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    Olivia Rodrigo and Morgan Wallen Dominate the Charts After Eight Weeks

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe ChartsOlivia Rodrigo and Morgan Wallen Dominate the Charts After Eight WeeksThe 18-year-old singer and actress’s song “Drivers License” holds at the top of Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, and the country star’s LP repeats at No. 1 on the Top 200.With few blockbuster releases at the top of the year, the Hot 100 and Top 200 charts haven’t changed much in several weeks. Olivia Rodrigo’s song “Drivers License” holds at No. 1.Credit…Erica HernandezMarch 8, 2021, 2:06 p.m. ETIn late 1966, Elektra Records signed a new band called the Doors, and the label had a feeling its debut was special. To prevent the album from getting lost in the crowded fourth-quarter market, Elektra released it at the start of the next year, when it faced scant competition. “The Doors” became a sensation, eventually reaching No. 2 on the Billboard chart.The strategy of rolling out a hot album in the January doldrums proved lucrative once again this year with “Dangerous: The Double Album” by Morgan Wallen, a country singer-songwriter who rode a lot of buzz to an instant No. 1.But the charts have rarely been as static as they have been this year, as big stars have largely held off releasing new material. That helped Wallen hold at No. 1 for eight weeks now — even as he came under fire last month for using a racial slur — and also given an advantage to Olivia Rodrigo, an 18-year-old singer and actress, who has now dominated the singles chart for eight weeks with her song “Drivers License.”“Dangerous,” which has held strong streaming numbers since it was released, had the equivalent of 82,000 sales in the United States last week, including 103 million streams and 6,000 copies sold as a complete package, according to MRC Data, Billboard’s tracking arm. With few major challengers, “Dangerous” may hold at No. 1 for a ninth week, although competition is coming from Justin Bieber and Drake.“Drivers License,” which had nearly 20 million streams last week, may not hold the top spot much longer, after the long-awaited release of three new Drake songs on “Scary Hours 2.”The rest of this week’s album chart is dominated by other recent hits, most of which have hovered in the Top 10 for weeks if not months: The Weeknd’s hits compilation “The Highlights” (No. 2), Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” (No. 3), Pooh Shiesty’s “Shiesty Season” (No. 4) and Lil Durk’s “The Voice” (No. 5).The highest-charting new release was Julien Baker’s “Little Oblivions,” at No. 39.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    With Seven Weeks at No. 1, Morgan Wallen Breaks a Chart Record

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe ChartsWith Seven Weeks at No. 1, Morgan Wallen Breaks a Chart RecordWith little competition, the singer-songwriter, who was rebuked in February for using a racial slur, is now the first country artist to spend his first seven weeks in the top spot of the Billboard 200.With no major releases to challenge him, Morgan Wallen has dominated the Billboard album chart in 2021.Credit…Ed Rode/Getty Images for CMTMarch 1, 2021Updated 4:02 p.m. ETIs Morgan Wallen’s “Dangerous: The Double Album” the most popular country LP in decades, or just the beneficiary of weak competition?“Dangerous,” Wallen’s second album, was released on Jan. 8, and it became an instant streaming hit. A former contestant on “The Voice,” Wallen has an aw-shucks appeal and a musical approach that is based in traditional country songwriting but, like much of contemporary Nashville, also borrows from pop and hip-hop production techniques, like the use of electronic drum loops.Journalists portrayed him as a charming newcomer with a bit of a bad-boy streak: In October he was booked to perform on “Saturday Night Live” but that invitation was revoked after images circulated on social media showing him cavorting maskless in an Alabama bar. He made an apology video and was welcomed back to “S.N.L.” in December.“Dangerous” opened at No. 1 on Billboard’s album chart and has held strong ever since — even after a video emerged in early February showing him using a racial slur. He was quickly rebuked by the industry, with his songs removed from radio and streaming playlists and his record company saying that it had “suspended” his contract. But Wallen made another apology video, and fans continued to stream his music.