Dignity (album): Difference between revisions
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'''''Dignity'''''<ref name="KIIS-FM">Interview with Duff on [[Ryan Seacrest]]'s radio show on 102.7 [[KIIS-FM]] Los Angeles. [[January 25]], [[2007]]. Audio available at [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtCnKG29dV8 YouTube].</ref> is the fourth [[studio album]] by [[Hilary Duff]], released in [[Italy]] on [[March 23]], in the [[United Kingdom]], [[Spain]] and [[Portugal]] on [[March 26]], [[2007]], in [[Japan]] on [[March 28]], [[2007]], in [[Australia]] on [[March 31]], [[2007]], and in the [[United States]] by [[Hollywood Records]] on [[April 3]], [[2007]] (see [[2007 in music]]). The first single was "[[Play with Fire (song)|Play with Fire]]", the second was "[[With Love (song)|With Love]]", and the third is "[[Stranger (Hilary Duff song)|Stranger]]", according to [[HMV Japan]].<ref name=HMVJapan>http://www.hmv.co.jp/product/detail/2552241</ref> |
'''''Dignity'''''<ref name="KIIS-FM">Interview with Duff on [[Ryan Seacrest]]'s radio show on 102.7 [[KIIS-FM]] Los Angeles. [[January 25]], [[2007]]. Audio available at [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtCnKG29dV8 YouTube].</ref> is the fourth [[studio album]] by [[Hilary Duff]], released in [[Italy]] on [[March 23]], in the [[United Kingdom]], [[Spain]] and [[Portugal]] on [[March 26]], [[2007]], in [[Japan]] on [[March 28]], [[2007]], in [[Australia]] on [[March 31]], [[2007]], and in the [[United States]] by [[Hollywood Records]] on [[April 3]], [[2007]] (see [[2007 in music]]). The first single was "[[Play with Fire (song)|Play with Fire]]", the second was "[[With Love (song)|With Love]]", and the third is "[[Stranger (Hilary Duff song)|Stranger]]", according to [[HMV Japan]].<ref name=HMVJapan>http://www.hmv.co.jp/product/detail/2552241</ref> |
Revision as of 15:04, 17 May 2007
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Dignity[1] is the fourth studio album by Hilary Duff, released in Italy on March 23, in the United Kingdom, Spain and Portugal on March 26, 2007, in Japan on March 28, 2007, in Australia on March 31, 2007, and in the United States by Hollywood Records on April 3, 2007 (see 2007 in music). The first single was "Play with Fire", the second was "With Love", and the third is "Stranger", according to HMV Japan.[2]
Production
In September 2005 Duff said she would "love" Joel and Benji Madden, who produced songs on her compilation album Most Wanted, to produce one of her albums.[3] In January 2006 Duff said she wanted to take time on the album and "really work on [it]", possibly by herself or with just one other producer and songwriter. "[I want to] do it just a little bit different from how I've done it in the past and see what we come up with", she said.[4]
Duff co-wrote all tracks but "Outside of You", which was co-written by singer Pink, and Kara DioGuardi is a co-writer on every song except "Outside of You" and "Gypsy Woman" (co-written by Haylie Duff). Duff said working with DioGuardi "allowed me to talk about things on my mind. It was one big therapy session."[5] According to Duff, she wanted to work with DioGuardi because she liked DioGuardi's work on melodies, which she says "[are] not my strongest suit." Duff wrote most of the lyrics with occasional help from DioGuardi: "She'd say, 'This doesn't really fit', and if I was adamant, we'd make it work." She said the process of her writing lyrics, which she had only done "here and there" on her previous albums, was "important this time".[6]
Duff also worked with producer-songwriter Rhett Lawrence in Toronto, Canada.[7] Other producers and mixers on the album include Greg Wells, Ryan Tedder, Richard "Humpty" Vission, Tim and Bob and Manny Marroquin,[8] and will.i.am of hip-hop/R&B group The Black Eyed Peas. Chico Bennett, Vada Nobles and Fred Wreck have also contributed.[9]
An early version of the song "Happy" was featured in the 2006 film Material Girls, in which Duff starred. It was originally set to the beat of "Play with Fire", but the lyrics were later changed, and it became a new song.
