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The Contenders is a midweek column that looks at artists aiming for the top of the Billboard charts, and the strategies behind their efforts. This week (for the upcoming Billboard 200 dated Apr. 6), a big week of new releases is headlined by Future and Metro Boomin, who could break the mark for first-week units set by Ariana Grande just two weeks earlier. 

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Future & Metro Boomin, We Don’t Trust You (Freebandz/Boominati/Epic/Republic): It was always gonna be big-time when hip-hop superstars Future and Metro Boomin got together for their first collaborative album. Not only have they proven to be two of the most consistently successful figures in the last decade-plus of rap, but they have extensive history and chemistry with one another — down to Future providing Metro’s famous “If young Metro don’t trust you, I’m gon’ shoot you” producer tag (via his appearance on Uncle Murda’s “Right Now”), which partly inspired the name of their recent team-up, We Don’t Trust You.  

Now, the two hip-hop greats with 11 No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 already between them are likely gonna be in line for their 12th. We Don’t Trust You immediately dominated the internet upon its release last Friday (March 22), with its entire tracklist swarming the top of the Spotify and Apple Music daily charts. Somewhat ironically, the thing the album is getting the most attention for has little to do with either Future or Metro, but rather the “Like That” guest verse from an arguably even bigger superstar in Kendrick Lamar – with its shots fired against Drake and J. Cole sending social media into an absolute tizzy, likely propelling the song to a No. 1 debut next week on the Billboard Hot 100.  

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Its parent album also seems all but certain to grace the top of the charts. Trust has remained a blockbuster on streaming — as of Tuesday, Future and Metro still commanded four of the top 10 spots on Spotify’s Daily Top Songs USA, and nine of the top 10 on Apple Music’s real-time chart – likely helped by an initially hidden guest list, which prompted users to listen to the 17-track set in full to discover the features for themselves. Even without a physical release yet, its streaming and digital sales numbers should be robust enough for the set to challenge Ariana Grande’s Eternal Sunshine mark (227,000) for the biggest first week yet of 2024 – though Future and Metro would still have to do better as a duo than either did with their own most recent solo sets, 2022’s I Never Liked You (222,000) and Heroes and Villains (185,000), respectively. 

Shakira, Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran (Sony Latin): Future and Metro are far from the only longtime hitmakers who released new sets on Friday: arguably the biggest global superstar from the last 30 years of Latin pop also made her return. Shakira’s 16-track new set Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran is essentially divided into two parts – half entirely new pop bangers, including the New Music Friday-leading Cardi B collab “Puntería,” and half singles Shak has already had success with over her highly productive past couple years, including 2023’s barnstorming Bizarrap team-up “Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 53.”  

That combination of explosive new bangers (also including guest appearances from the starry likes of Grupo Frontera, Rauw Alejandro and – again – Bizarrap) and established hits should result in a pretty formidable showing on streaming, though Shakira has nowhere near the established history there (especially in this country) as Future and Metro. She does have a physical presence, though, with Las Mujeres available for sale in four different vinyl editions (each with a different cover and different-colored LP), as well as four different CDs (also with different covers) and a standard digital release.  

Kenny Chesney, Born (Blue Chair/Warner Nashville): Another decades-spanning star returns this week from the country world in Kenny Chesney with his 19th studio album (and first in four years), Born. The album doesn’t have the kind of advance radio hits Chesney might have landed in the past; only “Take Her Home” had been previously pulled from the set, and had peaked at No. 13 on Billboard’s Country Airplay listing. But Chesney does have both standard and signed editions of Born for sale — as well as a “Tour Edition” of its digital release with three bonus live cuts, available for purchase to anyone who bought tickets to his upcoming summer trek or are members of his fan club – and he has the chart history of nine No. 1 albums, spanning from 2002’s No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problem to Born’s predecessor, 2020’s Here and Now.  

IN THE MIX 

Olivia Rodrigo, Guts (Geffen): While Olivia Rodrigo largely refused to play the reissue game with her game-changing debut album Sour, she’s diving into the deluxe editions with sophomore set Guts. Last Friday saw the release of Guts (Spilled), which tacked five stellar new cuts (previously each found on different specific vinyl variants of the album’s original release) onto the 12 of the chart-topping original LP – including the fan favorite “Obsessed,” which Rodrigo had been playing at stops on her current Guts World Tour. There’s no new physical drop for the deluxe set at the moment, but the resounding streaming and sales activity for the new cuts should help the album (which is still lingering in the Billboard 200’s top 20 a half-year after its initial release) rebound on the chart this week, possibly getting it back to the top 10 for the first time since early December.  

