J. Cole Charts His First No. 1 On One Billboard List After A Decade Of Trying

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By Fritz von Burkersroda

J. Cole Ends Decade-Long Chase for Billboard Vinyl Albums No. 1

Fritz von Burkersroda

J. Cole Charts His First No. 1 On One Billboard List After A Decade Of Trying

Breaking Through After Years of Near Misses (Image Credits: Unsplash)

J. Cole celebrated a breakthrough moment when his album The Fall-Off debuted atop Billboard’s Vinyl Albums chart.[1]

Breaking Through After Years of Near Misses

After more than ten years in the industry, J. Cole finally secured his first No. 1 position on the Vinyl Albums chart with The Fall-Off.[1]

This victory stood out because the rapper had charted on the tally six times before without ever reaching the top spot. His closest brush came with Born Sinner, which peaked at No. 2 during summer 2023. Other releases fared lower: The Off-Season hit No. 5, while 4 Your Eyez Only and 2014 Forest Hills Drive both landed at No. 6.[1]

Forest Hills Drive: Live managed only No. 12. More than half of those prior entries spent just one week on the chart, highlighting the challenge Cole faced in sustaining vinyl momentum.[1]

Massive First-Week Numbers Propel the Album

The Fall-Off launched with 280,000 equivalent album units in the United States during the week ending February 12, according to Luminate.[2]

Pure album sales reached 113,000 copies, with vinyl accounting for 71% of that total at 80,000 units – Cole’s largest vinyl sales week to date.[2]

This marked the biggest vinyl performance for any R&B or hip-hop album in nearly a year, trailing only Kendrick Lamar’s GNX, which sold 87,000 vinyl copies.[2]

The album also generated 166,500 streaming equivalent albums from 169.5 million on-demand streams, though it debuted at No. 2 on the Top Streaming Albums chart.[2]

Dominating Multiple Billboard Rankings

Beyond vinyl, The Fall-Off claimed No. 1 spots on several key charts. It topped the Billboard 200 for Cole’s seventh time, surpassing Nas for the sixth-most No. 1s among rappers.[1]

The set also led Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Top Rap Albums, marking Cole’s eighth No. 1 on each.[1]

On the Top Album Sales chart, it entered at No. 2 with 113,000 units, edged out by Ateez’s Golden Hour: Part 4, which moved 195,000 copies.[1]

The Vinyl Factor in Hip-Hop’s Revival

Cole’s success underscored a growing appetite for physical formats in hip-hop. The Fall-Off represented the first time he released vinyl alongside digital and streaming options from day one.[3]

This strategy paid off handsomely, as vinyl sales drove much of the album’s physical momentum. The project outperformed several high-profile debuts on the Vinyl Albums chart, including entries from Joji, Ateez, Nick Jonas, and Illenium.[1]

Reissues and returns from artists like Noah Kahan, Sabrina Carpenter, and The Beatles also trailed behind.[1]

Key Takeaways

  • The Fall-Off debuted with 280,000 units, the largest for any R&B/hip-hop album in nearly a year.[2]
  • Vinyl sales hit 80,000, Cole’s best ever and a vinyl-first for his releases.[2]
  • First No. 1 on Vinyl Albums after peaks like No. 2 for Born Sinner.[1]

J. Cole’s persistence paid off with a rare vinyl crown that eluded him for years, proving his enduring appeal in a streaming-dominated era. What charts will he conquer next? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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