Style and themes
Duff said that compared to her previous music it is "more dancey" and makes use of more real instruments. "I don't know exactly how to explain what we're doing, but it's fun and funky and different, something new for me. It's really cool", she said.[10] She has also described the sound of the album as "a little less pop-rock and more electronic".[11] Duff said she hadn't planned for the album to include a dance-pop sound, but that it was easier for her to write the songs to it.[5] In addition to the dance-pop influence Duff has said the album includes "some Indian vibes, Balinese beats, a little bit of hip-hop ... it sounds kind of '80s. It's very all over the place."[12] She has also cited the influence of Gwen Stefani, Beyoncé and, in particular, The Faint, who she says "have this swelling dance beat that's not so up, but live instruments and rock elements."[6] The album has been compared to the music of Depeche Mode,[9][13] Gwen Stefani,[9][14] Madonna,[9] Justin Timberlake,[15][6] Kylie Minogue,[16][13][17][6] Rachel Stevens,[13] ABBA,[18] Britney Spears,[19] Debbie Deb,[20] and Avril Lavigne.[17]
The album deals heavily with a relationship Duff had during the songwriting process in which she was in love, experienced feelings of doubt and then broke up with the other party. "I cover these emotions and the feeling of being in the dark", she said.[5] Duff's breakup with Joel Madden inspired her to write songs that are, as she describes, "a little bit angry and ... a little bit hurt and lonely and sad". The album also features songs about when they were happy together that Duff said she was "really scared" to include, but she thought she should because they were her experiences.[21] She titled the album Dignity because she felt dignity is something "you have to work on having ... The album is so personal and talks about so many experiences I've had — good ones and bad ones — and dignity is something I always hope to have and strive to have."[22] She said the album is "definitely more mature" than her previous material.[12]
According to Duff, "Gypsy Woman" is about a woman who had a relationship with Duff's father that "broke up a big part of my family";[12] Duff said she had not discussed it before because she "was embarrassed that my family wasn't perfect and that some woman had broken it up."[23] However, it has been rumored to be about Nicole Richie, who began dating Joel Madden after he split up with Duff. The song "Dignity" is also rumored to be about Madden and Richie.[24][25][26][16] Duff said "Dignity" is "[not] about [Richie] specifically but it is about people [in Hollywood] that kind of do what she does and act the way she acts";[27] however, she also said none of the songs were about Madden and Richie's relationship: "she seems like a nice person. There's no bad blood there. I hope that they are happy together."[12] "Stranger", although rumored to be about Duff and Madden,[26][14][23][16] is about how Duff thought her mother feels around her father; it was inspired by the same situation that inspired "Gypsy Woman". Duff said she wrote "Stranger" to appear to be about one of her own relationships, because she didn't want people to know about the strained relationship between her parents. "But I've realized that so many people can relate to what I've gone through", she said.[23]
Another track, "Dreamer", was the subject of media speculation; it is reported to be about the two men who stalked Duff during 2006.[24][25][26] "No Work, All Play", as Duff puts it, "goes back to not trying to fit into other people's ideals or be perfect — which a part of me still does. I want to look pretty and I want them to like my outfit. But another part of me is thinking, 'Well, why do I care?'"[12] "Danger" was partly inspired by the involvement of one of Duff's friend's with an older man, and Duff said "I understand that feeling of wanting to be dangerous. You may know morally something's not right, but you can't help yourself."[6] She said that "With Love" is about having a "crazy job" but being kept "sane" by "that one person" with whom they are in a relationship, "and letting that person know that you appreciate criticism or advice because you know it comes from a place of love."[28] She has said "Happy" "is the most personal, acoustic, mellow song [on the album]".[1]
Promotion
The album was originally going to be released November 21, but because production took longer than expected, it was pushed back to December 5.[29] It was subsequently pushed back to February 2007 because of Duff's commitment to the film War, Inc..[30] Hollywood Records later reported that the album would be released in April 2007.[31] All UK music retail stores will release both versions of the album, the standard fourteen-track CD and the CD + DVD edition, on the same day; however, the deluxe edition won't be out in Australia until early May. Dignity is at number eight on About.com's "Top 10 Albums to Watch for in 2007".[32]
