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Peaches leaving the top ten in style thanks to ACR, no loss really.
Shame to see 'Your Power' dropping so quickly (although not quite as drastic this week) but a better result than 'my future' at least. Bring on the album :wub:
So glad this Peaches crap is finally falling, maybe I like ACR sometimes :P

28 | :down: 15 | 2nd week

 

J. Cole and Lil Baby

p r i d e . i s . t h e . d e v i l

 

170x170bb-60.jpg

 

Album track from The Off-Season

Released: 14th May 2021

Label: Dreamville

 

Chart Statistics

 

NE (20/05/2021) | 15-28

 

Sales: 20k+

Certification: -

Status: Standard Chart Ratio

 

__ Sales

19 Audio Streaming

__ Video Streaming

 

Video

 

 

Biography

 

J. Cole

Raised on 2Pac, Biggie, Nas, and JAY-Z, J. Cole emerged in the 2010s as a kind of torchbearer for serious hip-hop. He takes on capital-T topics with an earnestness—and moral imperative—that most rappers seem to avoid. A North Carolina native (born in Frankfurt, West Germany, in 1985), Cole moved to New York City on scholarship to St. John’s University, graduating magna cum laude while making beats on the side, at one point waiting outside JAY-Z’s studio for three hours to give him a CD. Jay dismissed him initially, but circled back a year or so later on the strength of Cole’s mixtapes, making him the first signee to the Roc Nation label. Cole’s since gone on to release a string of ambitious, increasingly confident albums, often meditating on single subjects at length: 2018’s KOD, for example, offered a sustained look at addiction, while several songs on 2016’s 4 Your Eyez Only were written from the perspective of a friend killed in his early twenties after leaving the drug game—a composite of people Cole knew from childhood. Despite the gravity of his subjects (and his sobering delivery), Cole—like his occasional collaborator Kendrick Lamar—is the rare artist who's managed to reconcile the conscious with the commercial, balancing his conceptual side with giant singles like “Work Out,” “Deja Vu,” and “ATM.” - Apple Music

 

Lil Baby

The story goes that Lil Baby (born Dominique Jones in 1994) didn’t even really want to rap. He’d had encouragement—Pee and Coach K, the Atlanta kingmakers/Quality Control heads who helped launch Migos, had been on him since he was a teenager hustling dice in the street—but Baby wasn’t interested. But two years on a possession charge gave him more time to think than he wanted. Then the work came fast: Within a year of starting to rap, he’d released six mixtapes and a full-length album, 2018’s Harder Than Ever. (Young Thug, an early booster, paid him to spend time in the studio instead of the streets.) Compared to his Atlanta peers (Thug, Gunna, Migos, etc.), Baby’s persona was muted: He shrugged off fashion shows, didn’t have tattoos (he didn’t want potential business partners from the buttoned-up, white world thinking he was something he wasn’t), and kept his boasts mild: “I never call myself a G.O.A.T./I leave that love to the people,” he raps on “Emotionally Scarred.” But the lyricism was there, as were the low-key intensity and no-frills ethic that have become his hallmark. By the end of 2020, he’d been nominated for a Grammy, made the chart-topping album My Turn, and was named Artist of the Year at the Apple Music Awards. “I don’t wanna be comin’ from where I come from all the way right here to be a nothin’,” he told Apple Music around the release of My Turn. “I feel like I’m past that stage.” - Apple Music

 

Top 100 Chart History

 

J. Cole

2013 46 Power Trip (feat. Miguel) -1-

2014 68 She Knows (feat. Amber Coffman) -2-

2016 30 Deja Vu -1-

2016 49 Immortal -AT-

2016 54 Neighbors -2-

2016 63 Change -AT-

2016 78 Ville Mentality -AT-

2016 81 She's Mine, Pt. 1 -AT-

2016 82 For Whom The Bell Tolls -AT-

2016 89 Foldin' Clothes -AT-

2016 90 4 Your Eyez Only -AT-

2018 17 KOD -AT-

2018 28 ATM -AT-

2018 30 Photograph -AT-

2018 56 Kevin's Heart -AT-

2018 86 Pretty Little Fears (6LACK feat. J. Cole)

2019 09 MIDDLE CHILD -1-

2019 18 The London (Young Thug feat. J. Cole & Travis Scott)

