Metallica’s self-titled “Black Album” is 1,000 weeks of official UK rock and metal album … more
Redferns
It’s a big week for Metallica on the UK charts. The hard rock group is one of several acts from that side of the music business, maintaining a constant presence with at least one or two tallies at a time, but this period is particularly thrilling for the band as Metallica returns to multiple rankings on both albums and songs.
It may be considered perhaps the most successful full-length – at least when looking at commercial indicators, you will reach an incredible milestone as it reappears.
Metallica’s self-titled album reaches 1,000 weeks
Metallica’s self-titled album is a bestselling UK release this week.
Returning, Metallica hits an incredibly groundbreaking figure. At this frame, Full Length spent 1,000 weeks as one of the nation’s top 40 bestselling rock releases.
The doll master follows behind (far)
Metallica was the first release by a band of the same name, reaching four-digit stays on the official Rock & Metal Albums chart. One other project by the group, Master of Puppets, has been dividing three digits since it has taken 144 weeks to tally. Metallica manages more weeks on the official Rock & Metal Albums chart than all the other efforts of the band combined.
Metallica joins the elite club
Once a self-titled project reaches 1,000 weeks in tally, you will be participating in three other projects currently present on the official Rock & Metal Albums chart that achieved the same show. Nirvana’s Nevermind leads the rankings with 1,453 stays. Guns n’ Roses has maintained his desire to destroy the list for 1,222 periods, and Linkin Park’s debut full-length hybrid theory recently joined the group, and now has up to 1,032 turns on the roster.
Two Metallica Singles Charts
Metallica has only won one hit album in the UK this week, but the successful songs help the band hear them. “Enter Sandman” returns to the official Rock & Metal Singles Chart top 10, pushing from 13th to 7th. The group doubles in tally as “Nothing Matters” reappears in the final place at No. 40.