Promotion for the first single, "Play with Fire", began in August 2006;[7] a Richard Vission-produced remix of the song followed in October. Minor edits were made to the song before the release of Dignity. The second single, "With Love", was released on U.S. radio in February 2007,[33] and its music video has been used as the television commercial for Duff's first fragrance, With Love... Hilary Duff, promotion for which began in November 2006.[34] "With Love" has been heavily promoted at Top 40, where it was the "most added" song during the week of its release.[35] Abbey Konowitch, Hollywood Records general manager, said Duff's new sound is suitable for pop radio's "overlooked middle ... She offers balance between hip-hop and rock ... she's already an iconic pop star crossing into a new generation, versus someone who simply has a nice song for radio."[5] A Z100 program director called "With Love" "exactly the kind of song she should be doing."[5]
Duff and the album are the subjects of Hilary Duff: This Is Now, two MTV documentary specials following Duff during her preparations for the release of the album; they aired in early April 2007.[36] Yahoo! has filmed a multi-episode series about Duff's new music and image, and Duff will be supporting the album with a headlining concert tour.[5]
A noted aspect of promotion for the album is Duff's image, which Entertainment Weekly said comprised "[d]ark mane, dental veneers, luxe and vampy fashions", which it wrote is a contrast to the "[d]imples and blond curls, mall-princess ensembles that echoed her Disney Channel alter ego Lizzie McGuire for which she was originally known.[37] Buena Vista Music Group chairman Bob Cavallo said, "she's gone in a new musical direction. Her new look is reflective of all of this — confident, beautiful and edgy."[5] According to Duff, she wanted to "try new things" but the image change "just happened. It is not like a conscious change ... People think it is so different because they have watched me grow up but that is just what happens in life."[27]
Duff will be touring in summer and autumn 2007. She said on MuchMusic that she would start the tour in Canada, and would then tour the UK in the autumn and in the Middle East in winter. The only confirmed country in the Middle East was Bahrain.[citation needed] Tickets go on sale in June, according to her official UK website.[citation needed]
Chart performance
Dignity debuted at number three on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling about 140,000 copies in its first week; it was the highest debut of that week.[38] The debut was lower than those of Duff's previous three albums, each of which entered at numbers one or two with opening week sales of around 200,000 copies.[39] The following week it fell to number eleven, selling about 41,000 copies.[citation needed] The album debuted at number twenty-five in the UK with first-week sales of over 8,000 copies;[40] it is her highest charting album there. In Japan it entered the albums chart at number twelve, selling 17,600 copies in its first week.[41] Dignity broke Duff's streak of consecutive number-one debuts in Canada, entering the albums chart at number three with 20,000 copies sold;[42] and has spent four weeks on the chart, all in the top ten. The album has reached the top ten in Ireland and Italy, and the top twenty in Spain and Greece.
"Play with Fire", the lead single from the album, became a minor club hit in the U.S., reaching the top forty on the Hot Dance Club Play chart, but it failed to chart on the Billboard Hot 100. Second single "With Love" was more successful, reaching number twenty-four on the Hot 100 — Duff's highest peak on the chart — and the top forty in Australia and the UK. Its music video reached number one on MTV's TRL. According to Duff's official UK website, filming begins for the next single from Dignity, "Stranger", in May. HMV Japan has reported a June 2007 release for the single.[2]
Critical reception
Dignity was met with generally positive reviews, receiving a 61/100 on the website Metacritic.[43] Entertainment Weekly gave the album a B+ rating, describing it as "100 percent electro-pop, awash in bleeping synths and multitracked Duff vocals delivered with a newfound petulance. It would be churlish not to hope for a happy ending in Hilary's future, but on the evidence of Dignity, heartache brings out the best in her."[16] A review in Manchester Evening News called the album "commercially savvy ... this is Hilary's best material", giving it a three-star rating, but said "Duff sometimes sounds as weak as a new born kitten".[19] The Guardian wrote "the best cuts here hold their own against Kylie, though the more apt comparison is Rachel Stevens' fantastic but underperforming solo album [Come and Get It] ... Duff, as ever, is charmingly chameleon-like"; it gave the album four stars.[13] The Los Angeles Times said that Duff "seems a little lost and overwhelmed by the percolating dance settings and body-blow rock arrangements ... But as she tries out different approaches, Duff eventually finds some footing".[18]
