Post Malone's “Pour Me a Drink” featuring Blake Shelton climbs three spots to No. 10 Bulletin boardCompany's Country Airplay Chart (dated September 7). It rose 18% to 18.6 million audience impressions on Aug. 23-29, according to Luminate.
Post Malone adds his second Country Airplay top 10, following Morgan Wallen's “I Had Some Help,” which led for four weeks since June. Both singles are from his first country LP, F-1 Triswhich peaked at No. 1 on the Top Country Albums chart dated August 31 and on the all-genre Billboard 200 with 250,000 equivalent album units earned in the United States. It marked the second-biggest week for a country title this year, behind Beyoncé's debut in the genre, Cowboy Carterit came in at 407,000 in April.
Shelton scores 36th Country Airplay top 10 and his first since “Minimum Wage” peaked at No. 9 in June 2021. He ties fellow Oklahoman Reba McEntire for ninth most top 10s. Kenny Chesney and George Strait lead all acts with 61 each dating back to the chart's inception in 1990, followed by Tim McGraw with 60.
Post Malone boasts two simultaneous Country Airplay top 10s as “I Had Some Help” lands at No. 2 (28.1 million audiences). In addition, the newest F-1 Tris The single “Guy for That,” featuring Luke Combs, ranks No. 41 (2.6 million).
Shaboozey Cracks Open Six-Pack
Shaboozey rules Country Airplay for sixth straight week with “A Bar Song (Tipsy).” The track, which scored a 28.8 in airplay among chart reporters (down 3%), is only the second No. 1 of his career in country to reign for up to six weeks (counting Country Airplay's first entries as lead artist or their original songs promoted to country radio). Carrie Underwood's “Jesus, Take the Wheel” earned six weeks at the top in early 2006.
“A Bar Song (Tipsy)” added a seventh week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated Aug. 31, claiming the longest reign of 2024, surpassing the six non-consecutive weeks at the top for “I Had Some Help” Post Malone. Shaboozey's hit also logged the year's single longest command on the multi-metric Hot Country Songs chart, with its 11 weeks at No. 1 surpassing Beyoncé's “Texas Hold 'Em,” which ruled for 10 weeks in February-April.
All charts dated September 7 will be updated on Billboard.com on Wednesday, September 4 (one day later than usual due to the Labor Day holiday on September 2).
from our partners at https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/post-malone-pour-me-a-drink-blake-shelton-country-airplay-chart-top-10-1235764612/