The Regional Mexican Albums, published in Billboard magazine, is a record chart that features Latin music sales information for regional styles of Mexican music. This data are compiled by Nielsen SoundScan from a sample that includes music stores, music departments at department stores, verifiable sales from concert venues and track equivalent album units and streaming equivalent album units in the United States. [1] [2]
Issue date | Album | Artist(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
January 5 | Me Dejé Llevar | Christian Nodal | [3] |
January 12 | [4] | ||
January 19 | [5] | ||
January 26 | [6] | ||
February 2 | [7] | ||
February 9 | [8] | ||
February 16 | [9] | ||
February 23 | [10] | ||
March 2 | [11] | ||
March 9 | [12] | ||
March 16 | [13] | ||
March 23 | [14] | ||
March 30 | [15] | ||
April 6 | [16] | ||
April 13 | [17] | ||
April 20 | [18] | ||
April 27 | [19] | ||
May 4 | [20] | ||
May 11 | [21] | ||
May 18 | [22] | ||
May 25 | Ahora | [23] | |
June 1 | [24] | ||
June 8 | [25] | ||
June 15 | Pa Las Vibras | Herencia de Patrones | [26] |
June 22 | [27] | ||
June 29 | [28] | ||
July 6 | [29] | ||
July 13 | Del Barrio Hasta Aqui | Fuerza Regida | [30] |
July 20 | [31] | ||
July 27 | [32] | ||
August 3 | [33] | ||
August 10 | [34] | ||
August 17 | [35] | ||
August 24 | [36] | ||
August 31 | [37] | ||
September 7 | [38] | ||
September 14 | [39] | ||
September 21 | [40] | ||
September 28 | [41] | ||
October 5 | [42] | ||
October 12 | [43] | ||
October 19 | [44] | ||
October 26 | [45] | ||
November 2 | [46] | ||
November 9 | [47] | ||
November 16 | Corridos Tumbados | Natanael Cano | [48] |
November 23 | [49] | ||
November 30 | [50] | ||
December 7 | [51] | ||
December 14 | [52] | ||
December 21 | [53] | ||
December 28 | [54] |
Regional Mexican Albums is a genre-specific record chart published weekly by Billboard magazine in the United States. The chart was established in June 1985 and originally listed the top twenty-five best-selling albums of mariachi, tejano, norteño, and grupero, which are all subgenres of regional Mexican music. The genre is considered by musicologists as "the biggest-selling Latin music genre in the United States", and represented the fastest-growing Latin genre in the United States after tejano music entered the mainstream market during its 1990s golden age.