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It’s a fairly quiet week on Billboard’s World Digital Song Sales chart, which ranks the bestselling tracks in America via platforms like iTunes that are performed in a language other than English or Spanish (those cuts are sent to the various Latin tallies). For years now, the World Digital Song Sales ranking has been a home for many K-pop acts, both soloists and groups, though they are not the only artists who score bestsellers.
A hugely successful solo musician who is typically associated with K-pop, J-Hope – one of the seven members of BTS – has racked up dozens of hits on his own, and two of them return to the roster as they become top 10 smashes again.
This week, J-Hope claims 20% of the World Digital Song Sales chart for himself. The roster only features 10 slots, and a pair of cuts by the singer and rapper reappear. The higher-ranking of the pair is “Safety Zone,” which is back at No. 4. “Future” comes in just a few spaces lower as it breaks back in at No. 8.
Between the two, “Safety Zone” has reached a loftier peak, and it nearly finds its way back to that position this time around. “Safety Zone” topped out at No. 3. “Future,” meanwhile, rose as high as No. 5, though it doesn’t come close to reaching that position as it reenters the sales register.
“Safety Zone” appears on the World Digital Song Sales chart for only the second period. The tune debuted in July 2022 and then disappeared. “Future” arrived at the same time – they are both featured on J-Hope’s solo album Jack in the Box – but it has now spent a total of three frames somewhere on the list.
Both “Safety Zone” and “Future” are counted among J-Hope’s 22 top 10s under his own name on the World Digital Song Sales chart. Seven of those tracks have risen all the way to No. 1. J-Hope began appearing on the World Digital Song Sales tally when it ran longer than the 10 slots it features these days, and two of his cuts barely failed to crack the uppermost region.
Three tunes return to the World Digital Song Sales chart this week, and two of them come from the BTS superstar. “Move” by Adam Port, as well as Stryv, Malachiii, and Camila Cabello, also bounces back onto the ranking, coming in at No. 3. That’s as high as the composition has ever climbed.
At the same time, two singles debut and become fast bestsellers. “She Did It Again,” a collaboration between Tyla and Zara Larsson, nearly conquers the roster, but it instead opens at No. 2, while “Let Me Be” by artificial intelligence music project The Second Voice is steady at No. 1. Celine Dion sees her latest cut “Dansons” launch in fifth place. J-Hope is the only artist to fill multiple spaces on the ranking this time around.
“Safety Zone” is a top 10 bestseller on two tallies in America, as Billboard has classified it under different genre labels. As it returns at No. 4 on the World Digital Song Sales chart, it also bounds back in at No. 3 on the Rap Digital Song Sales tally. “Safety Zone” has only spent two weeks on that list, and both times, it’s settled at No. 3.
Two tunes debut on the Rap Digital Song Sales chart and another two return. J-Hope’s is the loftiest track that did not appear on the rundown just last week. Eminem’s “Till I Collapse,” a collaboration with Nate Dogg, reenters at No. 7, which marks a new high for the more than 20-year-old single. New songs by Ludacris and JT also begin their time on the 10-space ranking.
J-Hope has collected a milestone 10 hits on the Rap Digital Song Sales chart, and all of them are top 10 smashes. “Safety Zone” is tied with both “LV Bag,” which also credits Don Toliver, Pharrell Williams, and Speedy, as well as “Chicken Noodle Soup,” his early career win with Becky G, as all three peaked in third place. That trio of tracks are tied with one another as J-Hope’s third-highest-rising wins on the rap roster.
ForbesJ-Hope’s Entire Solo Chart History Reappears On The Same List此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。