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Aaliyah Charts Her First New Top 10 Hit In More Than 20 Years
Aaliyah Charts Her First New Top 10 Hit In More Than 20 Years

Forbes

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Aaliyah Charts Her First New Top 10 Hit In More Than 20 Years

It's been almost a quarter-century since Aaliyah passed away tragically at the age of 22 in an airplane crash. The R&B singer rose to prominence before the new millennium, and her career was seemingly just getting started when she passed away. Decades after her loss, Aaliyah's legacy remains a powerful one, and her estate has carefully doled out a handful of posthumous tracks in the past few years – tunes which have become clear successes on a handful of Billboard's genre-specific lists. This frame, the late superstar even manages to score a new proper smash, her first in many years. 'Gone' Rises Into the Top 10 R&B musician Tank joined Aaliyah on'Gone,' which dropped in May, and the tune reached a number of radio rosters in America upon its promotion. This week, the two genre favorites push 'Gone' from No. 11 to No. 7 on the Adult R&B Airplay chart, and the track cracks the top 10 for the first time on the list of the most successful songs on R&B stations across the United States that cater to a more mature audience. Aaliyah's Fourth Top 10 Smash As 'Gone' ascends, Aaliyah claims her fourth top 10 hit on the Adult R&B Airplay chart, and her second posthumous win. The new collaboration joins 'At Your Best (You Are Love),' 'Back & Forth,' and 'I Care 4 U,' which peaked at Nos. 4, 6, and 8, respectively. Two Decades Since Aaliyah's Last New Top 10 It's been more than 20 years since Aaliyah scored a new top 10 on the Adult R&B Airplay ranking. 'I Care 4 U' reached the highest tier in late 2002, more than a year after her death. Both 'At Your Best (You Are Love)' and 'Back & Forth' found their way into the uppermost region more than 30 years ago in 1994. Tank's Sixteenth Top 10 Hit Tank has now scored four times as many top 10s on the Adult R&B Airplay chart as his collaboration partner. That roundup includes nine No. 1s out of the 27 tracks he's pushed to the roster throughout his lengthy career. 'Gone' Holds on one Billboard Chart and Climbs on Another As 'Gone' hits the top 10 on the Adult R&B Airplay list, the duet holds on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart. 'Gone' is steady at No. 28, which remains its best showing on the similarly-composed radio tally. Aaliyah's Posthumous Album Unstoppable 'Gone' is the second single taken from Aaliyah's upcoming posthumous album, which is reportedly titled Unstoppable. There have been many delays that have kept the set from the public, and neither tune pushed from the project has performed very well. In 2021, 'Poison,' which also credits The Weeknd, was also unleashed, but it too failed to make much of a commercial impact in the U.S.

David Bowie's ‘Legacy' Continues To Grow Years After His Death
David Bowie's ‘Legacy' Continues To Grow Years After His Death

Forbes

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

David Bowie's ‘Legacy' Continues To Grow Years After His Death

David Bowie's Legacy compilation reaches 450 weeks on the U.K.'s Official Albums chart, marking his ... More first time hitting such a large number on the tally. NEW YORK - MAY 5: (U.S. TABS AND HOLLYWOOD REPORTER OUT) Singer David Bowie stands backstage at The Film Society of Lincoln Center's Tribute to Susan Sarandon at Avery Fisher Hall May 5, 2003 in New York City. (Photo by) Throughout the years, there have been several David Bowie compilations that have become hugely successful in the United Kingdom, where the rocker is still regarded as one of the most creative and beloved musicians, even nearly a decade after his passing. Among his many popular collections of singles, live recordings, and other tunes, one stands out as perhaps the most commercially viable of the bunch: Legacy. The title can always be found on the weekly rankings in the U.K., as people never stop listening to his catalog. Legacy brings Bowie's name to a special landmark this week — one he never reached during his lifetime. Legacy Reaches 450 Weeks on the Official Albums Chart Bowie's Legacy continues to grow, as the compilation hits 450 weeks spent on the Official Albums chart. The tally ranks the most consumed EPs and full-length projects of any genre or format in the U.K. each week. The compilation is far and away Bowie's longest-running success, and has been for quite a while, and every time it reaches another special figure, Bowie posthumously does as well. At the moment, Legacy sits at No. 74 on the Official Albums chart, down just a few spaces from several days ago. The compilation previously peaked at No. 5 — a somewhat surprisingly low position for a title that has managed to live on the ranking for years and will likely remain there for several more. Plays on Spotify, Apple Music, and other platforms are largely keeping Legacy afloat, as the compilation does not currently appear on any sales rankings, but it does rise to No. 59 on the Official Albums Streaming chart. No Other David Bowie Album is Even Close No other album by Bowie has managed to crack 200 weeks on the Official Albums chart, aside from Legacy. His early set The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars ranks as his second-longest-running, with 168 weeks. That figure narrowly beats Best of, which has racked up 163 stays on the tally. Legacy Was Released Months After David Bowie's Death Legacy was released in November 2016, less than a year after Bowie passed away at age 69. The compilation didn't differ much from several past projects, but its timing turned it into a bestseller, as the world was mourning Bowie's creative vision and voice at the time. It is still the title that people focus on when listening to the late star's music, so it's the one that remains on the charts.

