Remember when songs would sell 500k-600k because of the gift card effect
Gift Card rush is the following week but it's still a yikes moment.
Quote:
Originally posted by Kworb
Early estimates
1. Hello 346,000
2. Sorry 289,000
3. Love Yourself 277,000
4. Stressed Out 159,000
5. Hotline Bling 152,000
6. 679 135,000
7. Stitches 134,000
8. Same Old Love 126,000
9. What Do You Mean? 122,000
10. Ex's & Oh's 115,000
11. Jumpman 110,000
12. Confident 108,000
13. Here 102,000
14. Like I'm Gonna Lose You 101,000
15. One Call Away 100,000
16. My House 100,000
17. Die A Happy Man 97,000
18. The Hills 96,000
19. Perfect 92,000
20. I Know What You Did Last Summer 89,000
01 02 Fergie, Fergalicious 294,797
02 01 Beyoncé, Irreplaceable 268,876
03 04 Akon, Smack That 252,074
04 03 Akon, I Wanna Love You 221,359
05 06 Fray, How To Save A Life 185,868
06 09 All-American Rejects, It Ends Tonight 170,374
07 05 Nelly Furtado, Say It Right 158,382
08 10 Hinder, Lips Of An Angel 157,592
09 08 Jim Jones, We Fly High 152,357
10 07 Justin Timberlake, My Love 141,318
11 12 Justin Timberlake Featuring Timbaland, SexyBack 129,738
12 15 Bow Wow Featuring Chris Brown And Johnta Austin, Shortie Like Mine 114,106
13 13 Gwen Stefani, Wind It Up 113,965
14 16 My Chemical Romance, Welcome To The Black Parade 113,374
15 23 Weird Al Yankovic, White & Nerdy 107,510
16 14 Avril Lavigne, Keep Holding On 97,721
17 18 Carrie Underwood, Before He Cheats 96,938
18 21 Ludacris, Money Maker 96,437
19 17 Snow Patrol, Chasing Cars 90,878
20 32 Fergie, London Bridge 88,386
It became a number one hit for two weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in 1990 and reached number one on the Album Rock Tracks chart, as well as number one in Canada and number two on the UK Singles Chart.
Myles won the 1990 Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocalist for the song. Since its release, the song has received substantial airplay, receiving a "Millionaire Award" from ASCAP in 2005 for more than four million radio plays.[1]