The Beatles have returned to #1 on the U.K.'s
Official Albums Chart with the 50th anniversary edition of
Abbey Road (
Apple Corps), setting a new record in the process. Over on singles,
Tones & I's "Dance Monkey" (
Parlophone) has hit the top on 50k combined chart sales.
With 49 years and 252 days between today and the first time
Abbey Road hit the top of the chart for a 17-week run in January 1970, the 50th anniversary edition of the album sets a new record with the longest break between its first and second time at #1. The Beatles have beaten themselves at their own record, which was previously held by their
Sgt. Pepper’s album, which had a gap of 49 years and 125 days between 1967 and 2017.
Abbey Road is also this week's best-seller on vinyl, shifting just under 9k copies.
Lewis Capaldi rises four places to #3 with
Divinely Uninspired to a Hellish Extent (
Virgin EMI) following his
BBC Live Lounge performance, as his track "Bruises" zooms 71 places to #11, boosted by the release of a new remixes EP.
South London collective
D-Block Europe claim the week’s highest new albums entry at #4 with their self-released mixtape,
PTSD. They also score this week’s highest new entry on singles as "Playing For Keeps"
f/
Dave goes in at #21.
Elsewhere on the U.K.'s Official Singles Chart, Tones & I’s "Dance Monkey" ends a nine-week climb to the top, reaching it with 50k combined sales, including 5.1m streams. The track entered the singles chart at #82 in August and this week leaps six places. It's the first #1 by an Australian artist in five years, since
Iggy Azalea’s "Problem" (
Island) with
Ariana Grande.
Regard’s "Ride It" (
Ministry of Sound) settles for second place, up three places this week. Further down, "Buss Down
" (
Since 93) by
Aitch rebounds 10 places to #25 following the release of the track’s music video.