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Alex Warren gets an extra Ordinary week at the top of the singles chart. James Marriott has the number one album.

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After it was replaced at number one last week, people might have thought that Alex Warren’s Ordinary had had its time at the top. The first signs that they were wrong came on Sunday when it was back at number one in the first update of the week. It is still there at the end of the week, giving it a thirteenth week at number one in total. It thereby creates another chart record. Its return to the top after an initial twelve week run shatters the record set by Frankie Laine’s I Believe way back in 1953. That song’s first run at number one lasted for nine weeks before it lost its hold on the top spot. However, after just one week, it returned and stayed there for a further six weeks. It then bounced back up again for a three week run. Its total of eighteen weeks at number one remains a record over seventy years later.


The return of Alex Warren to the top spot means that Sabrina Carpenter’s fourth number one Manjchild comes to an end after just one week. Of course, she may yet return to extend her run.


Ravyn Lenae’s Love Me Not remains at number three with Chappell Roan’s Pink Pony Club another non-mover, at number four. The big mover of the week is MK and Chrystal’s Dior which jumps twelve places to number five.


Most of this week’s new entries come from, or feature, acts with a relatively long chart history. The first (measured simply by the order in which I am covering them)comes from Twenty One Pilots who made their top forty debut with Stressed Out in 2016. They haven’t exactly been regular visitors to the top forty since then. The Contract, a new entry at number 33, is only their fourth single to reach the top forty although others have spent time in the lower reaches of the chart.


Mark Ronson’s first chart outing came in 2003 when Ooh Wee reached number fifteen. His first major success came with his 2007 album Version, a collection of cover versions with guest singers. That included his version of The Zutons’ Valerie with Amy Winehouse on vocals. Ronson had previously produced many of the songs on Winehouse’s classic back To Black album. Suzanne, a new entry at number 34, features vocals from Raye and is Ronson’s thirteenth top forty hit, his first since 2019.


Regular readers will know that I am a bit of a Sparks fan. Unfortunately, old age and the need to be up for work in the morning meant that I didn’t see either of their London gigs this week. However, thye band does join the list of chart acts whose name has also been the title of a top forty single. Rather unexpectedly, it has happened because Coldplay’s song Sparks, from their debut alum Parachutes released in 2000, is a new entry at number 40. Coldplay made their singles chart debut in the same year.


The song which least deserves to be described as being from an act with a long chart history is the one where that act, Tinashe, is the featured artist. In fact, all three of her top forty hits since 2015 has seen her in a featuring role. On No Broke Boys, which enters at number 37, she plays second fiddle to Disco Lines, a new name to the top forty.


The exception to the established acts rule comes from BTS member J-hope. His first top forty single as a solo artist came as recently as 2023. He now gets his second with Killin’ It girl at number 30. It features GloRilla which I’m guessing isn’t their real name.


The Black Eyed Peas’ Rock That Body has been allowed back in to the top forty at number 35. It reached number eleven in 2010.


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The writer of the Official Chart Company’s write-up of the albums chart is still proudly using their new word, multihyphenate. This week they have used it to describe James Marriott, the Brighton-based musician who has a surprise number one album this week. His previous album reached number seventeen but a social media fanbase has propelled Don’t Tell The Dog all the way to the top.


A combination of a new (very expensive) vinyl edition and the imminence of their live comeback has lifted Oasis’s Time Flies compilation to number two.


Sabrina Carpenter’s Short ‘n’ Sweet is at number three. It has been in the top five for 43 consecutive weeks, a new record for a studio album. It has a little way to go to beat the South Pacific soundtrack album which entered the top five in April 1958 and stayed there until October 1961. It spent 114 weeks at number one, including the whole of 1959.


For many years Van Morrison was one of the most highly-acclaimed singer-songwriters. Chart watchers have also been able to comment on the fact that Astral Weeks, an album which regularly features on critics’ lists of the best albums of all time, was not a hit. Later albums have been more successful. His reputation took a bit of a knock when he rai9led against measures taken to protect people from Covid, including recording a song about it. However, his latest album, Remembering Now, has been well received and it is a new entry at number eleven.


To the delight of many, The Cure reached number one with their Songs Of A Lost World album topped the chart last year. They have now released an album of remixes o songs from that record and it is at number nine this week.


New York rapper Lil Tecca is at number seventeen with Dopamine. AJ Tracey 37 with the cheerfully-titled Don’t Die Before You’re Dead.


