A Culture of Reliability®

{'id': 590160628, 'path': 'cities', 'slug': 'cities', 'title': 'Cities', 'url': 'cities', 'full_url': 'cities', 'type': 0, 'parent_id': 0, 'order': 72, 'created_ts': 1674676865, 'page_settings': {'open_in_new_tab': False, 'allow_community_posts': False, 'hide_from_entry_editor': False, 'lock_posts_after_publishing': False, 'hide_from_search_engines': False}, 'extras': {}, 'about_html': '', 'meta_title': None, 'header_image_id': None, 'primary_posts_count': 0, 'regular_posts_count': 0, 'site_id': 23839865, 'status': 3, 'tags': (), 'meta_tags': (), 'breadcrumb_title': None, 'fb_author_name': None, 'url_header_image': '', 'isPublic': False, 'isPrivate': False, 'isUnlisted': True, 'parents': [], 'is_restricted_for_reading': False, 'linkout': False, 'original_url': 'cities', 'href': 'https://victoria.rebelmouse.dev/cities', 'absolute_url': 'https://victoria.rebelmouse.dev/cities'}
None

NOT a static page

https://victoria.rebelmouse.dev/tracy-chapman-tops-a-billboard-chart-for-the-first-time-since-2000-driven-by-luke-combs-fast-car

Tracy Chapman Tops a Billboard Chart for the First Time Since 2000, Driven by Luke Combs’ ‘Fast Car’

Tracy Chapman Tops a Billboard Chart for the First Time Since 2000, Driven by Luke Combs’ ‘Fast Car’

Tracy Chapman rises from No. 3 to No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Songwriters chart (dated June 17), leading for the first time, thanks to Luke Combs’ cover of her classic hit “Fast Car.”

Combs’ version of the song, on which Chapman is the sole credited writer, holds at its No. 2 high on the Hot Country Songs chart and jumps 8-4 on the Billboard Hot 100 – out-peaking Chapman’s original recording, which reached No. 6 on the Hot 100 in 1988.

Combs’ cover hits new heights with 34.2 million radio airplay audience impressions (up 30%), as it surges at country, pop and adult formats; 20.2 million U.S. streams (up 1%); and 9,000 downloads sold (up 4%) June 2-8, according to Luminate.

Chapman has tallied five entries on the Hot 100 as a billed recording artist: “Fast Car” (No. 6 peak in 1988), “Talkin’ Bout a Revolution” (No. 75, 1988), “Baby Can I Hold You” (No. 48, 1988), “Crossroads” (No. 90, 1989) and “Give Me One Reason” (No. 3, 1996).

Combs’ “Fast Car” is the third version of Chapman’s breakthrough song to chart on the Hot 100. It follows Chapman’s original and Jonas Blue’s dance cover, featuring Dakota (No. 98 peak, 2016).

Notably, as Chapman crowns Country Songwriters, she earns her first No. 1 placement on a Billboard chart since 2000, when her single “Telling Stories (There Is Fiction in the Space Between)” topped the Adult Alternative Airplay chart for eight weeks. Before that, she ruled the Billboard 200 with her debut self-titled album in August 1988, as well as Adult Pop Airplay for eight weeks in 1996 with “Give Me One Reason.”

Chapman’s eponymous debut album marked her first chart appearance when it entered the Billboard 200 chart dated April 30, 1988. “Fast Car” followed on Adult Contemporary and Mainstream Rock Airplay that May, and then the Hot 100 that June. She has won four Grammy Awards, including best female pop vocal performance for “Fast Car” and best rock song for “Give Me One Reason.”

Billboard launched the Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts, as well as genre-specific rankings for country, rock & alternative, R&B/hip-hop, R&B, rap, Latin, Christian, gospel and dance/electronic, in June 2019, while alternative and hard rock joined in 2020, along with seasonal holiday rankings in 2022. The charts are based on total points accrued by a songwriter and producer, respectively, for each attributed song that appears on the Hot 100. The genre-based songwriter and producer charts follow the same methodology based on corresponding “Hot”-named genre charts. As with Billboard’s yearly recaps, multiple writers or producers split points for each song equally (and the dividing of points will lead to occasional ties on rankings).

The full Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts and genre-specific rankings can be found on Billboard.com.

The Conversation (0)
Don’t miss a thing
What matters in tech, in your inbox daily
Follow us on
Meta plans to push back the debut of its next mixed reality glasses to 2027

The big reveal for Meta's next mixed reality glasses is being postponed until the first half of 2027, according to a report from Business Insider. Based on an internal memo from Maher Saba, the vice president of Meta's Reality Labs Foundation, the report said that the company's project, which is codenamed "Phoenix," will no longer be scheduled for a 2026 debut.

In a separate memo, Meta execs explained that the delay would help deliver a more "polished and reliable experience." According to BI, a memo from Meta's Gabriel Aul and Ryan Cairns said this new release window is "going to give us a lot more breathing room to get this right." Meta hasn't publicly revealed many details about its Phoenix project, but The Information previously reported that it would feature a goggle-like form factor with an external power source, similar to how the Apple Vision Pro is attached to a battery pack.

Keep reading...Show less
Engadget review recap: Dell 16 Premium, Nikon ZR, Ooni Volt 2 and more

We�ve slept off our collective turkey coma and returned to the review lab here at Engadget. Our team may also be in full CES prep mode, but we�ve got a few more devices to get off or our desks before 2025 is over. Catch up on all of the reviews you might have missed over the last few weeks � a perfect activity for a lazy December weekend.

Dell 16 Premium

There�s no denying the design of the Dell 16 Premium makes the laptop live up to its name. Unfortunately, all of that polish leads to some issues: a high price and hampered usability. �The more I looked at the Dell 16 Premium's beautiful facade, the more I wanted something... more,� senior reporter Devindra Hardawar wrote. �It needs more usable ports, like HDMI and a full-sized SD card reader. It needs more useful function keys that are visible in bright light � and also stay in one place � so I can touch type more easily. And for the love of god, just give up on the invisible trackpad.�

Keep reading...Show less
Don’t miss a thing
What matters in tech, in your inbox daily
Follow us on

Mariana Mazza. Droite : L'International de montgolfières.

Tout au long de l'été, la ville de Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu sur la Rive-Sud de Montréal brille avec ses envolées quotidiennes de montgolfières qui colorent le ciel ainsi que l'International de montgolfières, un festival de neuf jours en août. Le 1er juin marquait d'ailleurs le coup d'envoi des festivités alors que l'équipe derrière l'événement a finalement annoncé la programmation complète.

À la fin mars, on nous présentait déjà deux têtes d'affiche qui seront présentes pour animer la foule durant le dernier week-end de l'événement, soit la chanteuse québécoise Alicia Moffet, les rappeurs Loud et Imposs ainsi que celui qui se cache derrière le récent succès Acapulco, Jason Derulo.

Keep reading...Show less
Watch an incredibly powerful Christmas advert from the Royal Navy with devastating never-before-seen footage of an attack on a British ship.The two-and-a-half minute advert follows the story of HMS Diamond being attacked by Iran-backed rebels back on Christmas Eve in 2023.However, the story is also mirrored with an emotional bond with a father and son, just like this year's John Lewis advert. But, unlike high street stalwarts which splashes masses of cash on their Christmas adverts, the Royal Navy only spent £250 putting the moving story together, paying tribute to serving sailors as well as civilian volunteer. WATCH THE ADVERT ABOVE

Featured

Newsletter