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FYI

Meghan Patrick Is Hot, But So Is Susan Aglukark

The following are tracks delivered to radio by digital distributor DMDS/Yangaroo in Canada and broken down into three categories.

Meghan Patrick Is Hot, But So Is Susan Aglukark

By FYI Staff

The following are tracks delivered to radio by digital distributor DMDS/Yangaroo in Canada and broken down into three categories. Top Downloads and Top Canadian Downloads represent the most copied tracks in the weeks ending  on April 2. Most Active Indies blends downloads and streams, with the affiliated label and radio promotions company in parentheses.


Top Downloads:

  1. Meghan Patrick “Never Giving Up On You” (Warner)
  2. Ariana Grande “pov” (Republic/Universal)
  3. Demi Lovato “Dancing With The Devil” (Island/Universal)
  4. Olivia Rodrigo “déjà vu” (Geffen/Universal)
  5. Ali Gatie with Marshmello & Ty Dolla $ign “Do You Believe” (Warner)
  6. Lil Nas X “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” (Columbia/Sony)
  7. Maroon 5 “Beautiful Mistakes (feat. Megan Thee Stallion)” (Interscope/Universal)
  8. All Time Low “Once In A Lifetime” (Warner)
  9. Max Parker “Good Time” (Indie/RPMpromo)
  10. Ryan Hurd with Maren Morris “Chasing After You” (Arista Nashville/Sony)

Top CanCon Downloads:

  1. Meghan Patrick “Never Giving Up On You” (Warner)
  2. Ali Gatie with Marshmello & Ty Dolla $ign “Do You Believe” (Warner)
  3. Max Parker “Good Time” (Indie/RPMpromo)
  4. Susan Aglukark “Forgiveness” (Aglukark Ent/ThatEricAlper Promo)
  5. Felix Cartal & Kiiara “Happy Hour” (Physical Presents/Universal)
  6. Shawn Hook “Take Me Home” (Ultra/DMD Promo)
  7. Hailey Benedict “Strike 4” (Fenwick/Taylor Ent)
  8. AJA “Red Button” (Indie/Frontside Promo)
  9. Nate Haller “Lightning In A Bottle” (Indie/R. Chubey Promo)
  10. Carolina East “All The Things” (Indie/L. Tutty Promo)

Most Active Indies:

  1. Max Parker “Good Time” (Indie/RPMpromo)
  2. Hailey Benedict “Strike 4” (Fenwick/Taylor Ent)
  3. Carolina East “All The Things” (Indie/L. Tutty Promo)
  4. Nate Haller “Lightning In A Bottle” (Indie/R. Chubey Promo)
  5. AJA “Red Button” (Indie/Frontside Promo)
  6. Susan Aglukark “Forgiveness” (Aglukark Ent/ThatEricAlper Promo)
  7. Justin Fancy “Makes Me Wanna” (Indie/B. Martineau Promo)
  8. Tenille Arts “Give It To Me Straight” (19th and Grand/R. Chubey Promo)
  9. Jason Benoit “A Lot About A Little” (JDZL/Vicktory/Sharp 9 Promo)
  10. River Town Saints “Long Time Coming” (Indie/L. Tutty Promo)
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Johnny, Tommy and Joey Ramone of the Ramones perform on stage in the late 1970s.
Howard Barlow/Redferns

Johnny, Tommy and Joey Ramone of the Ramones perform on stage in the late 1970s.

Rock

The Ramones to Honor 50th Anniversary of Debut Album With Year-Long Celebration Featuring Reissues, Museum Exhibit

An authorized exhibit will open at the Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas on July 4 and Rhino Records will announce a series of reissues and remastered, upscaled videos.

Do you wanna dance? Good, because 50 years ago Thursday (April 23) The Ramones released their self-titled debut album, the punk rock atom bomb that blew our minds with such classics as “Blitzkrieg Bop,” “Beat on the Brat,” “Judy Is a Punk,” “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend,” “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue,” “53rd & 3rd” and “Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World,” among others.

The leather jacket and ripped jeans quartet originally comprised of singer Joey, guitarist Johnny, bassist Dee Dee and drummer Tommy Ramone wrote the template for the genre with their signature mix of bubblegum and girl group-spiked pop run through a blender on high speed in barely two-minute songs whose lyrics read like a suburban parent’s worst nightmare.

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.
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