threechordwonder wrote:And 'Transformer' has crept back into the UK albums Top 40 (at number 35)
In related news:
A predictable posthumous US sales jump for
Transformer and "Walk on the Wild Side" (quoted from
a New York Times article):
New York Times wrote:Sales of Mr. Reed?s music jumped, predictably, after news of his death spread on Sunday afternoon. His solo albums sold about 3,000 copies in the United States, more than six times as many as the week before; the Velvet Underground also sold around 3,000 albums, up more than 200 percent. (SoundScan?s publicly reported numbers are rounded.)
Mr. Reed?s most popular album was ?Transformer,? from 1972, with 1,400 copies sold (up more than 500 percent, SoundScan said), and ?Walk on the Wild Side? was the most popular track, with 6,500 times. Spotify said that streams of Mr. Reed?s songs increased 3,000 percent around the world in the 12 hours after news of his death emerged.
Even with those gains none of Mr. Reed?s releases sold enough copies to crack Billboard?s album and singles charts. But his posthumous numbers will still probably be up again when the weekly sales are tabulated again, since SoundScan?s accounting period ended on Sunday evening and tributes have continued to pour in.
And Morrissey is releasing his 2011 live cover of "Satellite of Love" as a single, due 2 December (quoted from
endorsed fansite True to You):
True to You wrote:Parlophone Records will release Satellite of Love by Morrissey as a digital download on December 2nd. Recorded live at the Chelsea Ballroom at the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas on 25 November 2011, the release will be further available in January as a heavyweight 12-inch disc and a 7-inch picture disc, supported by additional live tracks.
Satellite of Love is, of course, a song written by Lou Reed, who died on 27th October.
Finally, "Perfect Day" managed a peak position of #25 in the
Dutch charts, staying in for two weeks (the second week it was at #79). No albums have re-charted so far. (For the statisticians among us, historically, "Lou Reed Live" and "Coney Island Baby" peaked highest in the Netherlands, both at #4, while "New York" had the longest chart run at 29 weeks.)