Elizabeth Emblem awarded to Manx firefighter killed on duty 1965
Elizabeth Emblem awarded to Manx firefighter killed on duty 1965

BBC News

time04-07-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Elizabeth Emblem awarded to Manx firefighter killed on duty 1965

An Isle of Man firefighter who died in the line of duty in 1965 has been posthumously honoured for his "extraordinary courage and selfless service".Henry Bertram Kenna has been awarded the Elizabeth Emblem, which is named after the late Queen and recognises public servants who died in the line of Officer Kenna collapsed and died after attending a commercial building fire in Douglas on 22 November is among 100 people being posthumously recognised across the British Isles and is the first person on the Isle of Man to receive it. Mr Kenna attended the blaze on Athol Street on foot as emergency teams were already attending a separate entered the building alone to search of people inside, but collapse after emerging from the of Man Lieutenant Governor Sir John Lorimer said the award, which will be formally presented to Mr Kenna's family, honours his "selfless actions and ultimate sacrifice" that day. 'Immensely proud' Sir John said: "This long-overdue recognition honours not only his bravery, but the enduring contribution of our island's emergency services."Chief Fire Officer Mark Christian said: "The actions of station officer Kenna on that fateful day were nothing short of heroic."He said he firefighter, who was known to his friends as Bert, "showed no hesitation in entering the building to try and help others and, tragically, made the ultimate sacrifice"."We are immensely proud to see station officer Kenna and his family recognised for his bravery and selflessness," he Elizabeth Emblem was extended to the Crown Dependencies and devolved administrations last year. Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.

Ólafur Arnalds & Talos: A Dawning review – Five stars for this emotion-filled celebration of Eoin French's life
Ólafur Arnalds & Talos: A Dawning review – Five stars for this emotion-filled celebration of Eoin French's life

Irish Times

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Ólafur Arnalds & Talos: A Dawning review – Five stars for this emotion-filled celebration of Eoin French's life

A Dawning      Artist : Ólafur Arnalds & Talos Label : Deutsche Grammophon Operating under the stage name Talos, Eoin French was an unheralded virtuoso of Irish dream pop. Each of his three studio albums was sublime in its own distinct way, whether conjuring beautifully untethered soundscapes or cradling his expressive voice in otherworldly folk arrangements. Halfway between My Bloody Valentine and The Lord of the Rings, these were songs that took you somewhere else, constructed with an artisan's eye for detail (French was a qualified architect) and a poet's mastery of emotion. Sadly, French died last year aged just 36. The depth of that loss is underscored by his posthumous new release. A Dawning is a collaboration with the Icelandic composer, producer and DJ Ólafur Arnalds that brims with feeling yet is ultimately not an elegy for French but a celebration of his life. Given the context, it's an understandably challenging listen at times. But, in its totality, it is also a hugely comforting one, and credit is due to Arnalds for persevering with finishing the project on his own at his studio in Reykjavík. READ MORE Arnalds is renowned for his sweeping, cinematic work, as perhaps best exemplified by the soundtrack to the ITV drama Broadchurch. Here, however, it is the moments of intimacy that land the heaviest, such as when French takes vocals on the hushed Signs, singing of 'our setting sky / that burns across the ocean'. It's a poignant image that locates the song in west Co Cork, where a substantial chunk of the LP was recorded and where the coastline can offer stunning views of the Atlantic. Much of A Dawning was written before French became unwell. For that reason it feels trite to read it as a swansong or his way of saying goodbye to his audience. There is also the fact that his voice has always been marked by melancholy, and A Dawning is in the same register of regretful wonder. That hush falls heavy as morning snowfall on Bedrock. Here a stark piano backs French's high-pitched voice; think the Weeknd or Bon Iver standing on a clifftop of the Beara Peninsula, singing to the sheep and the waves. Because Arnalds and French are so dialled into each other musically, it can be challenging to say where one's contribution ends and the other's begins. That they had a natural chemistry was first identified by Mary Hickson , who encouraged them to work together at her Sounds from a Safe Harbour festival, in Cork. 'She seemed very sure that we would get along musically,' Arnalds has commented. 'She was right, of course. It was the start of an incredible, inspiring, heartbreaking but heartfelt journey that took us places we could never have imagined in our wildest dreams.' Holed up together in a hotel suite – not the sort of place redolent of epic sunsets or craggy cliffs – they hit it off immediately. Signs, the first song they wrote, crackles with the aura of artists comfortable in each other's company. The process continued even after French's cancer diagnosis: the material is alive with a diaristic sense of time in place, such as on the gossamer-light West Cork. Beautifully attuned, French and Arnalds evoke the craggy majesty of the hinterland around French's home in Clonakilty, where it can feel as if you have travelled to the ends of the earth and that nothing is left but sky, sea and mystery. The record's centrepiece, paradoxically, arrives right at the end, with We Didn't Know We Were Ready. Be warned that this is a heart-wrenching number that is going to reduce even the most insensitive listener to a quivering wreck. It opens with French wondering about the meaning of life and beyond: 'With the answers at our feet / Will we break the grounds beneath?' The song is a hurricane of feeling packed into four minutes, as was made clear when Arnalds performed it on The Tommy Tiernan Show, on RTÉ, accompanied by Dermot Kennedy, The Staves and the track's co-writers, Niamh Reagan and Ye Vagabonds. They will play it again when Sounds from a Safe Harbour hosts an evening in French's memory in September. If this astonishing record is any clue, it promises to be a tear-jerker for the ages.

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