“Dangerous” has now logged seven weeks at No. 1, the longest consecutive run at the top by any album since Drake’s “Views” five years ago. “Dangerous” is also the only country LP to spend its first seven weeks at No. 1 in the 64-year history of the Billboard 200, the magazine’s flagship album chart. (Other big country albums, like Garth Brooks’s “Ropin’ the Wind,” from 1991, and Billy Ray Cyrus’s “Some Gave All,” from 1992, have racked up more weeks at No. 1 over all, but not in their first seven weeks out.)Last week, “Dangerous” had the equivalent of 89,000 sales in the United States, including 111 million streams and 7,000 copies sold as a complete package, according to MRC Data, Billboard’s tracking arm. Since it came out, “Dangerous” — which contains 30 songs, with three more on a “bonus” version — has had the equivalent of just over one million sales in the United States, including 1.1 billion streams.Wallen’s fans have clearly been devoted to him, even as his mullet-framed face has become a dart board target for criticism of the music industry’s troubled history with race, particularly in the country genre. But there is another explanation for the continued success of “Dangerous”: Nothing else has come along to supplant it.For the last seven weeks, Wallen’s biggest competition has come from weeks- or months-old albums by Taylor Swift, Pop Smoke and Lil Durk, and from new releases by Foo Fighters, the Memphis rapper Pooh Shiesty, the R&B singer Jazmine Sullivan and the boy band Why Don’t We, none of which has opened higher than No. 3. The only new title to make it as high as No. 2 was a hits compilation from the Weeknd, released to coincide with his appearance at the Super Bowl.Will Wallen land an eighth week at No. 1? His album’s pace is slowing. But the arriving new releases — by Julien Baker, Madison Beer, Jimmy Edgar and Willie Nelson — don’t include any obvious blockbusters.The rest of this week’s Top 5 is typical for this year so far, with recurring hits, some of them many months old, but none with enough sales and streams to topple “Dangerous”: Ariana Grande’s “Positions” (No. 2, thanks to a “deluxe” reissue with five new tracks), Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” (No. 3), Lil Durk’s “The Voice” (No. 4), Pooh Shiesty’s “Shiesty Season” (No. 5).AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Despite Rebukes, Morgan Wallen Earns a Sixth Week at No. 1

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe ChartsDespite Rebukes, Morgan Wallen Earns a Sixth Week at No. 1The country star’s “Dangerous: The Double Album” continues to perform well on the Billboard chart, three weeks after he was caught on video using a racial slur.With six weeks at the top of the Billboard 200, Morgan Wallen has tied the longest run at No. 1 since Taylor Swift’s “Folklore” last summer.Credit…Charles Sykes/Invision, via Associated PressFeb. 22, 2021, 10:50 a.m. ETFor three weeks now, the music industry has agonized over what to do about Morgan Wallen.One of country’s newest stars, Wallen had been caught on video casually shouting a racial slur to a friend. After the music world banded together last summer, promising to hold itself accountable for racial inequities, there needed to be action.Denunciations poured forth on social media, and Wallen’s record label “suspended” his contract. Radio stations and streaming services quickly scrubbed his songs from playlists. Artists and commentators gathered at roundtables, wrestling over Nashville’s rocky history with race. Wallen apologized. Twice.But the marketplace has apparently been less troubled by Wallen’s transgression, sending his breakthrough release, “Dangerous: The Double Album” to No. 1 once again. It has held the top spot on Billboard’s album chart for six weeks in a row now, the longest run in the peak position since Taylor Swift’s “Folklore” last summer, and the only country album to spend its first six weeks at No. 1 since Garth Brooks’s “The Chase” in 1992.In its sixth week out, “Dangerous” had the equivalent of 93,000 sales in the United States, including 112 million streams and 10,000 copies sold as a full album, according to the tracking service MRC Data, which is owned by Billboard’s parent company. So far, “Dangerous,” which has 33 tracks in its “bonus” version, has logged just short of one billion streams in the United States.“Dangerous” has been aided by minimal competition. This week, the strongest contender against it was “After Hours,” the nearly year-old album by the Weeknd, who played the Super Bowl halftime show on Feb. 7. Last week, “After Hours” had the equivalent of 42,000 sales — less than half that of “Dangerous” but enough for No. 2 on the chart.Also this week, Lil Durk’s “The Voice” is No. 3; Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” is No. 4; and the Memphis rapper Pooh Shiesty’s “Shiesty Season” is No. 5 in its second week out.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Dolly Parton Statue Has Tennessee’s Support, but Not Parton’s

