Before he released “Who,” Jimin had already scored big hits in America, but this latest song is quickly becoming one of his longest-running wins. The BTS singer’s current focus isn’t the highest-rising tune from his solo catalog on the Billboard charts, but it has taken on special meaning nonetheless in the months since he shared it. The cut continues to prove its incredible popularity to this day, as fans aren’t done supporting the title.
“Who” is a bestseller again this week across America. The song’s sales skyrocket, helping it return to one tally and hold on several others, as it further establishes itself as one of Jimin’s most commercially viable tunes.
Luminate reports that in the past tracking frame, “Who” sold a little more than 1,800 copies throughout the U.S. That’s up 316% from the week prior, when it managed a little less than 450 purchases.
Such gains are not uncommon for some of the biggest names to emerge from the K-pop genre, especially those who were first made famous via BTS. The seven members have all found great success on their own, in addition to with the band, and their followers regularly return to older tunes in their catalogs, or band together to push a current single further up the charts. Jimin’s die-hards have done that once more this frame, making “Who” a strong seller again in the largest music market in the world.
That 300-plus-percent uptick in sales helps “Who” reappear on the Digital Song Sales chart this week. The smash breaks back in at No. 23 on the 25-spot ranking of the bestselling cuts in the nation.
“Who” has previously conquered the Digital Song Sales tally, adding to Jimin’s list of solo winners when it ruled. The track has now managed nine frames on the list, which is a very long time for any production by a solo South Korean artist. Typically, releases by musicians from that part of the world debut high on the purchase-focused roster and then fall away. That has not turned out to be the case for “Who,” which is now a longstanding hit.
“Who” also appears on several other Billboard charts this week, though it’s on the downswing. The single falls outside the top 40 on the Hot 100, slipping from No. 39 to No. 41. It also steps back one space on the Streaming Songs tally, landing at No. 29. The same cut is similarly backtracking on both the Billboard Global Excl. US (No. 8 to No. 21) and Billboard Global 200 (No. 13 to No. 21).
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