Following the release of his new album Mixtape Pluto, Future has gone from the top of the Billboard album chart to now completely dominating the singles chart.
The latest Billboard Hot 100 chart, released on Tuesday (October 1), released on October 5, features all 17 songs from Mixtape Pluto debuting at number one. (His “Like That,” a collaboration with Kendrick Lamar, also remains on the charts for its 27th consecutive week.
Mixtape Pluto’s highest-ranking song is album opener “Teflon Don” at No. 21, and its lowest-ranking song is “Made My Hoe Faint” at No. 85.
This happened just days after Future topped the Billboard 200 album chart.
On Sunday (September 29), Billboard revealed that Mixtape Pluto has sold 129,000 equivalent copies in its first week (mostly via streaming), taking it to No. 1 on the album chart.
The achievement means the Freebandz boss is the first rapper to top the charts three times in six months, and the first to do so since The Beatles nearly 60 years ago.
Future previously debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with “We Still Don’t Trust You” in March, and again the following month with “We Still Don’t Trust You.” Both songs were released with Metro Boomin collaborated.
Responding to the news on Instagram Stories, he wrote: “Omg! 3 #1 is a crazy job.
“Mixtape Pluto” is also the Atlanta star’s 11th No. 1 album, tying her with Eminem, Kanye West, Bruce Springsteen and Barbra Streisand for fourth on the all-time chart.
Only Drake (13), JAY-Z (14), Taylor Swift (also 14) and The Beatles (19) have more.
While Future celebrated his chart success, Travis Scott suffered a historic decline.
The rapper’s 2014 mixtape Days Before Rodeo was finally released commercially in August and debuted at No. 2 with sales of over 360,000 copies in its first week, controversially losing to Sabrina Carpenter.
After suffering a significant decline, the project made a historic bounce back to No. 1 in its fourth week, thanks almost entirely to vinyl sales that set a new record for a hip-hop album.
A week later, “Days Before Rodeo” completely fell off the Billboard 200 chart, becoming the first album in history to go from No. 1 on the chart to disappearing from the chart in one week.

