Black Panther—the soundtrack album curated and produced by Kendrick Lamar and TDE’s CEO Anthony Tiffith—has debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. charts, Billboard reports. It garnered 154,000 album equivalent units in its first week out, with 52,000 of those in traditional album sales. It marks the biggest charting week for a soundtrack in over a year. Black Panther is also Kendrick’s fourth album in a row to debut at No. 1, following 2015’s To Pimp a Butterfly, 2016’s untitled unmastered., and 2017’s DAMN. After its release, Kendrick thanked all the collaborators and producers who worked with him on the album in a heartfelt note.

Marvel’s Black Panther opened on Thursday, instantly becoming the top-grossing film in history by a black director (Ryan Coogler) and featuring a largely black cast. Ticket sales worldwide are estimated to reach $387 million by Monday.

The Black Panther soundtrack features SZA (“All the Stars”), the Weeknd (“Pray For Me”), James Blake, Jay Rock, Future (“King’s Dead”), and many others. It’s set to receive a release on vinyl and cassette. So far, Kendrick has shared music videos for “All the Stars” and “King’s Dead.” He’s currently touring with James Blake in Europe. In May, he hits the road with his TDE labelmates.

Read Pitchfork’s “How Black Panther Composer Ludwig Göransson Found the Sound of Wakanda.”

CORRECTION: A previous version of this story inaccurately stated that Black Panther’s debut week was the highest charting week for a soundtrack. Suicide Squad: The Album still holds the record with 182,000 units.