All Music Guide called it an album that "bears a stronger autobiographical imprint than almost any other teen-pop album of the 2000s", and said that it helped Duff make "some serious headway into turning into a mature recording artist".[15] Slant Magazine was unimpressed with the album, stating that "Duff's voice is nondescript and her delivery is blank; the impish, quirky, or coolly disaffected vocal characteristics and sex appeal that make other dance-pop divas viable performers is nonexistent."[20] The Winnipeg Sun called Dignity "Duff's most personal and revealing album yet", but that "[w]isely, the weight of her lyrics is leavened by the lightness of the music."[17] Rolling Stone said Duff's attempt to "make a adult dance-pop record" yielded "surprisingly successful results".[14] USA Today said it consisted of "a lot of monotonous dance-pop grooves [lifted] from Justin Timberlake's scrap pile ... It's the jauntier pop material that materializes halfway through and sounds more like her past records that holds more appeal."[6]
At the 2007 MuchMusic Video Awards, Duff was nominated in the "People's Choice: International Artist of the Year" category.[44]
Track listing
Standard Edition
- "Stranger" (Hilary Duff, Kara DioGuardi, Vada Nobles, Derrick Haruin, Julius Diaz) – 4:10
- "Dignity" (Duff, DioGuardi, Chico Bennett, Richard Vission) – 3:13
- "With Love" (Duff, DioGuardi, Diaz, Nobles) – 3:01
- "Danger" (Duff, DioGuardi, Nobles, Mateo Camargo, Diaz) – 3:31
- "Gypsy Woman" (Duff, Haylie Duff, Ryan Tedder) – 3:14
- "Never Stop" (Duff, DioGuardi, Bennett, Vission) – 3:13
- "No Work, All Play" (Duff, DioGuardi, Greg Wells) – 4:17
- "Between You and Me" (Duff, DioGuardi, Bennett, Vission) – 3:05
- "Dreamer" (Duff, DioGuardi, Farid Nassar) – 3:10
- "Happy" (Duff, DioGuardi, Rhett Lawrence, Mitch Allan) – 3:28
- "Burned" (Duff, DioGuardi, Farid Nassar) – 3:21
- "Outside of You" (Alecia Moore, Chantal Kreviazuk, Raine Maida) – 4:03
- "I Wish" (Duff, DioGuardi, Tim Kelley, Bob Robinson) – 3:51
- "Play with Fire" (Duff, DioGuardi, will.i.am) – 3:00
Deluxe Edition
- All fourteen songs from the U.S. Standard Edition
- Bonus DVD with nine music videos and interview:
- At Home with Hilary Duff (interview)
- "Why Not"
- "So Yesterday"
- "Come Clean"
- "Our Lips Are Sealed" (non-movie version)
- "Fly"
- "Wake Up"
- "Beat of My Heart"
- "Play with Fire"
- "With Love"
Wal-Mart Edition
- All fourteen songs from the U.S. Standard Edition
- Bonus remix EP:
- "With Love" (Richard Vission remix extended) – 6:00
- "Play with Fire" (Richard Vission remix radio edit) – 3:12
- "Dignity" (Richard Vission remix radio edit) – 3:43
- "Play with Fire" (Vada [Nobles] mix) – 3:17
- "Come Clean" (dance remix) – 3:44
Best Buy and iTunes Australia Edition
- All fourteen songs from the U.S. Standard Edition
- Bonus tracks:
- "Play with Fire" (rock mix) – 3:00
- "Stranger" (Vada [Nobles] mix) – 4:21
Target Edition
- All fourteen songs from the U.S. Standard Edition
- Opportunity to purchase six tour tickets early
Japanese Standard Edition
- All fourteen songs from U.S. Standard Edition
- Different cover art
- Bonus track
- "With Love" (DJ Kaya remix)
Japanese Deluxe Edition
- All fourteen songs from U.S. Standard Edition
- Different cover art
- Bonus DVD (the same as U.S., and will include a bonus video only for Japan, "Making of the Photo Book (Hilary Duff × Leslie Kee)")
- Bonus photo book (expect to have fifty-two pages)
- Bonus track
- "With Love" (DJ Kaya remix)
Charts
Chart | Peak position |
Certification | Sales |
---|---|---|---|
Argentina CAPIF Weekly Top 100[45] | 1 | ||
Australian ARIA Albums Chart[46] | 17 | ||
Billboard Europe Top 100 Albums Chart[47] | 28 | ||
Canadian Albums Chart[48] | 3 | ||
France SNEP Albums Chart[49] | 133 | ||
Greek Top 50 Albums[50] | 15 | ||
Irish Albums Chart[51] | 10 | ||
Italy Albums Chart[52] | 8 | ||
Japan Oricon Weekly International Albums Chart[53] | 1 | 40,869[41] | |
Japan Oricon Weekly Albums Chart[41] | 12 | ||
Mexican Albums Chart[54] | 4 | ||
New Zealand Albums Chart[55] | 31 | ||
Spain Top 100 Albums[56] | 12 | ||
Switzerland Hitparade Top 100 Albums[57] | 64 | ||
Taiwan 5-Music Chart[58] | 1 | ||
Taiwan G-Music Western Chart[59] | 1 | ||
UK Albums Chart[60] | 25 | ||
U.S. Billboard 200[38] | 3 | 248,364[citation needed] | |
United World Chart | 2 | 443,000[61] |
Release details
Notes
- ^ a b Interview with Duff on Ryan Seacrest's radio show on 102.7 KIIS-FM Los Angeles. January 25, 2007. Audio available at YouTube.
