About a week ago, Drake released his amazing new album, Honestly, Nevermind, which was released online a few hours later. Like clockwork, it’s now number one and Drake’s eleventh album at the top of the Billboard 200 chart.
“Honestly, Nevermind,” Drake’s seventh studio LP, and the 17th full-length release overall, including compilations and mixtapes, are worth 204,000 sales in the United States, according to tracking service Luminate. Includes 250 million streams. Those numbers were enough to put the dance-rich “honesty” in first place with a comfortable margin. However, they were low by Drake’s standards. Drake has been posting huge numbers regularly for new jobs for over a decade.
The album’s 204,000 worth of sales (measures that coordinate streams and downloads and traditional album purchases) are just a few of the 613,000 Drake posted on the opening of his final studio album, “Certified Lover Boy” (2021). And it’s the worst drake since the previously released track compilation “Care Package,” which opened at 109,000 in 2019. With the exception of “Care Package”, less than half of the drake albums haven’t started. Equivalent to 1 million copies since “What a Time to Be Alive,” a mixtape with rapper Future in 2015, where streaming accounted for the minority of overall music consumption. (As of last year, streaming 83 percent Of sales of music recorded in the United States
Still, No. 1 is No. 1.And in 11 of them, Drake is now match Barbra Streisand and Bruce Springsteen. Jay-Z (14) and The Beatles (19) are in front of them on the list of the most chart-top artists on the Billboard 200.
Also this week, BTS’Proof’ dropped to 4th place in last week’s top seller. Bad Bunny’s “Un Verano Sin Ti” is second, Harry Styles’ “Harry’s House” is third, and Morgan Wallen’s “Danger: Double Album” is fifth.