Hozier, Unheard (Rubyworks/Columbia): About a half-year since his latest album Unreal Unearth debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, Irish singer-songwriter Hozier is back with a new EP of songs that just missed the cut for that set,  Unheard. Though it’s only available on streaming and for digital sale at the moment, and only has four tracks to rack up consumption totals with, it should be in line for a sizeable debut – largely because one of those songs, the TikTok-teased “Too Sweet,” is off to a massive start on streaming, likely on pace to become the artist’s biggest Hot 100 hit since “Take Me to Church” reached No. 2 in 2015.  

Tyla, Tyla (Fax/Epic): One of the most anticipated pop debuts of the year comes from South African crossover star Tyla, whose breakout smash “Water” reached the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 in late 2023. Her 14-track LP features both the original and remix versions of “Water,” as well as a decently wide array of big-name guest stars, including Travis Scott, Tems and Becky G, and is available for purchase in three vinyl editions — including two color variants, one with a signed insert. 

Billboard has more than 200 different weekly charts, encompassing numerous genres and formats.
While established artists often compete for a spot on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart and Billboard 200 albums ranking, which track the most popular songs and albums of the week, respectively, up-and-coming talents typically start off on genre-specific lists.

Here’s a look at five artists who appear on surveys for the first time on the March 30, 2024-dated charts.

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Cloonee

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The house DJ arrives on Billboard’s charts with “Sippin’ Yak.” Released March 15 via Polydor/Hellbent/Black Book, the song tallied 644,000 U.S. streams and sold 1,000 downloads in its first week of release (March 15-21), according to Luminate. Those sums help the track debut at No. 25 on Hot Dance/Electronic Songs, as well as No. 6 on Dance/Electronic Digital Song Sales. The song samples Tracey Lee’s 2001 song “We Like” featuring Fatman Scoop.

Cloonee, from the U.K., has been performing the song during his live shows for months, but began teasing the song on his TikTok page in January. (The song is no longer available on TikTok due to the ongoing dispute between the platform and Universal Music Group.)

Trending on Billboard

Cloonee has been performing and releasing music, including multiple EPs, for more than a decade. He has collaborated with many fellow dance acts, including Brisotti, Caleb Calloway, Dances, Chris Lake and Wade. He has North American and European tour dates lined up through August, including Coachella this April.

Alek Olsen

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The singer-songwriter scores his first career entry on Billboard’s charts thanks to “Someday I’ll Get It.” The song, which he self-released Oct. 23, debuts at No. 17 on Hot Alternative Songs, No. 22 on Hot Rock Songs and No. 24 on Hot Rock & Alternative Songs (all of which use the same multimetric methodology as the Hot 100) with 2.6 million official U.S. streams (up 126%) in the March 15-21 tracking week.

The song has been surging in recent weeks due to buzz generated on TikTok, where it has been used in more than 375,000 clips on the platform to date. Many creators are using the song to soundtrack their experiences losing beloved pets, namely with the lyric, “I think of you all the time/ now that you’re gone.” The virality led to the song’s No. 19 debut on the Billboard TikTok Top 50 chart dated March 23.

Olsen originally released the song earlier this decade under the name Imsad., before he rebranded to his birth name. He has released five other songs on streaming services, all since 2015.

King Hendrick$

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The Houston rapper debuts on Billboard’s charts with his breakthrough single “Leaving the Lot.” The song, released Feb. 15 via Bigmoneymissions Records, debuted at No. 48 on the March 23-dated Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs survey and ranks at No. 49 on the latest list. It tallied 3.3 million U.S. streams March 15-21, up 10%. King Hendrick$ also rises 40-35 on the Emerging Artists chart.

Recent gains for “Leaving the Lot” can be attributed in part to the Twitch streamer Sketch (aka @thesketchreal), who boasts more than 500,000 followers on the platform and streams himself chatting and playing video games. After playing the song on a Feb. 14 stream, it drew 500,000 on-demand official U.S. streams Feb. 16-22. From Feb. 23-29, it surged 175% to 1.4 million. Sketch has continued to play the song, which has led to other viral clips with the cut’s audio across TikTok and Twitter. King Hendrick$ gave Sketch a shoutout in a March 20 Instagram post celebrating his chart debut.