2020 65 Lion King On Ice -1/2-

2020 77 The Climb Back -1/2-

2021 25 i n t e r l u d e -1-

2021 13 m y . l i f e (J. Cole, 21 Savage & Morray) -2-

2021 15 p r i d e . i s . t h e . d e v i l (J. Cole & Lil Baby) -AT-

2021 16 a m a r i -AT-

 

0 x #1 | 0 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 6 x Top 20 | 10 x Top 40 | 24 x Top 100

 

Lil Baby

2018 46 Yes Indeed (Lil Baby & Drake) -1-

2018 28 Drip Too Hard (Lil Baby & Gunna) -1-

2018 46 Never Recover (Lil Baby, Gunna & Drake) -AT-

2018 68 Close Friends -AT-

2018 43 TIC TOC (6ix9ine feat. Lil Baby)

2019 68 Phone Down (Stefflon Don & Lil Baby)

2019 72 Bad Bad Bad (Young Thug feat. Lil Baby)

2019 16 Nookie (D-Block Europe feat. Lil Baby)

2019 10 Down Like That (KSI feat. Rick Ross, Lil Baby & S-X)

2019 66 Woah -1-

2020 94 Sum 2 Prove -2-

2020 66 Heatin' Up (feat. Gunna) -AT-

2020 78 Emotionally Scarred -3-

2020 54 The Bigger Picture -NAS-

2020 89 We Paid (Lil Baby & 42 Dugg) -AT-

2020 14 For The Night (Pop Smoke feat. Lil Baby & DaBaby)

2021 10 Wants And Needs (Drake feat. Lil Baby)

2021 53 I DID IT (DJ Khaled feat. Post Malone, Megan Thee Stallion, Lil Baby & DaBaby)

2021 73 EVERY CHANCE I GET (DJ Khaled feat. Lil Baby & Lil Durk)

2021 15 p r i d e . i s . t h e . d e v i l (J. Cole & Lil Baby)

 

0 x #1 | 0 x Top 5 | 2 x Top 10 | 5 x Top 20 | 6 x Top 40 | 20 x Top 100

 

Social Media

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png J. Cole

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Lil Baby

 

http://i.imgur.com/1SERq1f.png

 

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27 | :down: 13 | 2nd week

 

J. Cole, 21 Savage and Morray

m y . l i f e

 

170x170bb-60.jpg

 

2nd single from The Off-Season

Released: 14th May 2021

Label: Dreamville

 

Chart Statistics

 

NE (20/05/2021) | 13-27

 

Sales: 20k+

Certification: -

Status: Standard Chart Ratio

 

__ Sales

17 Audio Streaming

64 Video Streaming

 

Video

 

 

Biography

 

J. Cole

Raised on 2Pac, Biggie, Nas, and JAY-Z, J. Cole emerged in the 2010s as a kind of torchbearer for serious hip-hop. He takes on capital-T topics with an earnestness—and moral imperative—that most rappers seem to avoid. A North Carolina native (born in Frankfurt, West Germany, in 1985), Cole moved to New York City on scholarship to St. John’s University, graduating magna cum laude while making beats on the side, at one point waiting outside JAY-Z’s studio for three hours to give him a CD. Jay dismissed him initially, but circled back a year or so later on the strength of Cole’s mixtapes, making him the first signee to the Roc Nation label. Cole’s since gone on to release a string of ambitious, increasingly confident albums, often meditating on single subjects at length: 2018’s KOD, for example, offered a sustained look at addiction, while several songs on 2016’s 4 Your Eyez Only were written from the perspective of a friend killed in his early twenties after leaving the drug game—a composite of people Cole knew from childhood. Despite the gravity of his subjects (and his sobering delivery), Cole—like his occasional collaborator Kendrick Lamar—is the rare artist who's managed to reconcile the conscious with the commercial, balancing his conceptual side with giant singles like “Work Out,” “Deja Vu,” and “ATM.” - Apple Music

 

