#tony khan put the cocaine down and just THINK
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Yeahhhh... I think I might stop watching AEW live for a bit
#aew#all elite wrestling#between the cmll deal#the constant string of random wrestlers coming in#the last minute thrown together matches#the lack of compelling stories lately#and the young bucks getting beat up by FUCKING RIC FLAIR#....#tony khan put the cocaine down and just THINK
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REVIEWING THE CHARTS: 7th July 2019
I have been cooped up sick for the past week so I am so glad I can have a pretty easy episode of REVIEWING THE CHARTS this week, in fact, I have a really easy week âcause nothing really happened. I can pretty much play catch-up and thatâs been great. Iâve even been more active on Twitter because of it. Anyway, time for another round of relatively family-friendly lame pop music ramblings.
Top 10
âI Donât Careâ by Ed Sheeran featuring Justin Bieber is still at the top spot for its eighth week and its only competition is the five other Ed Sheeran singles from his No. 6 Collaborations Project. Oversaturation is not a word Ed Sheeran understands, and Iâll get back to that when I talk about his second of three songs in the top ten right now.
âSenoritaâ by Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello is steady at number-two but Thog donât caare
We have our highest new entry on the chart this week at number-three, the... third newest Ed Sheeran single from the project and by the time youâre probably reading these, fourth-newest (Seriously, Edâs ran himself into a corner if he wants that mini-album bomb considering by now he should damn well know UK chart rules). Itâs âBeautiful Peopleâ featuring Khalid, but weâll talk about it later. Itâs Sheeranâs 40th(!) UK Top 40 hit, and 24th Top 10 (Thatâs a pretty great ratio), and Khalidâs twelfth UK Top 40 as well as his fifth Top 10 (Slightly less great ratio).
Up a single space from the debut last week is âCrownâ by Stormzy at number-four.
Unfortunately, that means he brought Lewis Capaldiâs âHold Me While You Waitâ with him up to number-five.
Oh, hey, itâs Ed Sheeran, I havenât seen him in two spots. I was starting to worry about him â I mean he might be falling off. Sigh, âCross Meâ featuring Chance the Rapper and PNB Rock is down two spaces to number-six. To be fair, I like this song.
âOld Town Roadâ by Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus is surprisingly pretty stagnant at number-seven.
Mabelâs âMad Loveâ is of course up five spaces to number-eight, and looking like a pretty promising Summer hit, as well as being her third UK Top 10.
âWish You Wellâ by Sigala featuring Becky Hill is sadly up three spots to number-nine. Itâs Sigalaâs seventh UK Top 10 and Hillâs third (second as a credited artist).
Finally, we have the unfortunate rebound for âSomeone You Lovedâ by Lewis Capaldi up four spaces back to #10.
Climbers
Itâs not all bad though, my favourite song on the chart right now, âLadbroke Groveâ by AJ Tracey, meets the top 20 at #16, up five from last week, becoming his fourth Top 20 hit. Elsewhere on the chart, âThiago Silvaâ with Dave has debuted at #56 despite being three years old because of a crazed fan at Glastonbury rapping the words (near-)perfectly, but thatâs not in the top 40, so Alexâs 15 minutes of fame wonât get covered here. Dominic Fike also gets his first top 20 with â3 Nightsâ up six spots to #20, which is an incredible song too. âStrike a Poseâ by Young T & Bugsey and Aitch is up five to #22 and âSummer Daysâ by Martin Garrix, Macklemore and Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy is also venturing up the charts, specifically seven spots, at #26. âFind U Againâ by Mark Ronson featuring Camila Cabello is up six to #31 off the debut and âLocationâ by Dave featuring Burna Boy has a chance at a second wind up five to #34. Wow, these are all great songs. Sure, thereâs nothing promising in the new arrivals really, and we can safely ignore âMotherâs Daughterâ by Miley Cyrus getting a video push up seven placements to #33, but this Summer has some pretty great hits so far and Iâm glad it does because otherwise my end-of-year lists would be dry as hell.