- ^ a b http://www.hmv.co.jp/product/detail/2552241
- ^ Tecson, Brandee J. "Hilary Says She Worried About Fan Reaction To Madden-Produced Music". MTV News. September 20 2005. Retrieved April 3 2007.
- ^ Bell, Mike. "Exclusive interview with Hilary Duff". Calgary Sun. January 11 2006. Retrieved March 24 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g Taylor, Chuck. "Duff Gets Personal On Dance-Driven New Album". Billboard. March 23 2007. Retrieved March 24 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f Gardner, Elysa. "Duff finds 'Dignity' in words". USA Today. April 2 2007. Retrieved April 3 2007.
- ^ a b Vineyard, Jennifer. "Hilary Duff: Psychedelic Dance Star? Singer Shoots Trippy Clip For New Single". MTV News. August 3 2006. Retrieved August 4 2006.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
officialsite
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c d Paoletta, Michael. "Duff Explores Her Dance Side On 'Dignity'". Billboard. February 9 2007. Retrieved February 10 2007.
- ^ "For The Record: Quick News On Hilary Duff, 'American Idol,' Kate Hudson, Travis Barker, Shanna Moakler & More". MTV News. August 14 2006. Retrieved August 25 2006.
- ^ "New Duff album to debut this fall". United Press International. August 20 2006. Retrieved December 18 2006.
- ^ a b c d e Charaipotra, Sona. "Dignified Ms. Duff". Teen People. March 30 2007.
- ^ a b c d Macpherson, Alex. "Hilary Duff, Dignity". The Guardian. March 23 2007.
- ^ a b c Greene, Andy. "Hilary Duff - Dignity". Rolling Stone. April 2 2007. Retrieved April 9 2007.
- ^ a b Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Dignity - Hilary Duff". All Music Guide. Retrieved April 3 2007.
- ^ a b c d Bernstein, Jonathan. "Dignity (2007) - Hilary Duff". Entertainment Weekly. March 30 2007.
- ^ a b c Sterdan, Darryl. "Duff gets serious on fourth effort". Winnipeg Sun. April 9 2007. Retrieved April 9 2007.
- ^ a b Cromelin, Richard. "Pop Album Review - Hilary Duff: Dignity (Hollywood)". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 3 2007.
- ^ a b Meads, Glenn. "Hilary Duff - Dignity (Hollywood Records)". Manchester Evening News. March 26 2007.
- ^ a b Cinquemani, Sal. "Music Review: Hilary Duff: Dignity". Slant Magazine. March 27, 2007. Retrieved April 5, 2007.
- ^ "For The Record: Quick News On Madonna, Black Eyed Peas, Foxy Brown, Beastie Boys, Hilary Duff, Joel Madden & More". MTV News. March 28 2007.
- ^ "Hilary Duff Calls Being Single 'Kind of Exciting'". Teen People. January 26 2007. Retrieved January 26 2007.
- ^ a b c Gardner, Elysa. "The focus is on Hilary". USA Today. April 2 2007. Retrieved April 3 2007.
- ^ a b "Hilary Duff takes aim at Nicole Richie?". MSNBC. March 7 2007.
- ^ a b "Hilary Duff's Richie rant". FemaleFirst.co.uk. March 8 2007.
- ^ a b c Bercovici, Jeff. "Hilary Duff Settles Score — In Song!". Radar. March 7 2007.
- ^ a b "Hilary dumps teen queen tag". The Sunday Mail. April 1 2007.
