Owl City, Rihanna shine on U.S. singles chart

(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-11-13 09:19
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Owl City, Rihanna shine on U.S. singles chart
Musician Rihanna accepts a 2009 Glamour Women of the Year award during the magazine's annual award show in New York November 9, 2009. [Agencies]


NEW YORK- Electronica artist Owl City reclaimed the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart on Thursday, while Rihanna earned her 12th career top 10 as "Russian Roulette" soared up the rankings.

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Owl City, a.k.a. 23-year-old Adam Young, rose one place to the top with "Fireflies", a week after losing his crown to Jason DeRulo's "Whatcha Say." DeRulo slipped to No. 3. In between, Jay-Z and Alicia Keys' "Empire State of Mind" rose one to No. 2.

Rihanna's "Russian Roulette" rocketed 66 places to No. 9, triggered by first-week download sales of 132,000 units, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

The song's digital release coincided with the singer's publicity blitz for her new album, "Rated R," due November 23, and her first public comments on her assault at the hands of then-boyfriend Chris Brown in February. The only other female artist with more top 10s this decade is Beyonce with 13.

Sean Kingston protege Iyaz soared eight places to No. 4 with "Replay." Jay Sean's "Down," featuring Lil Wayne, dipped one to No. 5. Miley Cyrus' "Party in the U.S.A." was also down one, to No. 6, as was Lady Gaga's "Paparazzi" at No. 7.

Britney Spears' former No. 1 "3" held at No. 8, and Beyonce's "Sweet Dreams" rebounded one place to No. 10.

The Hot 100's Hot Shot Debut belonged to Canadian teen singer Justin Bieber, whose "Favorite Girl" started at No. 26. Other newcomers included Jay Sean's "Do You Remember," featuring Sean Paul and Lil Jon, at No. 27; and Rob Thomas' "Someday" No. 93.

Taylor Swift, crowned Entertainer of the Year at the Country Music Assn. Awards on Wednesday, jumped eight places to No. 38 with "Fifteen," the 13th top 40 hit from "Fearless," extending the record for most such entries from one album (including the set's recent "Platinum Edition" re-release) in the chart's 51-year history.