King Hendrick$ has released eight albums, all since 2016. He has already released nearly two dozen songs this year alone, including, most recently, “Blocking on a Sunday” with Hoodrich Keem (March 13), and “Special Teams Anthem” with Top$ide and Sketch (March 6). He has also collaborated with Babyface Ray on “Wavy Gang Immortal” and “Big Meech Holiday.”

Novulent

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The shoegaze artist reaches on Billboard’s charts with his breakout song “Scars.” Released in June 2023 via The Royals, the track debuts at No. 45 on Hot Rock & Alternative Songs with 1.5 million streams (up 11%). TikTok has been a contributing factor in the song’s growing exposure, as a portion of its audio has soundtracked more than 90,000 clips on the platform to date, including one by Megan Thee Stallion on March 11.

“Scars” appears on Novulent’s third LP Vol. 1, released in October. He has released three additional albums: My Story (2022), My Story 2 (2023) and DEARY DIARY (this January). He has a new set, Secret Letters, due this Friday (March 29).

Bjrnck

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The Chicago native lands her first Billboard chart entry thanks to her featured appearance on Omarion’s “Taking Off.” Released in December on Omarion’s latest LP Full Circle: Sonic Boom Two (on Omarion Worldwide), the track debuts at No. 28 on Adult R&B Airplay with a 28% gain in spins. “BJRNCK is a pure superstar,” Omarion wrote in a Jan. 28 post on Instagram. “Loved working with her.”

Bjrnck has released six solo songs on streaming services, all since 2019, including collaborations with Big Freedia, HappyBirthdayCalvin and Lucky Daye. In February, she released a new collaboration with Eric Bellinger, “Pheenin.”

As for Omarion, “Taking Off” is the R&B veteran’s second song from Full Circle to hit Adult R&B Airplay, after “Serious” reached No. 18 in January. Before that, he had last charted at the format in 2006, with “Entourage.”

Christian Nodal and Peso Pluma take over Billboard’s Regional Mexican Airplay chart as “La Intención” lands at No. 1 on the list dated March 30. Nodal and Pluma’s first collab springs from No. 5 to crown the chart with 8.3 million audience impressions earned in the U.S. in the week ending March 21, according to […]

310babii’s “Soak City” douses the competition on two Billboard charts as it takes the throne on both Rhythmic Airplay and Rap Airplay. The new radio champ advances from the runner-up slot on both rankings to rule the lists dated March 30 and gives the rapper, who solely wrote the song, his first No. 1s on any Billboard charts.

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“Soak City” rises from No. 2 on Rhythmic Airplay after a 5% increase in plays that made it the most played song on U.S.-monitored rhythmic radio stations in the tracking week of March 15-21, according to Luminate. WHTP-FM, in Portland, Maine, led the way, with 140 plays, while three stations – WHZT-FM (Greenville, S.C.), KPHW-FM (Honolulu, Hawaii) and KHTN-FM (Modesto, Calif.) – shared second place after each registered 134 plays.

“Soak City” first caught viral attention through TikTok with the squabble dance, which soon became further popularized as multiple NFL players, including the Kansas City Chiefs’ Travis Kelce and Houston Texans’ C.J. Stroud, performed versions of it as an end-zone celebration. Thanks to the growth, the song reached a No. 17 peak on the TikTok Billboard Top 50 chart in November.

Trending on Billboard

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The viral buzz fueled momentum for a radio campaign, and “Soak City” landed on Rhythmic Airplay in late November. In reaching the summit in its 19th week, it ties for the fourth-longest wait to the top spot in the chart’s 31-year history.

Here’s a review of the songs that required the most weeks to attain the No. 1 rank on Rhythmic Airplay:

Weeks to No. 1, Song Title, Artist, Date Reached No. 1

24, “Waterfalls,” TLC, Aug. 5, 1995

20, “Day ‘N’ Nite,” Kid Cudi, May 23, 2009

20, “Sky Walker,” Miguel featuring Travis Scott, Feb. 3, 2018

19, “Don’t Let Go (Love),” En Vogue, Feb. 15, 1997

19, “Work Out,” J. Cole, Dec. 31, 2011

19, “Soak City,” 310babii, March 30, 2024

On Rap Airplay, “Soak City” steps 2-1 following a 4% improvement in audience in the latest tracking week. As with its Rhythmic Airplay rise, patience was rewarded – “Soak City” leads in its 17th week, becoming the 14th of 217 No. 1s to need at least that much time to complete a chart-topping trek.