Fallers
Most of these fallers this week are also pretty bad songs so it seems to me that the rubbish we kept in Spring is slowly being pushed out finally, as well as some unfortunate losses and songs that debuted high but collapsed afterwards. That last category includes songs like âYou Need to Calm Downâ by Taylor Swift down five to #15, âBounce Backâ by Little Mix down eight to #25 and âMocking Itâ by JAY1 down eight to #27 off the debut despite an EP release. âEasierâ by 5 Seconds of Summer stops wasting everyoneâs time with its sloppy Nine Inch Nails sample down six to #37. Stormzyâs streaming cuts have finally cut the power of âVossi Bopâ, however, which is a great song, down a whopping 11 spaces, but thankfully only to #14, and the pretty good âKilosâ by Bugzy Malone featuring Aitch is down 10 off of the disproportionally high debut considering both artistsâ current popularity last week to #30.
Dropouts & Returning Entries
My only response to this first drop-out is ferocious laughter, as Taylor Swiftâs âME!â featuring Panic! at the Disco has dropped out from #30 after a mere nine weeks on the chart and never hitting #1 or even #2, with a flailing single barely on the charts to save her album release from completely going under. In terms of other drop-outs, there really arenât any to speak of, except more ferocious laughter, as âMEGATRONâ by Nicki Minaj drops out from #34, which was its DEBUT. This means itâs below both âShotgunâ by George Ezra (A song thatâs been in the top 75 for 67 weeks), âThiago Silvaâ and freakinâ âMr. Brightsideâ by the Killers (Which also re-entered outside of the top 40 because of Glastonbury)! Otherwise, we have some drop outs for UK hip-hop, as âMr Sheeenâ by Russ splash and Digga D is out from the debut at #28, and âShine Girlâ by MoStack featuring Stormzy is out from #36. Theyâre both not particularly great songs, but they had some promise.
We have one returning entry for once, which is âGiantâ by Calvin Harris and RagânâBone Man to #40 after it dropped out from that exact space two weeks ago. Sure.
NEW ARRIVALS
#36 â âHigher Loveâ â Kygo and Whitney Houston
Produced by Kygo and Narada Michael Walden â Peaked at #2 in Norway and #63 in the US
So, Whitney Houston was an incredible singer and sadly passed away at age 48 in February 2012, after a decades-long career being wrapped up in personal struggles that soon overshadowed her music, especially her marriage with Bobby Brown, cocaine usage, but still eleven Hot 100 number-ones to her name, including some of the most iconic hit songs of all time such as âI Will Always Love Youâ, and the novelty of being one of, if not the, first African-American female singer to appear on MTV. You all know that. Posthumous releases have been few and far between, mostly consisting of cash-grab compilation albums, reissues and box sets, but there have been four posthumous releases as singles before this, most of which are just from a movie she starred in before she died, including duets with Jordin Sparks and... R. Kelly. Huh. None of them charted, then in 2016, some Malaysian dude sampled her in a cover of a mid-1960s progressive rock song... and that leads to this. I feel I should clarify that this is a Steve Winwood cover (Mostly because he and his co-writer are getting all of the royalties off of this, not even Kygo is credited as a songwriter), since this was his first #1, featuring (uncredited) vocals from Chaka Khan, from 1986, but then Whitney Houston covered it in 1990 for the deluxe Japanese version of her third album (Which explains the Walden guyâs production credit). Somehow, Kygo found the isolated vocals for this deluxe Japanese bonus track (We needed that dude on the Clockman search, I swear â or maybe he just has trunkloads of money) and made it a tropical house song, and itâs actually pretty good.
This is Houstonâs 32nd(!) UK Top 40 hit and Kygoâs eighth, and it has no right to be this good. Youâd think Whitney wouldnât be putting this much effort into a Japanese bonus track, but her vocals donât sound strained or tired here, theyâre just as beautiful as her biggest hits, youâd think she was planning for a single release. The lyrical content isnât anything special but with the grandiosity of the piano and trumpets that build up to a relaxed vocaloid drop that seems anti-climactic until it hits you again with a much more epic drop, you can really feel how desperate Whitney is in the lyrics, even when mangled to hell and back in the vocal fragments. I have nothing to talk about with this song really, and it may be a tad overlong for my taste, but this is decent, especially considering Kygoâs recent efforts and this being a tropical house remix of a Steve Winwood cover that was released exclusively to Japan in 1990 â you wouldnât expect quality out of this, let alone choir vocals in the second drop that really make the song feel pretty religious for... no reason, but I guess Winwoodâs song was always up for interpretation and he must have given this the thumbs-up at the time. The dudeâs never going to complain about free royalties from some EDM DJ, he didnât back in 2004 when Eric Prydz did it.. which, by the way, had a video that even the Prime Minister at the time admitted to being aroused toâokay, why is Steve Winwood the person who I found the most interesting here? Itâs a good song, letâs leave it at that before I go on an essay-length ramble about Steve Winwood, Tony Blair and Japanese Whitney Houston songs.
