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Probably long forgotten by now but 'If you're Looking for a Way Out' by Odyssey in 1980 spent six weeks in the top 10.

 

56-34-29-20-7-7-7-{6}-7-10-16-24-37-61-71

 

 

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It was only 5 weeks but this deserves a mention:

 

Hermes House Band 'Country Roads' (2001/2) (7-10-10-10-10-20-27-38-39-38-50-69-x)

It was only 5 weeks but this deserves a mention:

 

Hermes House Band 'Country Roads' (2001/2) (7-10-10-10-10-20-27-38-39-38-50-69-x)

 

Most consecutive weeks in the same chart position would deserve a thread all of it's own (and probably has in the past) but I doubt anything would surpass the statistical fluke of Take That's 'Rule the World' spending 5 consecutive weeks at no.83.

 

http://www.chartstats.com/release.php?release=33211

Most consecutive weeks in the same chart position would deserve a thread all of it's own (and probably has in the past) but I doubt anything would surpass the statistical fluke of Take That's 'Rule the World' spending 5 consecutive weeks at no.83.

 

http://www.chartstats.com/release.php?release=33211

 

Apart from number ones of course!

Apart from number ones of course!

 

Well obviously, and no 2s as well of course, the record is 7 weeks. Dunno about the record for no.3 but I do remember 'Sledgehammer' by Peter Gabriel spending 4 straight weeks at no.4 in 1986. Anyway my point was that spending 5 consecutive weeks at as low a position as no.83 is quite remarkable.

 

Just remembered, the wonderfully named Elbow Bones and the Racketeers spent 4 weeks at no.33 in 1984 with 'A Night in New York'. Great song too.

There have been quite a few examples of songs spending 3 or 4 weeks in a row at oddly low positions recently (for example I Gotta Feeling spent 3 weeks at #92 and Only Girl (In The World) spent 3 weeks at #74 - plus there's obviously DJ Got Us Fallin' In Love's 4-week run at #20), but I don't know of any that can beat RTW's bizarre 5-week run at #83. I actually thought that was an error the first time I saw it.
Didn't Usher spend something like 4 weeks at number 20 last year with DJ Got Us Fallin In Love?
Whoops! My screen's just updated after about 2 hours - seems you beat me to it with Usher!
Whoops! My screen's just updated after about 2 hours - seems you beat me to it with Usher!

From the very first chart, we have a record that qualifies for this list

 

Artist: Doris Day & Frankie Laine

Title: Sugarbush

Peak Posn: 8

Weeks On Chart: 8

 

15/11/1952: 9

22/11/1952: 12

06/12/1952: 8

13/12/1952: 8

20/12/1952: 10

27/12/1952: 10

03/01/1953: 10

10/01/1953: 10

 

 

i.e. 7 weeks in the Top 10

Edited by fchd

Right, think this one must be the record holder

 

Artist: Louis Armstrong

Title: Takes Two To Tango

Peak Posn: 6

Weeks On Chart: 10

 

20/12/52: 8

27/12/52: 8

03/01/53: 8

10/01/53: 9

17/01/53: 7

24/01/53: 6

31/01/53: 7

07/02/53: 10

14/02/53: 7

21/02/53: 10

Right, think this one must be the record holder

 

Artist: Louis Armstrong

Title: Takes Two To Tango

Peak Posn: 6

Weeks On Chart: 10

 

20/12/52: 8

27/12/52: 8

03/01/53: 8

10/01/53: 9

17/01/53: 7

24/01/53: 6

31/01/53: 7

07/02/53: 10

14/02/53: 7

21/02/53: 10

 

Joint record holder. Frankie Laine's "Rain Rain Rain" (1954) and Tony Martin's "Stranger In Paradise" (1955) also had 10 weeks in the top 10 without making the top 5.

 

Frankie Laine's is particularly notable as it never peaked above No8.

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