Jump to content

Featured Replies

Posted
Now back with their seventh record The Car, Alex Turner, Matt Helders, Jamie Cook and Nick O'Malley have been on an extraordinary musical journey since their hype-laden debut in 2005, plucked from the streets of Sheffield and into indie-rock superstardom.

 

Since that debut, the Arctics have worn any hats and explored many corners of rock music, from post-Britpop intake of breath to their influential debut album, to the defining skinny jean slick rock of AM.

 

 

 

To celebrate The Car's release, and as the Arctic's duke it out against Taylor Swift for domination on the Official Albums Chart, we're counting down the band's Official biggest singles and albums in the UK, with brand-new updated figures thanks to Official Charts Company data.

 

Let's start it of with Arctic Monkeys' Top 10 biggest singles in the UK. But befor we get to that, here's an in-depth look at the Top 5.

 

Arctic Monkeys' Official Top 5 singles in the UK

5. R U Mine?

Released: 2012

Official Singles Chart Peak: Number 23

Total UK chart sales: 1.5 million

A stoner rock anthem, R U Mine? primed the public for the victory lap of AM's release a full year before it dropped, yet it still acts as the perfect introduction to the Arctics' most confident record.

 

4. Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High?

Released: 2013

Official Singles Chart peak: Number 8

Total UK chart sales: 1.5 million

A swaggering funk-blues tune with more than a heady influence of R&B and hip-hop inside Alex Turner's slick cadence makes AM's third single another modern classic from the band. It edges out R U Mine? with more physical sales and streams (combined streams of over 161 million).

 

3. Fluorescent Adolescent

Released: 2007

Official Singles Chart peak: Number 5

Total UK chart sales: 1.8 million

The second single from Favourite Worst Nightmare, Fluorescent Adolescent is a scatty garage-rock lament for lost youth that has, in many respects, become a generational anthem.

 

The tracks music video (featuring Stephen Graham and directed by The IT Crowd's Richard Ayoade) is the band's second-most streamed visual, with other 6.4 million video streams.

 

2. I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor

Released: 2005

Official Singles Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 2 million

You can't do better than a Number 1 debut on your first go. Lifted from the then-burgeoning social media platform of MySpace, Alex and co. may have asked people to not believe the hype, but it was hard not to agree with them.

 

Then, as now, I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor is just, front to back, a great tune and one of the largest post-Britpop flags in the ground for British rock. Not only that, but its still the band's highest physical seller (over 114,000).

 

It's very easy to pinpont the magic; a propulsive and explosive production, as well as some light-footed lyricism ("No Montagues or Capulets, just banging tunes and DJ sets") that showed from the off that the Arctic Monkeys were here and here to stay.

 

1. Do I Wanna Know?

Released: 2013

Official Singles Chart peak: Number 11

Total UK chart sales: 2.5 million

There is no better way to announce the world "we're about to make the best music of our career" than the sly, slinky and undeniably sexy bass line of Do I Wanna Know, officially Arctic Monkeys' biggest song in the UK.

 

AM's opening track starts off holding the shape of a pop song, before exploding into something more stuttering and insurmountable in its second part, echoing Alex's emotional fragmentation, backed by those high falsetto coos of "Do I wanna know?" And no, deep inside, he doesn't.

 

But what we know (sorry) is that Do I Wanna Know is by and far the biggest track the band have ever released here. With over 2.5 million chart sales combined, it's also their most digitally-downloaded tune (over 482,000) and their most-streamed to (over 255 million streams, including 29 million video streams).

 

Arctic Monkeys' Official Top 10 biggest songs in the UK

POS TITLE PEAK YEAR

1 DO I WANNA KNOW 11 2013

2 I BET YOU LOOK GOOD ON THE DANCEFLOOR 1 2005

3 FLUORESCENT ADOLESCENT 5 2007

4 WHY'D YOU ONLY CALL ME WHEN YOU'RE HIGH 8 2013

5 R U MINE 23 2012

6 WHEN THE SUN GOES DOWN 1 2005

7 MARDY BUM 123 2006

8 505 2 2007

9 ARABELLA 70 2013

10 SNAP OUT OF IT 82 2013

©2022 Official Charts Company. All rights reserved.

 

Arctic Monkeys biggest albums in the UK, ranked and revealed

6. Tranquility Base Hotel & Casion

Released: 2018

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 247,000

A stark left-turn from the strutting G-funk of AM, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino is instead, somewhat bizarrely, a soft sci-fi concept album coupled with the Arctics stepping into gentle lounge music and blues.