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyDolly Parton Statue Has Tennessee’s Support, but Not Parton’sThe state legislature was considering a bill that would kick off plans to erect the statue on Capitol grounds. She has asked that the bill be pulled.“Given all that is going on in the world, I don’t think putting me on a pedestal is appropriate at this time,” Parton said in a statement.Credit…Robyn Beck/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesFeb. 18, 2021, 2:14 p.m. ETIt was something that Democrats and Republicans in Nashville could agree on: a statue of the country music legend Dolly Parton on the grounds of the State Capitol.The only problem? It doesn’t have Parton’s vote.The singer released a statement on Thursday asking the Tennessee General Assembly to pull a bill that would have started the process for commissioning a statue of her.“Given all that is going on in the world, I don’t think putting me on a pedestal is appropriate at this time,” Parton said in the statement, which was posted on Twitter and Instagram.A monument to Parton gained support during a debate over whether to remove the bust of Nathan Bedford Forrest, a former Confederate general, slave trader and leader of the Ku Klux Klan, from the Tennessee State Capitol. In 2019, a Republican House leader, Representative Jeremy Faison, suggested Parton as a potential replacement for the Forrest bronze; in January, a Democratic legislator, Representative John Mark Windle, introduced a bill to initiate plans for the statue on Capitol grounds. According to the bill, the statue would be positioned to face Ryman Auditorium, a storied country music venue.In her statement, Parton, 75, left the option open for a statue to be erected in the future, writing, “I hope, though, that somewhere down the road several years from now or perhaps after I’m gone if you still feel I deserve it, then I’m certain I will stand proud in our great State Capitol as a grateful Tennessean.”The singer was being considered for her role in country music history, her philanthropy and her strong Tennessee roots. (She was born in Sevierville, Tenn., or as she likes to say, “the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains.”) It helped that Parton has long kept her political opinions to herself, saying in the 2019 podcast series “Dolly Parton’s America” that she avoided the subject because “I have too many fans on both sides of the fence.”Representative Windle’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether he planned to remove the bill from consideration. The bill was scheduled to be considered by a House committee on Tuesday.On social media, Parton’s statement asking for the monument plans to be put aside drew plaudits from fans and fellow musicians who called her a “national treasure,” making some even more confident that the singer was deserving of such a tribute.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Morgan Wallen Holds Onto No. 1 Again Following Use of Racial Slur

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe ChartsMorgan Wallen Holds Onto No. 1 Again Following Use of Racial SlurThe country star, who was condemned by the industry for his language, has only seen his album sales increase since the scandal.Morgan Wallen at the Country Music Awards in 2019. His latest, “Dangerous: The Double Album,” is still topping charts.Credit…Jordan Strauss/Invision/APFeb. 15, 2021, 12:21 p.m. ETNearly two weeks and two apologies later, Morgan Wallen, the country singer who was promptly condemned by the music industry for using a racial slur, is still No. 1 on the charts — and his sales have increased.Earlier this month, in a clip published by TMZ, Wallen was seen on camera casually yelling the anti-Black slur after a night of drinking with friends. The very day next, his chart-topping music was removed from radio stations and streaming service playlists, and his label said, however vaguely, that it was suspending Wallen’s contract.In a five-minute video posted last week, the singer, one of country music’s biggest new stars, said that he was wrong and that he was sorry for his language. “It’s on me to take ownership for this and I fully accept the penalties I’m facing,” Wallen said.But those rebukes have not much affected his commercial standing, with Wallen’s latest album, “Dangerous: The Double Album,” now spending its fifth straight week at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart with the equivalent of 150,000 sales in the United States. Wallen’s songs were streamed 146 million times, down slightly from 154 million the week prior, but his traditional album sales were up 49 percent to 37,000, more than enough to maintain his reign at No. 1.Wallen’s previous album, “If I Know Me,” from 2018, also saw a spike last week, jumping to No. 10 on the chart, its highest-ever position, up from No. 17 the week before, Billboard said.Even as Wallen’s behavior has set off some soul-searching in Nashville, where questions of racial inequity in country music have long been papered over or brushed aside, some supporters of the singer have portrayed him as a victim of so-called “cancel culture.”In his apology video, which followed an earlier written statement of regret, Wallen described the incident as part of a “72-hour bender”; he said he’d been sober since.