If the dual radio coronations weren’t enough, “Soak City” is already looking to expand to a third radio ranking soon. The track climbs 3-2 on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay, where it added 11% more plays in the most recent tracking window.

Nearly nine months since arriving on the Adult R&B Airplay chart, Maeta’s “Through the Night,” featuring Free Nationals, finally reaches No. 1 on the list dated March 30. By reaching the summit in its 35th week, it completes the second longest trek to the top in the chart’s 30-year history.

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“Through the Night,” released on Roc Nation, captures the flag after a 6% jump in plays that made it the most-played song on U.S. monitored adult R&B radio stations in the tracking week of March 15-21, according to Luminate.

Singer-songwriter Maeta achieves her first Adult R&B Airplay No. 1 through her third chart appearance. Her first, “Bitch Don’t Be Mad,” peaked at No. 14 in 2023, while 2023’s “(S)EX,” went one rank higher.

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Featured artist Free Nationals, who frequently perform as a backing band for Anderson .Paak, claim their initial Adult R&B Airplay leader with their first try.

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With its 35-week journey to its coronation, “Through the Night” wraps the second longest trek, in terms of weeks on the chart, to reach No. 1. It trails Snoh Aalegra’s “I Want You Around,” which crowned the list in its 43rd chart week, in March 2020.

Here’s a look at the songs with the longest marches to reach No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay:

Weeks to No. 1, Song Title, Artist, Date Reached No. 1

41, “I Want You Around,” Snoh Aalegra, March 14, 2020

35, “Through the Night,” Maeta featuring Free Nationals, March 30, 2024

34, “Step in the Name of Love,” R. Kelly, Nov. 1, 2003

33, “Love Calls,” Kem, Sept. 13, 2003

32, “Permission,” Ro James, Sept. 10, 2016

31, “Please Don’t Go,” Tank, May 19, 2007

31, “For the Rest of My Life,” Robin Thicke, Jan. 11, 2014

31, “I’m Baby,” Ambre featuring Jvck James, May 6, 2023

30, “Anything,” Jaheim featuring Next, June 22, 2002

30, “Never Would Have Made It,” Marvin Sapp, July 26, 2008

Elsewhere, “Through the Night” slips from 21-22 from its peak on R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay, which ranks songs by combined audience from adult R&B and mainstream R&B/hip-hop radio stations. Despite the position drop, the single improved to 5.1 million in audience, a 6% gain over the prior week.

While Ariana Grande’s Eternal Sunshine spends a second week atop the Billboard 200 albums chart this week, a pair of new releases check into the top five below it: country star Kacey Musgraves‘ Deeper Well, and Justin Timberlake‘s Everything I Thought It Was.

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Musgraves’ latest debuts at No. 2 on the chart, with 97,000 units moved — the best first-week performance of her career in units, and her highest debut on the listing since debut LP Same Trailer Different Park also hit No. 2 in 2013. Meanwhile, Timberlake’s first set in six years bows at No. 4 with 67,000 units, making it his first official album since 2002’s Justified not to take the top spot.

How are the two artists most likely feeling about their respective albums’ debut performances this week? And which of the two sets are we most likely to return to throughout the rest of 2024? Billboard staffers discuss these questions and more below.

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1. Kacey Musgraves’ Deeper Well debuts at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 – below Ariana Grande’s Eternal Sunshine in its second week, but tied for Musgraves’ best-ever chart placement, and with her best first-week tally to date (97,000). On a scale from 1-10, how excited do you think she is with that debut-week performance?

Hannah Dailey: I’ll give it a 9. A No. 1 album would’ve been an exciting first for Kacey, but debuting as high as No. 2 while in competition with Eternal Sunshine and Everything I Thought It Was is still excellent, especially six albums deep into her career.  

Kyle Denis: It’s gotta be a 10, right? Kacey is the biggest winner of the week in my eyes. She’s spent years toiling outside of the Nashville apparatus and her returns have gotten more and more impressive with each subsequent release. If the success of Deeper Well tells us anything, it’s that Kacey has cultivated one of the most loyal fanbases in contemporary country music. There was no hit single – or as close to a “hit” as a Kacey track can be – nor was there an accompanying music film or flashy awards show performance. 