 

No matter how heady the U-turn, Tranquility has proved to be one of the most important records of the bands career (you can read The Car on many sonic levels as a continuation and in some places an improvement on what they were dabbling with here) which became Arctic Monkeys' sixth consecutive Number 1 studio album in the UK.

 

5. Humbug

Released: 2009

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 446,000

Humbug is a record that made its most important mission to subvert people's expectations. Recorded in the desert with Quens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme, Humbug dumps out the recogniseable styles and lyricisms from the first album and replaces them with psychedelic rock with a harder edge.

 

Derided critically at the time, retrospective commentary has more of then not highlighted that Humbug helped the band to grow and reach new and bolder horizons.

 

4. Suck It And See

Released: 2011

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 450,000

The title reflects the band's approach to this album; try everything, and see what works. And try they do.

 

Their most diverse offering musically, Suck It And See is the fourth biggest Arctic Monkeys album in the UK, reaching combined chart sales of 450,000.

 

3. Favourite Worst Nightmare

Released: 2007

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 1.2 million

Released less than 18 months after their debut, Favourite Worst Nightmare proved that above all else, the Arctics were ambitious, and they were never going to be boxed in by one sound.

 

Favourite Worst Nightmare starts the streak of the band's sonic identity becoming supple and pliant with each respective release.

 

It's their third most popular here, with over 1.2 million chart sales to its name.

 

2. AM

Released: 2013

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 1.6 million

The first Arctic Monkeys album made from their new base in LA, AM speaks to how the band's confidence in their vision had grown. Inspired just as much by West Coast hip-hop beats and rappers as it is bouncy indie-rock that seemed custom-fit for the skinny jean Tumblr age aesthetic of 2013, AM is the defintiive sound of a band in their prime.

 

The home to their biggest single in the UK, AM is also the Arctic's most digitally downloaded (394,000) and streamed (over 591,000 combined album equivalent streams) LP to date.

 

All-in-all it is, quite simply, one of the defining pieces of rock music of the second decade of the 21st century.

 

1. Whatever People Say I Am That's What I'm Not

Released: 2006

Official Albums Chart peak: Number 1

Total UK chart sales: 2.1 million

Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not is a landmark debut record for a British rock band.

 

Not only containing two Number 1 singles, right off the bat (I Bet That..., Sun Goes Down), the Arctics charted a quick and very un-conventional road to success with panache, and the results still speak for themselves.

 

A great alt-rock album, mainly about going out boozing in the North of England as a young teenager, Whatever People Say...has left an indelible mark on the culture of this country's musical palate.

 

With over 2.1 million chart sales to its name, it's the Arctic Monkeys' biggest album ever here, edging out everyone for the most physical sales too (1.4 million).

 

POS TITLE YEAR

1 WHATEVER PEOPLE SAY I AM THAT'S WHAT I'M NOT 2006

2 AM 2013

3 FAVOURITE WORST NIGHTMARE 2007

4 SUCK IT AND SEE 2011

5 HUMBUG 2009

6 TRANQUILITY BASE HOTEL & CASINO 2018

©2022 Official Charts Company. All rights reserved.

 

https://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/a...evealed__22872/

  • Replies 7
  • Views 548
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

The OCC rewriting history to give 505 the high chart peak it deserved :lol:
They must have mixed up its chart peak with Brianstorm, kinda surprised that isn't in their top 10!

Pretty surprised that 'Fluorescent Adolescent' is (still) ahead of 'Why'd You Only Call Me When You're High?' (and by a fairly big margin at that)! Also would have half expected '505' to be a little higher but to be fair everything else on this list still gets pretty healthy streams to this day as well so I guess it's held back by never having a period of high sales as a single.

 

The lack of 'Brianstorm' here is a bit of a shame as that's one of my favourites from them but not too surprised it's not there, it's not among the many songs of theirs that have entered / re-entered the Spotify top 200 recently. 'Do I Wanna Know?' is the correct #1 though :heart:

 

(also lol I didn't notice the '505' peak being wrong, teas of Sam Ryder being promoted to #1 in one of these articles x)

The realisation that The Car has done almost half of Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino's total sales in 3-4 days, yet it won't be #1.

Delighted that Arabella is in the top 10. Love it and didn't realise its streams were so strong.

 

Also we LOVE to see the OCC's retroactive calculations promoting 505 to a #2 single, following Sam Ryder being promoted to a rightful #1. Yasssss OCC serving up the late stage justice! :wub: :wub: :wub:

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.