“One thing I’ve learned already that I’m specifically sorry for is that my words matter, that words can truly hurt a person and at my core that’s not what I’m OK with,” Wallen said. “This week I heard firsthand some personal stories from Black people that honestly shook me.”In response to the uptick in sales, the singer and songwriter Jason Isbell, whose composition “Cover Me Up” was covered by Wallen on “Dangerous,” said last week that he would donate any of his proceeds from the album to the Nashville chapter of the NAACP. “Thanks for helping out a good cause, folks,” Isbell wrote on Twitter, addressing Wallen’s listeners.Also on this week’s chart, “The Highlights,” a greatest hits collection by the Weeknd, released ahead of his Super Bowl performance, is No. 2, largely thanks to streaming. “Medicine at Midnight,” the new album by Foo Fighters, is No. 3, the Memphis rapper Pooh Shiesty’s “Shiesty Season” debuts at No. 4 and Lil Durk’s “The Voice” fell to No. 5 from No. 2.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    A New Generation Pushes Nashville to Address Racism in Its Ranks

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyA New Generation Pushes Nashville to Address Racism in Its RanksA small contingent of country artists and industry players have been speaking up in a business that likes to shut down dissent.Mickey Guyton, the only Black female country singer signed to a major label, quickly tweeted a challenge to Nashville after the star Morgan Wallen was caught on video using a racial slur.Credit…Mark Humphrey/Associated PressFeb. 12, 2021Less than 30 minutes after TMZ posted a video of the country star Morgan Wallen using a racial slur on Feb. 2, Mickey Guyton, the only Black female country singer signed to a major label, tweeted her reaction: “The hate runs deep.”She added, “How many passes will you continue to give?” and “So what exactly are y’all going to do about it. Crickets won’t work this time.”A few other mainstream country artists commented about the incident on social media, but many figured Nashville would do as it has almost always done when one of its stars is under fire: circle the wagons and shut up. “It’s been the norm for country artists to stay silent and not use their platform for controversy,” said Leslie Fram, CMT’s senior vice president of music strategy.By the following day though, radio conglomerates including iHeartMedia, Cumulus and Entercom pulled Wallen’s songs from rotation at hundreds of stations, and major streaming services removed him from playlists. CMT stopped running his videos. The Academy of Country Music declared him ineligible for its upcoming awards. All this while Wallen’s second album, “Dangerous: The Double Album,” topped the Billboard 200 chart for the third straight week.While Guyton’s tweets alone weren’t responsible for the swift rebuke, she is one of a small contingent of mostly female artists — among them Cam, Maren Morris, Margo Price and Amanda Shires — and industry players whose advocacy has pushed the country music business to begin confronting issues of racism and diversity that go beyond one artist’s misdeeds.“I was really encouraged by how fast every group in the industry showed up,” said Cam, a Grammy-nominated singer and songwriter. “But I don’t think aha moments to call someone on something so ingrained in everyone is going to be the tide changer.”“I’d assume a lot of males aren’t speaking out because they’re comfortable in their places of power and money,” said Amanda Shires.Credit…Mark Zaleski/Associated PressThe work these women do isn’t easy to quantify. Much of it is about deliberately nudging the public conversation in Nashville toward uncomfortable questions about racial equity. That can mean using social media to trumpet a book like Layla F. Saad’s “Me and White Supremacy” or excoriate the band formerly known as Lady Antebellum for tangling with a Black artist over the name Lady A. Other times, it’s participating in diversity and inclusion task forces. In November, when Morris was named female vocalist of the year at the Country Music Association Awards, she used her acceptance speech to highlight the struggle of Black women in country music, including Guyton, Rissi Palmer, Yola and Brittney Spencer.That it’s often been a group of women who speak the loudest is perhaps unsurprising. Female artists have faced huge barriers in the industry themselves, from sexual harassment and objectification to unwritten rules limiting airplay for women.