Deeper Well sold almost solely off the back of fan loyalty and good music. Moreover, the new LP is the follow-up to Star-Crossed, another Billboard 200 top 10 effort that was met with decidedly more mixed reactions than Golden Hour or Deeper Well. Star-Crossed and its film of the same name employed an aesthetic closer to mainstream pop than any of Kacey’s previous records, and she was able to retain the new fans she earned from that era and fold them into her larger fan base, resulting in the best first-week unit total of her career with Deeper Well. And for what it’s worth, Deeper Well and Eternal Sunshine had a very close race – this is a win for both ladies. 

Jason Lipshutz: A 7. A couple points get knocked off for getting so close-but-not-quite-there to her first No. 1 album and six-figure equivalent albums unit showing, but for Musgraves, this debut — with a relatively muted project, and nothing resembling a crossover hit single on it — demonstrates her continued commercial power as a genre-straddling singer-songwriter. The top of the Billboard 200 was crowded this week, and for Deeper Well to cut through the competition and earn the top debut should be a very encouraging sign for Musgraves. 

Jessica Nicholson: 8. When she previously earned No. 2 album debut on the Billboard 200, it was for her debut project Same Trailer, Different Park, which was led by her top 10 Country Airplay hit single “Merry Go Round.” She earned her first Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper with the Zach Bryan collab “I Remember Everything” last year and the song has had impressive staying power on the chart, further elevating her visibility in the leadup to the Deeper Well release. But none of the songs released leading up to Deeper Well quite reached that same bell-ringing chart height, and she has strong competition from Grande on the albums chart. Given all of the above, she’s had a stellar debut week for Deeper Well.

Andrew Unterberger: Probably an 8. To still be going up in numbers not just more than a decade after her debut but now a half-decade after her album of the year Grammy win for Golden Hour indicates that Musgraves’ audience is both impressively wide and absolutely in it for the long haul. Would’ve been nice to finally get that No. 1 though.

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2. Musgraves has long bucked the system when it comes to going the traditional routes of promotion for a country artist – but over a decade into her career, her popularity still seems to be growing. What do you think the biggest factor is behind Deeper Well scoring her best first-week debut yet?

Hannah Dailey: I think that Kacey is simply a really authentic person and a truly gifted storyteller, which keeps people curious about the ever-changing perspectives she offers in her music. I also think that Golden Hour, especially after winning AOTY, solidified her as an “album artist,” so people are always going to be hyped to see how she crafts a full-package experience with each LP. 

Kyle Denis: I’ll reemphasize that Deeper Well landed as a return to form of sorts. Where Star-Crossed found her flirting with legitimate pop stardom (visual album, headlining arena tour, VMAs performance), Deeper Well is sonically and aesthetically closer to the earthier vibe of Golden Hour and Same Trailer Different Park. When you combine the new Star-Crossed fans with an already fervent home base secured from the country star’s first three LPs, you’re left with a large audience that is invested in Kacey’s world-building. There’s also something to be said about the new fans she may have courted thanks to her and Zach Bryan’s Billboard Hot 100-topping “I Remember Everything.” 

Jason Lipshutz: One could point to Deeper Well sounding a little like a course correction back to the comforts of Golden Hour following the more urgent Star-Crossed, or to the fact that “I Remember Everything” with Zach Bryan gave Musgraves her first Hot 100 chart-topper while undoubtedly expanding her audience. I think it’s simpler than that: at this point in her career, Musgraves has developed a loyal listenership that transcends traditional country lines and is going to show up for her songwriting when she returns with a new project every few years. As long as Musgraves continues at the quality and release rate she’s been at for a while, she’ll be an artist that a lot of music fans will want to grow old with.

Jessica Nicholson: As music audiences have become increasingly niche, Musgraves hasn’t wavered from knowing who she is as an artist and has a keen sense of what her audience wants. A key part of Musgraves’ brand has always been her complex, introspective, vivid style of songwriting, which also happens to fall right in line with what has been popular among mainstream listeners over the past year, as evidenced by the success of Noah Kahan and Zach Bryan — both of whom Musgraves has collaborated with recently. She also smartly sees the continued resurgence of vinyl, and released nine vinyl variants of Deeper Well, including eight different colors of vinyl variants, which also boost those sales numbers.

