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List of top five albums with the highest first-week home market sales of 1993 Number Album Artist 1st-week sales 1st-week position Refs 1 Doggystyle: Snoop Doggy Dogg: 802,858 1 West Coast Hip Hop 2 Black Sunday: Cypress Hill: 261,000 1 West Coast Hip Hop 3 Lethal Injection: Ice Cube: 215,000 5 West Coast Hip Hop 4 It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa ...
Between 1989 and 1999, 173 singles topped the Hot Rap Singles chart, with "Hot Boyz" by Missy Elliott featuring Nas, Eve and Q-Tip being the final number-one single of the 1990s. [7] The single's 18-week reign at the top spot extended into the next decade , and until 2019 it held the record for the most weeks at number one in the chart's ...
The Bodyguard soundtrack by Whitney Houston was the best-selling album of 1993. These are the Billboard magazine number-one albums of 1993, per the Billboard 200 . Chart history
This is a list of the U.S. Billboard magazine Hot 100 number-ones of 1993. There were 11 singles that topped the chart this year. There were 11 singles that topped the chart this year. The first of these, " I Will Always Love You " by Whitney Houston , spent nine weeks at the top, concluding a 14-week run that had begun in November 1992.
Queens’s Tribe, as RZA notes in a recent interview with Yahoo Entertainment, was more established in the fall of ’93, as the leaves changed color — and the face of hip-hop was forever altered.
In addition to hitting number one on the US rap chart, it also was a mainstream hit, reaching number 19 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1993. "Insane in the Brain" earned a 3× platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America and sold 3,000,000 copies domestically.
These are the Billboard magazine R&B singles chart number one hits of 1993: Chart history. Key † Indicates best-charting R&B single of 1993 [1] Issue date Song
Doggystyle is the debut studio album by American rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg.It was released on November 23, 1993, by Death Row and Interscope Records.The album was recorded and produced following Snoop Doggy Dogg's appearances on Dr. Dre's debut solo album The Chronic (1992), to which Snoop contributed significantly.