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Drake and PartyNextDoor’s ‘Some Sexy Songs 4 U’ Is No. 1

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Drake and PartyNextDoor’s ‘Some Sexy Songs 4 U’ Is No. 1

News flash: Drake’s music is not dead.

Although the Canadian rapper, the longtime prince of streaming, was badly pummeled in a diss-track war with Kendrick Lamar last year, and two weeks ago Lamar performed Exhibit A of that fight — the vicious “Not Like Us” — at the Super Bowl halftime show, Drake’s latest album has sailed to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart.

“Some Sexy Songs 4 U,” a collaborative album with the singer and producer PartyNextDoor — with scant reference to Drake’s feud with Lamar — was released on Valentine’s Day and opens at the top of the latest chart. It had the equivalent of 246,000 in the United States, including 287 million streams and 25,000 copies sold as a complete package, according to the tracking service Luminate.

It is Drake’s 14th title to go to No. 1, counting collaborative releases, which ties him with Jay-Z and Taylor Swift for the most albums by a solo act to reach the top of Billboard’s chart. (The Beatles have more No. 1 albums than anybody, solo or group, with 19.)

The release of “Some Sexy Songs” also came after Drake sued Universal Music Group, the giant label behind him and Lamar, for defamation in “Not Like Us” (which was lightly censored at the Super Bowl). His joint album was released by Republic, a Universal label, along with OVO Sound, a Drake imprint, which is distributed through Sony Music, a Universal competitor.

The numbers for “Some Sexy Songs” are modest for Drake, whose knack for taking over streaming services has made him one of the top-selling artists of the last decade-plus. Its 246,000 “album equivalents” last week — a composite figure that combines popularity on streaming with old-fashioned unit sales — is considerably lower than the opening-week totals for Drake’s last two releases, “For All the Dogs” (402,000 in 2023) and “Her Loss,” a joint album with 21 Savage (404,000 in 2022). But it is better than the 204,000 he had for “Honestly, Nevermind” in 2022 — still his lowest opening-week number for a studio LP — and the 109,000 for “Care Package,” a 2019 collection of non-album tracks.

Also this week, Sabrina Carpenter’s “Short n’ Sweet” rises five spots to No. 2 after the release of an expanded version, and Lamar’s “GNX” falls two to No. 3, after it returned to the top slot in the week following his triumphant Super Bowl appearance. SZA’s “SOS” is No. 4 and Bad Bunny’s “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” is in fifth place.