Andrew Unterberger: It is indeed good timing for Musgraves, who is benefitting not only from vinyl’s increased value as a collector’s item among fans, but from country’s and folk’s ever-growing slices of the streaming pie — and from her recent allegiances with two of the biggest beneficiaries of the latter boon, Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan. She’s a thoughtful artist with a savvy sense of how to connect with her fans, and those are the artists who usually last the longest at her current level.

3. Justin Timberlake’s Everything I Thought It Was bows at No. 4 this week, with 67,000 first-week units – less than a quarter of the 293,000 units moved by his previous effort, Man of the Woods, in its debut frame. Are those numbers higher, lower, or about where you would’ve expected for Timberlake’s latest?

Hannah Dailey: They’re lower than I expected, but not that much lower. I assumed that his most dedicated fans, plus his appeal to *NSYNC nostalgia with “Paradise,” would carry him a little bit more than it did. At the same time, performers can only last so long at the top without changing things up artistically, something he seems either reluctant or incapable of doing. 

Kyle Denis: Lower. I wasn’t expecting anything all that impressive – given that no one seems to really care about “Selfish” and that his reputation is in the gutter right now – but Justin Timberlake not being able to clear at least 100,000 units in any circumstance is still a shocker. 

Jason Lipshutz: Lower. A drop-off in units compared to Man of the Woods was expected, considering that it’s been more than a half-decade since Timberlake’s last album and that Everything I Thought It Was wasn’t preceded by a particularly big hit single. Yet after all the press that JT completed rolling out the album, the new *NSYNC song on its track list and surprise reunion ahead of its release, the arena tour coming soon and the fact that it’s still Justin freakin’ Timberlake… maybe the album rebounds a bit as the tour picks up, but 67,000 units couldn’t have been the expectation for Week 1. 

Jessica Nicholson: Everything I Thought It Was comes six years after Man of the Woods, which earned two top 10 hits on the Hot 100, while the lead up to Everything only saw one top 20 hit on the Hot 100. Still, given that Man of the Woods debuted at No. 1 (and given Timberlake’s history as one of pop music’s biggest artists through his time with ‘NSYNC and his solo work in the early ’00s), his first-week numbers for the new album came in lower than I would have expected.

Andrew Unterberger: About where I would have expected, which probably tells you all you need to know about how Justin Timberlake’s last decade has gone.

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4. After a very bad half-decade of press that reached a new low with the revelations from Britney Spears’ recent memoir, Timberlake desperately needed an album that at least changed the conversation about him or moved him out of his past somewhat. Do you think this album accomplishes that? 

Hannah Dailey: No. If anything, I think JT was trying to say, “Look at me, I can still deliver all the same things you loved about me 20 years ago!” with this era. The problem is that people don’t love or even want those same things anymore. The approach backfired in that it solidified him deeper as the persona people have grown less tolerant of in recent years.

Kyle Denis: Absolutely not. The album would have accomplished that if people engaged with the music, but it’s clear that nobody really cares about it. “Selfish” — which was nearly overshadowed by a decade-old Britney Spears song of the same name – has yet to surpass the No. 19 Hot 100 peak it notched in its opening week, and none of the album’s tracks have emerged as a potential second single. Even Man of the Woods squeaked out two top 10 hits!

This is all coming after songs with Calvin Harris (“Stay with Me”), SZA (“The Other Side”) and Nelly Furtado & Timbaland (“Keep Going Up”) that went nowhere. People haven’t been connecting with JT’s music for some time now. In the case of this specific album, there’s certainly good material on it, but “good” just isn’t enough for his current situation. 

At best, the Forget Tomorrow tour – which, arguably, wouldn’t be possible without Everything I Thought It Was – will do more to change the conversation around JT than the music. With a total gross rumored to end up somewhere around $140 million and challenge for his most successful tour yet, JT will have plenty of time to redirect the public conversation with some good press. Barring a one-off surprise hit, it might be time to say that JT is entering his legacy act era as an artist who can sell tickets, but not necessarily new albums. 

Jason Lipshutz: Yes and no. While Everything I Thought It Was is a solid reminder of Timberlake’s pop panache and showmanship, the new album really needed a new hit or huge chart bow to fully transcend the recent negative headlines. Credit to JT for looking inward a few times on Everything I Thought It Was, as well as serving up the type of disco-funk grooves that loyal listeners can enjoy, but the narrative here is going to be less about the art and more about its commercial returns.

