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Chart Beat

Savannah Jade Hits the Canada Country Airplay Chart With 'More Like It'

The sophomore single from the rising Quebec country singer — one half of the duo Five Roses — arrives at No. 52 on the chart. Kingston's Headstones also debut a new track with City and Colour on Mainstream Rock, "Navigate" at No. 36.

Savannah Jade

Savannah Jade

Courtesy Photo

Savannah Jade is belting her way onto the airplay charts this week.

The Quebec singer is maybe best-known as half of the country duo Five Roses, but now she's branching out as a solo singer. Her sophomore single "More Like It" arrives at No. 52 on the Canada Country chart for April 26. It's a barn-burning country-pop track where she sings about what she wants for a date night: no glitz or glamour, just jeans and the local watering hole.


Savannah Jade is no stranger to the limelight, having placed as a semi-finalist with Five Roses in SiriusXM's 2022 Top of the Country competition, as well as touring with Tebey and performing at country festival Boots & Hearts. Her previous single "He's The One" was a Stingray radio trending track, and "More Like It" looks like it will keep building Savannah Jade's momentum.

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There's a couple more Canadian airplay chart debuts this week. Veteran Kingston rockers Headstones collaborate with City and Colour on "Navigate," their first single on Dine Alone Records, arriving on the Mainstream Rock chart at No. 36. Over on Modern Rock, alt-rock stalwarts Our Lady Peace enter with "No Angels In This Town" at No. 36 and long-running indie rock band Born Ruffians debut "What a Ride" at No. 39.

There's not as much movement at the top of the airplay charts this week. Gracie Abrams holds onto the top spot on All-Format with "That's So True." Myles Smith's "Stargazing" continues to lead AC and Chappell Roan's "Pink Pony Club" holds atop CHR/Top 40. ROSÉ and Bruno Mars maintain the top spot on Hot AC with "APT."

Morgan Wallen's "I'm The Problem" moves up to lead Canada Country, while Papa Roach's "Even If It Kills Me" and Mumford & Sons' Rushmere rule Mainstream and Modern Rock, respectively.

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Check out the full Canadian Airplay charts here.

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Quebec to Impose Quotas For French-Language Content On Streaming Platforms
Photo by Kenny Eliason on Unsplash
Streaming

Quebec to Impose Quotas For French-Language Content On Streaming Platforms

Bill 109 could impose big changes for streaming services to improve the discoverability of French-language content in Quebec.

Quebec may soon be getting stricter language regulations on streaming services.

Quebec Culture Minister Mathieu Lacombe tabled a new bill on Wednesday (May 21) that aims to add more French-language content to major streaming platforms, as well as increasing its discoverability and accessibility by establishing quotas. The bill will directly impact platforms that offer media content such as music, TV, video and audiobooks, including giants like Netflix and Spotify.

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