As one of the first legally released full albums of mash-ups, the set earns Jay-Z his second No. 1 on the big chart this year, following "Unfinished Business" (Jive/Def Jam/IDJMG), his collaboration with R. Kelly, which topped The Billboard 200 just last month.
As last year's "The Black Album" (Roc-A-Fella/Def Jam) was released in November Jay-Z just misses scoring three No. 1 albums in one year. As it stands, the retiring rapper boasts eight Billboard 200 chart-toppers and a U.S. sales total of 21 million.
"Numb/Encore," the first single from the blend of Linkin Park and Jay-Z songs, earned Linkin Park the first crossover hit of its career with last week's No. 94 entry on Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks list. The group's latest studio album, "Meteora" (Warner Bros.), debuted last year at No. 1 with 810,000 and has sold 4.7 million to date.
After just one week on top, U2's "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb" slides to No. 2 on a 66% dip to sales of 288,000 units. Kelly Clarkson's second RCA effort "Breakaway" earns the No. 3 slot with 250,000 units. The original "American Idol" winner opened at No. 1 last year with 297,000 copies of her debut "Thankful," which has moved 2.1 million to date.
New York rapper Nas, who has three chart-topping Billboard 200 albums to his credit, enters at No. 5 with "Street's Disciple." The Sony Urban Music/Columbia set sold 232,000 copies, an improvement over 2002's "God's Son," which bowed at No. 18 with 156,000 copies in 2002; the set has sold 1.2 million to date.
Rapper T.I. represents the South with a No. 7 bow for "Urban Legend" (Grand Hustle/Atlantic) on sales of with 193,000 copies. Despite entering behind on the big chart, the Atlanta-bred artist's set beats Nas and "Collision Course" for the No. 1 spot on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Last year, T.I.'s "Trap Muzik" opened at No. 4 with 109,000 copies; it has a to-date total of 903,000.
Amidst the flush of new entries, the rest of the top 10 survivors suffered an average 50% slip in sales.
Eminem's "Encore" (Shady/Aftermath/Interscope) falls 2-4 in its fourth week on the chart on a 47% tumble to 248,000 units, while Shania Twain's Mercury Nashville greatest hits collection came up 49% shorter at 195,000 copies, causing a 3-6 drop on the chart.
The 17th installment of "NOW That's What I Call Music!" (Sony BMG/Universal/EMI/Zomba/Capitol) dips 6-8 on a 47% drop to 169,000 and Destiny's Child's "Destiny Fulfilled" (Sony Urban Music/Columbia) slips 4-9 after a 51% decline to 164,000.
And Toby Keith's "Greatest Hits 2" still hangs on to a top 10 berth despite a 57% dip to 142,000 units. The DreamWorks Nashville/Interscope set drops five slots to No. 10.
Josh Groban's "Live at the Greek" (Reprise/Warner Bros.) gathered 84,000 copies in its first week to debut at No. 24. His last studio set, "Closer," gets a 20-slot boost to No. 51 on a 24% increase to sales of 36,000. The 2003 album debuted at No. 4 with 375,000 copies and peaked at No. 1 two months later; it has sold 4 million to date.
Gerald Levert's "Do I Speak for the World?" (Atlantic) rounds out the week's top 50 debuts at No. 29 with 66,000 copies. His "Stroke of Genius" (Elektra) entered at No. 6 last year with 97,000 copies and has a to-date total of 384,000 copies.
Overall U.S. album sales dipped 8.5% from the previous week to 17.8 million units and about 5.3% from the same week last year. With 583 million units, sales for 2004 are beating those of last year by about 2.3%.



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