21 Savage

Whispering betrays an intimacy—a shared acknowledgement of something sacred. And 21 Savage, rap’s ASMR wordsmith, uses the technique to intimidate and taunt, to threaten and destroy. Violence was quite literally Shéyaa Bin Abraham-Joseph’s introduction to rap: He started after his best friend was killed (and he himself sustained gunshot wounds) in a shootout on Joseph’s 21st birthday. This is music born in the streets, desensitized to tragedy because any other coping mechanism would result in unending heartbreak. His breakthrough, 2016’s Savage Mode, produced entirely by Metro Boomin, showcases the rapper’s deadpan delivery and ambivalence toward the stories he tells. With the EP, 21 emerged as one of rap’s great stylists, with his flow and Metro’s minimal beats giving the album an almost ambient feel. When 21 took his signature sardonic style to its logical extreme on Metro Boomin’s “Don’t Come Out the House,” he betrayed a playful willingness to engage with our image of him. With 2018’s I Am > I Was, though, 21 proved he was more than a single, captivating style. The album boasts a diversity of ideas, homing in on post-trap and club anthems and heightening the impact of his signature snarl, which grows in menace as it’s used less frequently. He used to shroud his apathy entirely in hushed sneers, but now, when 21 Savage lulls us with a whisper, the quiet is deafening. - Apple Music

 

Morray

Morae Ruffin known professionally as Morray, is an American rapper, singer and songwriter. Best known for his combinations of rapping and singing, Morrays’ days as the lead singer of his church choir heavily influenced his melodic and unique style. Growing up in Fayetteville, NC and getting in and out of trouble, Morray turned to music as his escape. He uses his real life struggle as inspiration for his music. - Spotify

 

Top 100 Chart History

 

J. Cole

2013 46 Power Trip (feat. Miguel) -1-

2014 68 She Knows (feat. Amber Coffman) -2-

2016 30 Deja Vu -1-

2016 49 Immortal -AT-

2016 54 Neighbors -2-

2016 63 Change -AT-

2016 78 Ville Mentality -AT-

2016 81 She's Mine, Pt. 1 -AT-

2016 82 For Whom The Bell Tolls -AT-

2016 89 Foldin' Clothes -AT-

2016 90 4 Your Eyez Only -AT-

2018 17 KOD -AT-

2018 28 ATM -AT-

2018 30 Photograph -AT-

2018 56 Kevin's Heart -AT-

2018 86 Pretty Little Fears (6LACK feat. J. Cole)

2019 09 MIDDLE CHILD -1-

2019 18 The London (Young Thug feat. J. Cole & Travis Scott)

2020 65 Lion King On Ice -1/2-

2020 77 The Climb Back -1/2-

2021 25 i n t e r l u d e -1-

2021 13 m y . l i f e (J. Cole, 21 Savage & Morray) -2-

2021 15 p r i d e . i s . t h e . d e v i l (J. Cole & Lil Baby) -AT-

2021 16 a m a r i -AT-

 

0 x #1 | 0 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 6 x Top 20 | 10 x Top 40 | 24 x Top 100

 

21 Savage

2016 52 Sneakin' (Drake feat. 21 Savage)

2017 41 Bank Account -1-

2017 01 rockstar (Post Malone feat. 21 Savage) MILLIONAIRE

2017 60 Ghostface Killers (21 Savage, Offset & Metro Boomin feat. Travis Scott) -AT-

2018 40 Bartier Cardi (Cardi B feat. 21 Savage)

2018 94 PASS OUT (Quavo feat. 21 Savage)

2018 69 10 Freaky Girls (Metro Boomin feat. 21 Savage)

2018 80 Don't Come Out The House (Metro Boomin feat. 21 Savage)

2019 29 a lot -1-

2019 81 Wish Wish (DJ Khaled feat. Cardi B & 21 Savage)

2020 28 Mr. Right Now (21 Savage & Metro Boomin feat. Drake) -2-

2020 43 Runnin (21 Savage & Metro Boomin) -1-

2020 54 Rich N***a Shit (21 Savage & Metro Boomin feat. Young Thug) -AT-

2021 13 m y . l i f e (J. Cole, 21 Savage & Morray)

 

1 x #1 | 1 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 2 x Top 20 | 5 x Top 40 | 14 x Top 100

 

Morray

2021 13 m y . l i f e (J. Cole, 21 Savage & Morray)

 

0 x #1 | 0 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 1 x Top 20 | 1 x Top 40 | 1 x Top 100

 