“In the female experience, you understand what it is to be the underdog, to come into a situation that’s mostly white-male-driven and try to assert yourself,” said Palmer, who hosts an Apple Music radio show called Color Me Country that spotlights the genre’s Black, Indigenous and Latino roots.Shires, a singer-songwriter who also performs alongside Morris in the Highwomen, put it bluntly: “I’d assume a lot of males aren’t speaking out because they’re comfortable in their places of power and money. Why would they want it to change?”The story of male artists’ dominance in country music is a long-running one. Between 2014 and 2018, 84 percent of artists on Billboard’s year-end country charts were men, according to a study by the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative at the University of Southern California.The relative silence of many of country’s biggest stars, male and female, is partly habit but also partly economics. Whether stars and gatekeepers are indifferent to racism or not, they fear fans are.“If they’re worried they’re going to financially take a fall, they keep their mouths shut,” said Price. “They’d rather keep that rebel dollar.”“For three days, I was threatened, called a racist, a bigot, a nobody,” Rissi Palmer said of the consequences of speaking up online after Charley Pride’s death.Credit… Chip Somodevilla/Getty ImagesBut crediting these mostly white women for being country’s social conscience is itself indicative of the larger problem. “White women speaking up is a result of we don’t let Black women speak up,” said Cam. With a few frequently noted exceptions, in Nashville, she said, “Black people aren’t even allowed in the door, cannot be in writing rooms, cannot get signed, don’t have a Twitter following, so you never hear them.”Part of this work is amplifying those marginalized voices. Shires and Morris have worked with both Spencer and Yola. Morris, Cam and Guyton are part of a group text with Palmer and Andrea Williams, a Black journalist and author based in Nashville, where they share reading suggestions, relay personal experiences and strategize.“How is it that two white women even partially understand what the experience is like for Black people in country?” asked Cam. “It’s because we’re learning from Black women. We watched what’s going on with Mickey and talked to her.” Cam said she and Morris use their platforms to share what they’re learning more widely.Williams, a lively Twitter presence, hasn’t shied from needling the ideologically like-minded — including Morris, and Shires’ husband, Jason Isbell — when she feels they’ve fallen short in bids to be good allies. “I’d rather people not say anything than say the wrong thing,” she said. “Sometimes, you need to listen and learn.” She pointed out that two of the first artists to respond to the Wallen incident, Kelsea Ballerini and Cassadee Pope, posted that his behavior “does not represent” country music.“That’s more hurtful than people who didn’t say anything because you’re diminishing the very real experiences of people who know for a fact this is actually indicative of the way this entire industry works,” she said.Cam stressed the importance of white artists listening to and learning from Black people before speaking out: “We watched what’s going on with Mickey and talked to her.”Credit…Frank Hoensch/Redfern, via Getty ImagesAccording to Williams, focusing on gender obscures country music’s “original sin”: “Country was created with the sole intent of marketing to a particular racial demographic. We divided Southern music into white hillbilly records and Black race records. This dividing line is as stark now as in the 1920s,” she said.This current reckoning traces to last summer’s nationwide Black Lives Matter protests. Just days after George Floyd’s killing at the hands of Minneapolis police, Guyton released the startlingly personal “Black Like Me” and country’s only mainstream male artists of color — Darius Rucker, Kane Brown and Jimmie Allen — spoke forthrightly about their own experiences, while the rest of the country music industry largely struggled to meet the moment. Other artists and executives were quick to share supportive hashtags but in a genre where mainstream Black performers can be counted on one hand and Black faces are hardly any more common behind the scenes, their efforts felt insubstantial.Lorie Liebig, a Nashville-based publicist and journalist, began compiling a Google Doc tracking what country artists had posted — or not posted — in support of Black Lives Matter. Shires was among the first to share the spreadsheet widely, but as it was disseminated, the harshest reactions often were aimed at Liebig herself.