![]() Instead, the album reached the top on the official compilation albums chart and stayed there for 11 weeks, spending 60 non-consecutive weeks in the top 10 and for a total of 107 weeks on the chart. In the United Kingdom, the album didn't chart on the main albums chart because compilation albums were excluded from the main albums chart from January 1989. ![]() It topped the albums chart in for five weeks, for nine weeks, for 12 weeks, for eight weeks, for 11 weeks, for two weeks, for two weeks, for two weeks, for six weeks, for eight weeks, for six weeks, for four weeks and for nine weeks. In addition, the album was the first in Nielsen SoundScan history to rank among the top three albums in two consecutive years (#, #), and the best-selling soundtrack by the (NARM) in 1993–1994. The Bodyguard soundtrack was ranked #1 in the 1993 Billboard year-end charts, on the. The album held the record for the most weeks at number one, and the record for the most non-consecutive chart-topping weeks on the Billboard 200 chart in the Nielsen SoundScan era until 2012 when it was overtaken by 's which spent 24 non-consecutive weeks at the summit. ![]() ![]() The soundtrack stayed at number one for 20 non-consecutive weeks on the Billboard 200 chart, and spent eight consecutive weeks atop the Top R&B Albums chart, remaining on the charts for a total of 141 weeks and 122 weeks, respectively. The following week, the album once again set a record for the most albums sold in a single week, since the introduced a computerized sales monitoring system in May 1991 when it sold 1,061,000 copies, making it the first album to sell over 1 million copies in one week since tracking began. In its fifth week, it sold 831,000 copies, breaking the old sales record of 770,000 set by ' in the fall of 1991. ![]()
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