Social Media

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png J. Cole

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png 21 Savage

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Morray

 

http://i.imgur.com/1SERq1f.png

26 | :down: 08 | 19th week

 

Riton and Nightcrawlers featuring Mufasa & Hypeman

Friday

 

170x170bb.jpg

 

Non-album single

Released: 15th January 2021

Label: Ministry of Sound Recordings

 

Chart Statistics

 

NE (28/01/2021) | 60-37-24-16-10-7-5-7-5-4-5-5-6-5-5-7-7-8-26

 

Sales: 400k+

Certification: Gold

Status: Accelerated Chart Ratio

 

01 Sales

05 Audio Streaming

05 Video Streaming

 

Video

 

 

Biography

 

Riton

Henry Smithson (born 13 September 1978), best known by his stage name Riton (/ˈriːtɒn/ REE-ton), is an English electronic music DJ and producer. - Wikipedia

 

Nightcrawlers

Electronic dance act the Nightcrawlers is based around DJ, producer, and vocalist John Reid. The act released the single "Living Inside a Dream" in 1992, it wasn't until "Push the Feeling On" that Reid achieved a Top Ten hit on the U.S. dance singles chart. The track was re-formed by Mark Kinchen with his "Dub of Doom" remix, which reached number 22 on the U.K. singles chart in 1994. For the four following singles, Reid worked very closely with Mark Kinchen, and all the singles featured Mark Kinchen remixes: "Surrender Your Love" (U.K. number seven), "Don't Let the Feeling Go" (U.K. number 13) "Let's Push It" (U.K number 23), and "Should I Ever Fall In Love(U.K number 34). It was a few years before "Never Knew Love" was released in 1999, “Push the Feeling On" was again remixed and re-released, this time by Rosabot, and went into the U.S. dance charts at number one.Reid is also an Ivor Novello award winning songwriter and has written songs for the likes of Pitbull, French Montana, Kelly Clarkson, Leona Lewis, Keith Urban, Il Divo, Westlife, Rod Stewart, and Tina Turner. - Spotify

 

Top 100 Chart History

 

Riton

2016 13 Rinse & Repeat (feat. Kah-Lo) -NAS-

2019 12 Turn Me On (Riton & Oliver Heldens feat. Vula) -NAS-

2021 04 Friday (Riton & Nightcrawlers feat. Mufasa & Hypeman) -NAS-

 

0 x #1 | 1 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 3 x Top 20 | 3 x Top 40 | 3 x Top 100

 

Nightcrawlers

1994 03 Push The Feeling On -1-

1995 07 Surrender Your Love (feat. John Reid) -2-

1995 13 Don't Let The Feeling Go (feat. John Reid) -3-

1996 23 Let's Push It (feat. John Reid) -4-

1996 34 Should I Ever (Fall In Love) (feat. John Reid) -5-

1996 30 Keep On Pushing Our Love (feat. John Reid & Alysha Warren) -NAS-

1999 59 Never Knew Love -NAS-

2021 04 Friday (Riton & Nightcrawlers feat. Mufasa & Hypeman)

 

0 x #1 | 2 x Top 5 | 3 x Top 10 | 4 x Top 20 | 7 x Top 40 | 8 x Top 100

 

Mufasa & Hypeman

2021 04 Friday (Riton & Nightcrawlers feat. Mufasa & Hypeman)

 

0 x #1 | 1 x Top 5 | 1 x Top 10 | 1 x Top 20 | 1 x Top 40 | 1 x Top 100

 

Social Media

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Riton

 

qHAIHhS.png qHAIHhS.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Nightcrawlers

 

Z3yZBmt.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Mufasa

 

qHAIHhS.png n1LUs3L.png VlKuv9y.png 48kM43m.png Hypeman

 

http://i.imgur.com/1SERq1f.png

Not them playing Friday again instead of one of the fresher J. Cole songs :drama:

I'm so glad all the J. Cole tracks were skipped

 

:yahoo:

 

Now time to bop to Friday!!!

I am dreading hearing this on a night out, I think I'll stubbornly walk off and go to the smoking area if it ever came on :lol:
Even ACR can't stop Friday's obligatory chart show play *.*
I really don’t think Friday is leaving the top 40 anytime soon if it’s this high while on acr- and they always choose to play it <_<

Edited by LiamSime

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