“There was a day when it first hit, my Twitter was just cascading with negative responses,” she said. “A lot were saying I was racist toward white people. I ended up being doxxed. They posted my parents’ address.”Many of these women have faced similar bile. “I’ve been called pretty much every name in the book,” said Price. “I’ve had people send me threatening DMs. I’m sure it’s cost me album and ticket sales.”After the Black country pioneer Charley Pride’s death in December, Palmer criticized eulogies that whitewashed his legacy. “For three days, I was threatened, called a racist, a bigot, a nobody,” she said. “I’ve been called a Nazi propagandist, which was my favorite.”But the steady pressure these women have been exerting seems to be starting to shift the conversation. While it remains to be seen whether the consequences Wallen has faced signal any enduring appetite for change — he returned for a fourth week at No. 1 after the incident, and was not roundly condemned by Nashville, where defenders and sympathetic voices spoke up on his behalf — there are signs the ground is moving. Four of the 10 acts chosen for CMT’s “Next Women of Country” this year are Black. The National Museum of African American Music recently opened in downtown Nashville — across the street from country music’s symbolic home, the Ryman Auditorium.“We’re a long way from seeing sweeping changes but every time the light bulb goes on for somebody else, we’re closer,” said Williams. “Because as we all come together, and we’re all firing texts back and forth at midnight in these group chats, we’re more powerful than any of us as individuals. All we need is more people to join the fight.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Amid Industry Rebukes, Morgan Wallen’s Album Stays No. 1

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe ChartsAmid Industry Rebukes, Morgan Wallen’s Album Stays No. 1An online video showing Wallen using a racial slur led to his fall from grace last week, but “Dangerous” became the top-selling album for a fourth time.Radio stations and streaming platforms removed Morgan Wallen’s music from playlists; his label suspended his contract; and he has apologized. He topped the chart again.Credit…Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for CmaFeb. 8, 2021Last week, Morgan Wallen, country music’s biggest new star, quickly fell from grace after a video surfaced of him casually using a racial slur.Within a day, radio stations and streaming platforms removed his music from playlists and his record label decided to “suspend” his contract. Instantly, he became the focal point of an industrywide debate about the long and complex history of racial inequity in Nashville, country music’s power center. Even though some defended him — his sister, Ashlyne, condemned his words but portrayed her brother as a victim of “cancel culture” — Wallen’s time as a chart-topping crossover hero, it would seem, was over.But on Monday, Wallen’s breakthrough second LP, “Dangerous: The Double Album,” notched its fourth week at No. 1 with the equivalent of 149,000 sales in the United States, up almost 15 percent from the week before, according to MRC Data, Billboard’s tracking arm. In every measurement, the numbers for “Dangerous” grew from the previous week. It had 160 million streams, up from 154 million; sold 25,000 copies as a complete package, more than double its previous take; and had 67 percent more downloads of individual tracks.Timing likely played a part in that growth. Billboard’s weekly tracking period goes from Friday to Thursday, so by the time Wallen’s video was published late Tuesday by TMZ, the accounting week was nearly over. But even well after that point, “Dangerous” and its songs were still holding strong on Apple’s iTunes charts, a sign that a large contingent of fans was standing by him.Even under this cloud, “Dangerous” is the first country title to hold its first four weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, the magazine’s flagship album chart, in 18 years; the last to do so was Shania Twain’s “Up!,” which spent its first five weeks in the top spot in late 2002 and early 2003.Where Wallen goes from here is unclear. His label and management company, Big Loud, has not clarified what it means to suspend a contract — a step that some industry figures have already criticized as an empty gesture. But whether the company can unilaterally cancel his deal may depend on the terms of Wallen’s contract. In a statement to TMZ last week, Wallen apologized, saying, “there are no excuses to use this type of language, ever,” and has not since commented.Also on this week’s chart, Lil Durk’s “The Voice” is No. 2, Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” is No. 3, the Weeknd’s “After Hours” is in fourth place and Juice WRLD’s “Legends Never Die” is No. 5.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More