Liam Gallagher has secured his fourth #1 on the Official Albums Chart alongside showings by Harry Styles, Queen and Kate Bush.
Gallagher’s C’Mon You Know (Warner) becomes his 11th career #1 album, with more than 70k in chart sales shifted its opening week. C’Mon You Know is also the best-selling vinyl of the week, moving 29k LPs. Right behind it on the vinyl chart is Gallagher's live album, Down by the River Thames, which debuts at #4 on the overall chart.
Elsewhere, Def Leppard scores its first Top 5 album in 26 years with Diamond Star Halos (UMC), Will Young’s 20 Years–The Greatest Hits (Sony Music CG) hits #6 and the debut album from Tate McRae, i used to think i could fly (RCA) zooms in at #7. ABBA’s Gold–Greatest Hits (Polydor) is back in the Top 10, at #9, following the launch of the quartet's ABBA Voyage show in London.
A two-LP edition of Doja Cat’s Planet Her (RCA) pushes the set up to #17, and a new Sex Pistols package, The Original Recordings (UMC), pops in at #19.
Between those two rookies sits Queen’s Greatest Hits (Parlophone), which becomes the first album by a British act with 1,000 weeks on the Official Album Chart. Only two other albums have topped 1,000 weeks on the chart: Bob Marley & The Wailers’ Legend (Island) and ABBA’s aforementioned Gold–Greatest Hits. The Queen collection was released in 1981, more than 2,000 weeks ago.
On the singles chart, Styles’ “As It Was” (Columbia) hits nine weeks at #1, the longest streak since Ed Sheeran’s 11-week reign with “Bad Habits” last year. The most-streamed song in the country—7.4m this week—"As It Was" registered more than 65k in chart sales.
Continuing to trail Styles are Cat Burns’ “Go” (Since 93/RCA), which hits a new peak of #2, and Lizzo’s “About Damn Time” (Atlantic), which hits a personal best for her at #3. Tion Wayne & La Roux’s “IFTK” (Atlantic) rises to a new apex of #7, and Sheeran’s “2step” (Atlantic) enters the Top 10 for the first time, hitting #9.
Reaction to the fourth-season premiere of Netflix’s Stranger Things has resulted in Kate Bush's returning to the Top 10 of the Official Singles Chart for the first time in a decade as “Running Up That Hill” races to #8 on 48k in chart sales. “Hill” was last in the Top 10 in 2012, when a new mix of the song was featured in the closing ceremonies of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
Originally released in 1985 as the lead single from Hounds of Love, “Running Up That Hill” rose to #3, becoming Bush’s second-highest charting single in the U.K., behind the chart-topper “Wuthering Heights.”
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