Last week saw the sad news of the death of Brian Wilson, the last surviving of the three brothers who formed The Beach Boys. It is impossible to exaggerate just how revolutionary songs such as God Only Knows and Good Vibrations sounded when they were released in 1966, almost sixty years ago. The news came too late to influence last week’s chart but their 1983 compilation The Very Best Of The Beach Boys is at number 32 this week.


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Popchartfreak

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If it helps to get over missing Sparks Hammersmith was well into the 30s Centigrade. I walked from Putney started suffering then enjoyed standing for 90 minutes with no support act before another 90 mins standing by which time i needed water and a sit down to soothe every aching muscle and bone in my body. The 2 70-somethings on stage did way better than me!

8 minutes ago, Popchartfreak said:

If it helps to get over missing Sparks Hammersmith was well into the 30s Centigrade. I walked from Putney started suffering then enjoyed standing for 90 minutes with no support act before another 90 mins standing by which time i needed water and a sit down to soothe every aching muscle and bone in my body. The 2 70-somethings on stage did way better than me!

I went on a History trip to Battle Abbey yesterday. One of the History teachers had been to Hammersmith the previous night. She was about half our age and loved it! They are in Wolverhampton the day after we break up for summer. I'm still wondering whether to go.

Popchartfreak

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Sounds very educational! I had to google it!

It was quite a mixed age audience which for a band their age is pretty impressive! Im guessing the Sparks Brothers Edgar Wright doc has pushed awareness of their impressive back catalogue and history. Russell can still perform and some of the new stuff sounds as good as the classics. Rifftastic and quirky as ever! I would say "go!" To Wolverhampton if the journey there isnt an issue from the South Coast but get a seat not standing! You will def enjoy it 👍

39 minutes ago, Suedehead2 said:

I went on a History trip to Battle Abbey yesterday. One of the History teachers had been to Hammersmith the previous night. She was about half our age and loved it! They are in Wolverhampton the day after we break up for summer. I'm still wondering whether to go

The new album is fantastic! If I go, I will definitely go for a seat!

Battle Abbey is the location of one of the most significant events in English history. Unfortunately, Yr 7 students don't quite get just how big a deal it is. It is the site of the last successful invasion of England, and it was almost 1,000 years ago. Most of the current Yr 7s will be alive for the 1,000th anniversary even if we are not. I wonder if Alex Warren will still ne number one by then.

TheSnake

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The Cure were mentioned here and in parts the Addison Rae song in the chart 'Fame Is A Gun' I think uses similar synths to their song 'The Walk'.

Well done to James Marriott Hotel and Spa on the albums!

Popchartfreak

Editorial

On 20/06/2025 at 22:17, Suedehead2 said:

The new album is fantastic! If I go, I will definitely go for a seat!

Battle Abbey is the location of one of the most significant events in English history. Unfortunately, Yr 7 students don't quite get just how big a deal it is. It is the site of the last successful invasion of England, and it was almost 1,000 years ago. Most of the current Yr 7s will be alive for the 1,000th anniversary even if we are not. I wonder if Alex Warren will still ne number one by then.

goodo re sitting at Sparks! 🙂

The thing about being Year 7 - or as I call it First Year At Secondary - is what you call a big deal tends to be (in my case) getting hold of my latest fave pop single or new Legion Of Super-Heroes comic, but rest assured I look fondly back on school trips out of school and it tends to stay with you (in my case a trip round Singapore Harbour and it's historical and geographical importance) and I'm sure they will look back nostalgically on that day out to Battle Abbey in 2066, while they get misty-eyed at that time Alex Warren held the top spot for a record 37 weeks and fond memories of it being their wedding song back in the good old 2030's as their kids tootle off to Uni to study the enslavement of Mankind in the 2040's by the internet AI Overload before the 2050's revolt by the human drones 😄

11 minutes ago, Popchartfreak said:

goodo re sitting at Sparks! 🙂

The thing about being Year 7 - or as I call it First Year At Secondary - is what you call a big deal tends to be (in my case) getting hold of my latest fave pop single or new Legion Of Super-Heroes comic, but rest assured I look fondly back on school trips out of school and it tends to stay with you (in my case a trip round Singapore Harbour and it's historical and geographical importance) and I'm sure they will look back nostalgically on that day out to Battle Abbey in 2066, while they get misty-eyed at that time Alex Warren held the top spot for a record 37 weeks and fond memories of it being their wedding song back in the good old 2030's as their kids tootle off to Uni to study the enslavement of Mankind in the 2040's by the internet AI Overload before the 2050's revolt by the human drones 😄

I don't think my school can afford a trip round Singapore Harbour! maybe Brighton Marina instead.