Rapper Lil Baby's Wham is the No. 1 album in the United States this week. Coming in at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 chart dated Saturday is Bad Bunny's Debi Tirar Mas Fotos, followed by SZA's SOS at No.
WHAM is Lil Baby's fourth overall No. 1 on the Billboard 200, following 2022's It's Only Me, 2021's The Voice of the Heroes and 2020's My Turn. The Atlanta rapper's first album, 2
For the fourth time in four tries this decade, Lil Baby has the No. 1 album in the country.
Lil Baby's 'Wham' is the first new No. 1 album of the year as Bad Bunny trails closely behind with 'Debí Tirar Más Fotos' at No. 2.
This week, we get a fresh jolt of energy, as SZA and Lamar make way for two blockbuster debuts. Lil Baby enters the chart at No. 1 with WHAM — an acronym for "Who Hard As Me," not a tribute to the duo who spent last Christmas in the top 5 — which becomes the rapper's fourth consecutive chart-topper and seventh album to hit the top 10.
Lil Baby is often held to the fire for his 2022 album, It's Only Me. Now he reveals he didn't want to put that project out.
But previously, Lil Baby revealed his relationship with Gunna is finished. In an interview with Charlamagne Tha God, Lil Baby revealed he “ain’t got no relationship” with Gunna. Charla would push forward, stating the Internet believes Lil Baby doesn’t think he can make a hit without Gunna. To which he replied, “The Internet will say anything.”
Lil Baby’s WHAM debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with 140,000 equivalent album units. Bad Bunny follows at No. 2 with DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS. Check out the full chart recap!
Lil Baby’s “Wham” becomes his fourth No. 1 ... The remaining titles in the Top 10 of the albums list are SZA’s “SOS,” which slips to No. 3 after two consecutive weeks at No. 1 (12 ...
Lil Baby’s new release, WHAM, debuts at No. 1 on this week’s Billboard 200 albums chart. This marks the fourth consecutive chart-topping record from the Atlanta rapper, and his seventh Top 10 album of his career.
The Billboard 200 albums chart measures the top releases during the weekly tracking period every Friday through Thursday. While it used to be determined strictly by record sales, the ever-changing landscape of music consumption led Billboard to update its methodology for the 21st century.