Jessica Nicholson: Including his ‘NSYNC bandmates on the album, and reuniting with them for a performance during his one night only show at The Wiltern in Los Angeles certainly sparked a social media frenzy. But overall, this album doesn’t seem to shift things forward — sonically or narratively. Instead, it seems to rely heavily on the mid-2000s pop and R&B sounds he’s known for, and barely seems address his personal life at all (with a notable exception in the album opener “Memphis”), when nodding to personal events now seems de rigueur for so many artists.

Andrew Unterberger: Nope. I feel for Timberlake a tiny bit because I’m not totally sure what he even could have done to change people’s perceptions of him on this album, short of a jarring sonic left turn or a harrowingly introspective lyrical focus. Maybe a greater artist would’ve at least attempted one of those, but Timberlake clearly wasn’t ready to close the door yet on his days as a central force in pop music, which is understandable. Nevertheless, this album may end up closing it for him.

5. Which of the two albums do you think you’ll be revisiting more as the year goes on? 

Hannah Dailey: Deeper Well. 100%.  

Kyle Denis: Deeper Well. Kacey’s new record will be evergreen for life’s quieter, more introspective moments. JT’s record has several strong songs, but they ultimately feel forgettable because his performance across the album is tragically devoid of the sauce that made LPs like The 20/20 Experience such triumphs. 

Jason Lipshutz: Deeper Well, although the best moments on Everything I Thought It Was have been enjoyable to revisit in the first couple of weeks since its release (and I am a well-documented Man of the Woods defender, who has returned to that one quite a bit). But as we enter springtime, I am ready to listen to Musgraves’ cozy tales of Saturn returning, lazy days and dinners with friends, birds chirping around me all the while.

Jessica Nicholson: Musgraves has always crafted music that feels intimate, relatable, timeless — even groovy when called for (see “High Horse” and “Justified,” among others). The laid-back, centered vibe and folky instrumentation of Deeper Well, along with the themes of peace, self-improvement and dismantling old habits that no longer suit her, make this a comfort-filled, if slightly sleepy at moments, listening experience — one that will warrant returning to repeatedly.

Andrew Unterberger: Probably neither, in truth — can’t say I’ve found either album to be particularly resonant so far. But Musgraves’ album is pleasant, and significantly shorter, so I guess that one.

Chilean singer FloyyMenor arrives on the Billboard Hot 100 (dated March 30) for the first time thanks to his breakthrough viral hit “Gata Only” with Cris MJ. The song debuts at No. 98 on the strength of its streaming sum: 5.1 million U.S. streams (up 13%) in the March 15-21 tracking week, according to Luminate. […]

Bryan Martin lands his first career entry on the Billboard Hot 100 (dated March 30) as his breakthrough single “We Ride” arrives at No. 96.
“We Ride” has been steadily climbing Billboard’s charts since its release in October 2022 on Average Joes Entertainment. With 35 weeks and counting on the Hot Country Songs chart, and after 18 weeks on the Hot 100’s Bubbling Under ranking, it enters the Hot 100 with 8.7 million all-format radio audience impressions (up 13%) and 4 million official U.S. streams (up 4%) in the March 15-21 tracking week, according to Luminate.

The song also ranks at No. 22 on Country Airplay, a new high, and No. 25 on Hot Country Songs after reaching No. 24.

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Activity on TikTok has contributed to the song’s growing profile. Martin began teasing it on the platform in September 2022, performing acoustic clips on his profile ahead of its official release. To date, the song has soundtracked more than 26,000 clips on TikTok, where Martin boasts nearly 400,000 followers. Many users are resonating with the lyrics detailing Martin’s struggles with everyday life, including the line, “rubbin’ two nickels just tryin’ to make a dime/ hard to make a livin’ while the gas is so high.” Such autobiographical elements have also helped spark the success of other country stars of late, including Jelly Roll and Oliver Anthony.

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“We Ride” is on Martin’s third solo LP, Poets & Old Souls, which was released in March 2023 and reached No. 12 on the Heatseekers Albums chart this January. He previously released Self Inflicted Scars in 2022 and If It Was Easy in 2019.

