Teen country star, Taylor Swift remains 'Fearless' at No. 1 position, seventh week in a row, the first album after Usher's 2004 'Confessions', more than four years ago, and outselling and besting its closest competitor, Beyonce's 'I am ... Sasha Fierce' rebounded two at No. 2. Also, 'Fearless' became the longest-running No. 1 album by a solo female vocalist, since Alanis Morissette's 1995 'Jagged Little Pill' remained at the top for 12-weeks.
Canadian rock band Nickelback's 'Dark Horse' slipped one to No. 3. One new entry and one returning title, made it into this week's Top Ten, and in a rare occurrence, a collection of Golden Globes wins, The Bad Boy soundtrack from the film 'Notorious' featuring hits by Notorious B. I. G., new Jay-Z tracks and other material opened at No. 4.
Kanye West's '808s and Heartbreak' fell twice to No. 5, while the 'Twilight' soundtrack slipped one to No. 6. Britney Spears' 'Circus' slipped one to No. 7, with Jamie Foxx's 'Intuition' holding tight at No. 8, and Keyshia Cole's 'A Different Me' fell two spots to No. 9. After his 'A Daily Anthem' featured in the new season of 'American Idol', David Cook's self-titled debut managed to rise eight slots to No. 10.
The 'Slumdog Millionaire' (Interscope) soundtrack pushed upwards from No. 55 to rest at No. 16, after the film won four Golden Globes, including the Original Score for A. R. Rahman.
Other Top 50 debuts include: 'Now That's What I Call Motown', a single disc celebration of the Detroit label's 50th anniversary that hit No. 13; Derek Trucks Band's 'Already Free' came aboard at No. 19; Heather Headley's 'Audience of One' debutted at No. 27.
John Legend's 'Evolver' racheted 12 slots to No. 33, while Fleet Foxes' self-titled disc 'Fleet Foxes' climbed 22 to No. 46.












