City Times

Macca scores US No. 1 after 36 years

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Paul Mccartney is back on the top of the charts, on Sunday earning his first solo number-one album in the United States in 36 years.

Egypt Station – a confident 16-track album in which Mccartney experiment­s with a younger rock feel in addition to his classic Beatles sound – marked the first time that he has ever debuted as a solo artist on top of the benchmark US Billboard chart.

The English legend – who at 76 retains a hectic touring schedule – spared no promotiona­l effort for the album, appearing on US late-night shows and live streaming an invite-only concert inside New York’s Grand Central Station.

Surprising­ly, Mccartney did not replicate the feat in his native Britain, where Egypt Station debuted at number three, with veteran US rapper Eminem’s surprise album Kamikaze reigning for a second week.

Egypt Station sold the equivalent of 153,000 copies in the United States in the week since its release on September 7, tracking service Nielsen Music said.

Unusually for a chart-topping album in recent years, virtually all of the sales were traditiona­l purchases rather than through streaming or individual­ly downloaded tracks.

Mccartney, who last topped the chart as a solo artist in 1982 with Tug of War, achieved the second largest gap between number-one albums for any artist.

Johnny Cash holds the record with a break that was seven months longer than Mccartney’s when the country great posthumous­ly hit number one in 2006.

Since Tug of War, Mccartney has also reached number one four times in the United States with Beatles anthologie­s.

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