Martin has charted two other songs on Billboard’s charts. He made his first overall chart appearance in May 2021, when “Beauty in the Struggle” debuted and peaked at No. 23 on Country Digital Song Sales. In 2022, “Fafo (Part 1)” — featuring Charlie Farley, Austin Tolliver and OG Caden — reached No. 10 on Rap Digital Song Sales.

Martin hails from Logansport, La., and worked on an oil rig before pivoting to music. Much of his musical catalog details his difficult life experiences — addiction, attempted suicide, brain injury and relapse.

Martin has a string of tour dates scheduled through October, including opening spots for Morgan Wallen and Chris Young. Last summer, he made his debut at the Grand Ole Opry, where he performed “We Ride” and “Goin for Broke.”

Elbow turns up the volume with Audio Vertigo, the leader on the midweek U.K. chart.
Audio Vertigo is the Bury, England band’s 10th studio album. And if it holds its position, the collection will give Guy Garvey and Co. their fourth U.K. leader after 2014’s The Take Off And Landing Of Everything, 2017’s Little Fictions and 2019’s Giants Of All Sizes.

Based on sales and streaming data captured at the midweek point, the British alternative rock outfit holds off Future and Metro Boomin’s collaborative collection, We Don’t Trust You. It’s at No. 2 on the midweek chart, and should become Future’s fourth and Metro Boomin’s third U.K. top 10 album. Three tracks from it are aiming for top 20 debuts on the national singles survey.

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Veteran Scottish alt-rock act the Jesus and Mary Chain could snag a career-best with Glasgow Eyes. It’s forecast to complete an all-new top 3, at No. 3, for the group’s third top 10 title.

Following the release of a deluxe edition, Olivia Rodrigo’s former leader GUTS should spill into the top 10 once again. It’s up 15-4 on the chart blast. The LP, which originally logged a single week at No. 1 in 2023, should yield the week’s highest new Official Singles Chart entry, with “Obsessed” predicted to bow at No. 6. The “Spilled” version of GUTS includes five more songs, including a new cut, “So American”; the other four songs were the “secret” tracks that appeared on a variety of GUTS vinyl releases: “Obsessed,” “Scared of My Guitar,” “Stranger” and “Girl I’ve Always Been”.

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Finally, new titles from Starsailor (Where The Wild Things Grow), Fletcher (In Search Of The Antidote) and The Staves (All Now) are cruising for top 10 berths, while LPs from Waxahatchee (Tigers Blood at No. 12), a project led by Alabama-born singer-songwriter Katie Crutchfield, and Gossip (Real Power at No. 18) could bag top 20 debuts.

All will be revealed when the Official Charts are published late Friday, March 29.

Another beautiful week is unfolding for Benson Boone in the U.K., where his global hit “Beautiful Things” (via Warner Records) is on track for a second week at No. 1.

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The Washington-born singer-songwriter’s breakthrough song has led both of Billboard’s Global singles tallies and, for the first time, lifted to No. 1 in the U.K. last week.

Based on early sales and streaming data published by the Official Charts Company, “Beautiful Things” should nail another cycle at the top in the U.K.

Thanks to the release of the deluxe GUTS (spilled) edition, Olivia Rodrigo should bag the highest new entry with “Obsessed.” It’s new at No. 6 on the chart blast, and should give the U.S. pop phenomenon her 12th U.K. top 10 single.

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Rodrigo has set several U.K. chart records in her young career. When her debut album SOUR hit No. 1 on the U.K.’s Official Chart in May 2021 in the same week her single “Good 4 U” led the national singles survey, she became, at 18 years and 3 months, the youngest solo artist to snag the U.K. chart double.

Along the way, SOUR set the U.K. mark record for the most first-week streams for a debut album, and, in June 2021, Rodrigo became the first female solo artist to land three simultaneous U.K. top 5 singles: “Good 4 U,” “Déjà vu” and “Traitor.” SOUR logged five total weeks at No. 1, and GUTS completed one week at the top.

Meanwhile, Future and Metro Boomin’s collaborative LP We Don’t Trust You should drop the maximum three tracks into the U.K. singles chart, all impacting the top 20. Based on early predictions, “Like That” is poised to enter at No. 7, “Type Shit” could start at No. 11 and the title track could bow at No. 14.

Finally, Irish singer-songwriter Hozier is targeting a No. 16 with his new song, “Too Sweet.” It’s on target for a No. 16 start.

All will be revealed when the Official Charts are published late Friday, March 29.