- ^ "It's a Won-Duff-Ful Life!". tvhits. May 2007, no. 210, pg. 24–5.
- ^ "For The Record: Quick News On Christina Aguilera, Hilary Duff, Madonna, Three 6 Mafia, Fergie & More". MTV News. September 22 2006. Retrieved September 30 2006.
- ^ Feenstra, Nicole. "Hilary Duff's Album Pushed Back Again". andPOP. October 12 2006. Retrieved January 25 2007.
- ^ "Hilary's upcoming album...". HilaryDuff.com. January 16 2007. Retrieved January 25 2007.
- ^ Lamb, Bill. "Top 10 Albums to Watch for in 2007". About.com. Retrieved March 24 2007.
- ^ AllAccess.com
- ^ Elliot, Stuart. "Woman of a Scent". The New York Times. December 18 2006. Retrieved December 20 2006.
- ^ Hollywood Records. "Top 40 Radio can't get enough of Hilary Duff; First Single 'With Love' #1 Most Added!". PR Newswire. February 21 2007. Retrieved March 2 2007.
- ^ "MTV & Hilary Duff Celebrate New Album, Dignity, with the Premiere of 'Hilary Duff: This Is Now' on Monday, April 2 at 9:30pm ET/PT". PR Newswire. March 15 2007. Retrieved March 24 2007.
- ^ Greenblatt, Leah. "Keep The Change?". Entertainment Weekly. March 16 2007. Retrieved March 24 2007.
- ^ a b Hasty, Kate. "'NOW 24' Trumps McBride, Duff, Timbaland At No. 1". Billboard. April 11, 2007. Retrieved April 13 2007.
- ^ Harris, Chris. "Not Tim's Time: Now 24 Tops Timbaland For Billboard #1". MTV News. April 11 2007. Retrieved April 12 2007.
- ^ Music Week, April 7 2007
- ^ a b c "Weekly Album Ranking". Oricon Style. April 1 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.; "Top 50". livedoor. April 16 2007. Retrieved April 28 2007.
- ^ Williams, John. "Duff enters at No. 3 in Canada". Jam! Showbiz. April 11 2007. Retrieved April 11 2007.
- ^ "Dignity by Hilary Duff". Metacritic. Retrieved May 13 2007.
- ^ http://www.muchmusic.com/events/mmva07/vote/
- ^ "Ranking Venta Mayorista de Discos - Semanal". April 1 – April 7 2007. Retrieved April 12 2007.
- ^ "Top 50 Albums Chart". Australian Recording Industry Association. April 9 2007. Retrieved April 9 2007.
- ^ Billboard. April 14 2007.
- ^ "Albums: Top 100". Nielsen SoundScan via Jam! Showbiz. April 15 2007 (w/e April 19 2007). Retrieved April 22 2007.
- ^ "Les Classement Albums Nouveautes". March 31 – April 7 2007. Retrieved April 12 2007.
- ^ "Greek IFPI Top 50 Albums". Week 16, 2007. Retrieved May 3 2007.
- ^ "Top 75 Artist Albums". IRMA archive at ChartTrack. March 29 2007. Retrieved March 31 2007.
- ^ Classifica Artisti". FIMI. March 23 – March 29 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.
- ^ "Weekly Album Ranking". Oricon Style. April 9 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.; "Top 50". livedoor. April 16 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.
- ^ "Mexico - Top 10 albums". AMPROFON. April 29 – May 5 2007. Retrieved May 2 2007.
- ^ "New Zealand - Top 40 albums". RIANZ. April 4 – April 10 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.
- ^ "Lista Promusicae - Top 50 álbumes". Promusicae via Los 40 Principales. April 4 – April 11 2007. Retrieved April 4 2007.
- ^ "Hilary Duff - Dignity (album)". Hitparade.ch. Retrieved April 18 2007.
- ^ "5-Music Top 20". 5-Music. April 6 – April 11 2007. Retrieved April 13 2007.
- ^ "Weekly Top 20 - Western Chart". G-Music. March 30 – April 5 2007. Retrieved April 9 2007.
- ^ "The Official UK Top 75 Albums". Yahoo! Music. April 2 2007. Retrieved April 2 2007.
- ^ "United World Chart - Albums". media traffic. Week 20, May 19 2007. Retrieved May 13 2007.
External links