#29 â âDonât Check on Meâ â Chris Brown featuring Justin Bieber and Ink
Produced by Sheldon Ferguson â Peaked at #13 in New Zealand and #67 in the US
Alright, so, yeah, Iâve used all of my energy up for that first song because I have nothing to talk about for this one or the song afterwards. Itâs Brownâs 36th Top 40 hit here in the UK, which is about 35 too many (Yeah, I liked his last one, âNo Guidanceâ featuring Drake, and Iâm not exactly proud to say that). Itâs Bieberâs 45th (Holy moly) and this Ink womanâs first, mostly because she has never released solo material and doesnât have a Wikipedia page. Ink sounds good on the song, but Bieberâs boring as he always is and Brownâs vocals are incredibly overproduced, especially for this tone of song. In fact, Iâm not going to go in any more depth than I need to, and just leave you with this. This song is a stripped-down acoustic ballad fronted by Chris Brown. Thatâs all you need to know.
#3 â âBeautiful Peopleâ â Ed Sheeran featuring Khalid
Produced by Ed Sheeran, Max Martin, Shellback, Fred Gibson and Alex Gibson (Did this song really need this many producers?) â Peaked at #2 in Ireland and Slovakia, and #26 in the US
I always feel like the highest debuts each week are the ones I have the least to say about, but maybe thatâs because Iâve heard discourse about them all week and I donât care for them enough to go on about how the new Taylor Swift song misses the point of Pride Month or how Chris Brown is an abuser who made up with Drake after a year-long fued that ended anti-climactically, or how Lewis Capaldi makes me want to eat Kermit the Frogâs insides. This song Iâve seen little to no discourse on however, and thatâs pretty telling when all is considered, considering these guys are the two biggest male singer-songwriters out right now, but I think maybe thatâs because the song has little to no discourse to be provoked from it. I mean, the lyrical content is interesting, mostly because itâs about how Sheeran and Khalid donât want to become have their perspective on life clouded by the money and fame... which is very convenient for these guys since thatâs their whole appeal â theyâre down-to-earth lads who sing over a couple guitar&B instrumentals despite being some of the richest entertainers on Earth, and while nothing can really tell me otherwise that these guys are genuine, I canât help but to think the lyrics are less of a genuine message and more just fitting in line with the public appearances theyâve established for themselves over the past decade. It doesnât help that the overproduced instrumental is stodgy and cluttered with nasal vocal samples over some fake handclaps, bumping 808s and... chanting vocals? Also, Iâm pretty sure that Fred Gibson guy snuck his âFred againâ tag into this song as well, during a really janky part in the first verse? That means there are two Ed Sheeran songs with a producer tag. Huh, at least this one doesnât have a PNB Rock verse. The hook is catchy but it breaks momentum with the post-chorus chanting thatâs just dumb as hell, and Iâm pretty underwhelmed with Khalid in comparison to Ed here, where it would usually be a complete wash, but Iâm pretty sure thatâs because Khalid doesnât care enough about perpetuating Ed Sheeranâs image of âHaha, I donât fit in with the current pop scene of flashy clothes and extravagant music videos!â First of all, that isnât the current pop scene at all, it was in 2013 when Ed came on the scene but that has switched entirely, mostly to his benefit, and second of all, Iâm sure Khalid has no issue at all with wearing a suit to a couple awards shows. Heâs barely in his 20s for goodnessâ sake.
EDIT: âI Donât Careâ does not have the âFred againâ tag. âCross Meâ still does, but Iâm just glad Fred Gibson hasnât put his claws on everything he touches.
Conclusion
What a shoddy week. Uh, Best of the Week goes to Kygo and Whitney Houston for âHigher Loveâ and while âDonât Check on Meâ isnât really worthy of my commentary, I honestly think âBeautiful Peopleâ annoys me more, so sadly Iâll have to give Worst of the Week to Ed Sheeran and Khalid. Follow me on Twitter @cactusinthebank for more pop music ramblings and Iâll see you next week!
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