Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mary's Danish was an alternative rock band that was formed in Los Angeles, California in the late 1980s which released four albums, with the last in 1992. Mary's Danish blended a musical mixture of rock, funk, country and soul elements.
American Standard is the third and final album by the American band Mary's Danish, released in 1992. [1] [2] The band supported the album by participating in a Rock the Vote tour, following it with a tour with the Darling Buds. [3] [4] "Leave It Alone" peaked at No. 20 on Billboard ' s Modern Rock Tracks chart. [5]
A previous logo for the Billboard Hot 100, main chart for singles in the U.S. (major world's music market). A record chart, also known as a music chart, is a method of ranking music judging by the popularity during a given period of time.
The Danish Albums Chart is a list of albums ranked by physical and digital sales in Denmark. It is compiled by Nielsen Music Control in association with the Danish branch of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), and the new number-one album is announced every Thursday at midnight on the official Danish music charts website.
If two or more artists have the same claimed sales, they are then ranked by certified units. The claimed sales figure and the total of certified units (for each country) within the provided sources include sales of albums, singles, compilation-albums, music videos as well as downloads of singles and full-length albums.
In April, Mary J. Blige told People Magazine that she was recording a new project that’s “probably my last studio album.” At 53 years old, Blige sings in a lower register now, sounding ...
Small Change was Waits’ most successful album in the 1970s, reaching No. 89 on the Billboard 200 — his highest chart peak for 22 years. Recorded amidst a stretch of hard touring and hard ...
Until 1991, the Billboard album chart was based on a survey of representative retail outlets that determined a ranking, not a tally of actual sales. Weekly surveys and year-end charts by Billboard and other publications such as now defunct Cash Box magazine sometimes differed. For instance, during the 1960s and 1970s, the number-one album as ...