Week Ending January 24th 2009
It means that despite a strong challenge from immediately below, 'Just Dance' neatly retains its crown at the top of the singles chart. Its sales will have been further bolstered by the release of parent album 'The Fame' which also made its British debut this week and enters the album chart at Number 3, confounding a few who expected it to hit the very top first week out. The appearance of the album online means that Lady Gaga has the honour of two simultaneous Top 40 hits as 'Poker Face' proves popular enough to land at Number 30. The reason cherrypickers have homed in on this particular track is because it has been her second single in most other European countries and will presumably have the same honour in this country. Expect this to be just a brief burst of initial fame for the track, it will be back in a bigger way in a couple of months time.
So what of the single that very nearly upset the applecart and gatecrashed the Number One position? A brand new entry at Number 2, 'Day N' Nite' marks the British chart debut of much talked about rap star Kid Cudi (one of a number of signings to Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music label). The cult single has been bouncing around the clubs for the best part of a year, having first come to peoples attention in February last year. Originally written as an old skool beats and bass hip-hop track, the minimalist nature of its production made the track ripe for remixing with just about every aspiring producer worthy of the name having had a go on it (or so it seems) during 2008.
It should therefore come as little surprise to learn that 'Day N' Nite' continues a decades- old tradition of becoming a UK hit not in its original form but via the clubs of mainland Europe with a radically different remix pushed to the fore. Although what is billed as "The Original Hip Hop Mix" is available as part of the single bundle, it is the remix by Italian outfit Crookers which is pushed to the fore, to the extent that the chart credits the single to Kid Cudi vs Crookers rather than the rapper alone. Its appeal to British ears isn't hard to understand, although Italian in origin the mix is Garage at heart and so has a natural home in even the most conservative of club sets.
The track has also created an online quirk of its very own. The "radio edit" of the single runs to a rather meagre 2 minutes and 42 seconds with the extended "club mix" clocking in at a slightly more conventional 4 minutes 41 seconds. This has led to downloaded sales being neatly divided between the two cuts and so 'Day N' Nite' has spent most of the second half of the week occupying two places in the iTunes Top 10, the Radio Edit maintaining its lead over the Club Mix presumably because most casual purchasers don't look much further than Track 1 of the digital single. With its arrival on the singles chart set to expose the insanely popular single to an even wider audience, it looks as if battle over Number One is set to be joined between Kid Cudi and Lady Gaga for a second straight week.
The newly physically available 'The Loving Kind' is the other new entry to the Top 10, the worst fears of Girls Aloud fans failing to be realised as the single vaults 19 places to ensure they retain their unbroken record of Top 10 hits (now stretching to an impressive 20 singles). Unbroken that is, apart from the somewhat anomalous appearance in their chart history of 'Theme To St Trinians' which spent a week at Number 51 in January 2007 as an album cut. Most die-hards will insist that as the track wasn't an official single as such it should not be considered an interruption to their unbroken flow of hits and I guess in a sense we should allow them just a bit of slack. The criteria for most chart records is by and large down to whoever is writing the books, early editions of British Hit Singles going out of their way to disregard cash-in hits such as 'My Bonnie' and 'Ain't She Sweet' in order to credit The Beatles with a record-breaking run of 11 consecutive Number One hits. Just ask a Kylie fan whether 'The One' was a proper single or not and watch the steam come out of their ears.
On the rise at Number 17 is Britney Spears with 'Circus', the title track from her current album which first made the Top 40 back in December when the album was released and which is now climbing the chart properly now it has been officially elevated to the status of her next single. Also climbing into the Top 20 is Ne-Yo who as we've mentioned before has this wonderful knack of releasing singles that climb the charts slowly and imperceptibly until they become smash hits without you realising. Just as 'Closer' made Number One after an eight week climb and 'Miss Independent' peaked at Number 6 on its seventh week on the chart, so too new single 'Mad' is taking it one step at a time. Six weeks after it first charted at Number 37, the single is now a Number 19 hit and could well have Top 10 in its sights before too long.
To avoid the inevitable "bit surprised you didn't mention... " comments let's pay lip service to the continuing progress of Alesha Dixon ('Breathe Slow' moving 39-23), Pink ('Sober' moving 37-26) and Jason Mraz ('I'm Yours' moving 34-28) but also note the surprising failure to date of 50 Cent's new single 'Get Up' which peaked at a lowly Number 24 two weeks ago and now slips down the chart for the second straight week. As the first release from his forthcoming new album 'Before I Self Destruct' you could be forgiven for expecting it to make a slightly bigger impact.
Brand new at Number 35 is 'To Lose My Life' from White Lies. It is the first Top 40 hit for the London group, the title track from their forthcoming debut album. First single 'Death' crept to Number 52 back in October. Jordin Sparks also creeps into the Top 40 with her latest single 'One Step At A Time' climbing to Number 38. Although 'No Air' gave her a deserved and long running Top 3 smash hit in the summer, the failure of follow-up single 'Tattoo' (still widely regarded as the far better pop record) to peak any higher than Number 24 called into question whether had it in her at present to establish herself as an international star. 'One Step At A Time' was a US single as far back as last summer when it made the Top 20 over there and my only hesitation in tipping it as an equally big hit here is that it is possibly just a little too breezy and summery to work in a cold and miserable British January.
Watch out next week for a massive leap by 'Take Me Back' from Tinchy Stryder and Taio Cruz. The single charts at Number 39 this week on sales of its club mixes alone, the Sunship and Vito Benito remixes having been made available online just after Christmas. The "real" version of the track, the radio edit, finally hits the stores this week and based on airplay and online reaction so far it could well propel the single into the Top 10 by the time I appear on your screens again.

Bit surprised you didn't mention every other record in the Top75 James.... :)
Anyway, Cudi should've been No. 1 but GaGa deserves it more. Hah!
This controversy about Theme to St. Trinians thing is stupid, it's not an official single so it's considered as "other songs", not a single. Look at the 20 other singles, they have their physical releases.
Chartwise their run is unofficially broken whether it's a single or not, but when it comes to the physical releases it isn't particularly broken.
Funny how in the USA it took over 20 weeks to get to #1, whereas in the UK in took just 2 weeks!! Lady Gaga will own the first half of 2009!
The Kid Cudi record is appaling, and will probably end up in my list, as being the worse song of the year, as i cannot imagine anything worse coming out this year.
I have noticed that the top 75 is becoming more like the Billboard charts, with so many American acts in it, like Akon, Neyo, T Pain etc.
Something needs to be done soon, so let's start having more homegrown talent being played on the radio, otherwise the top 10 will soon consist of 3 hits by Akon, 3 by Neyo, 2 by T Pain, and 2 by TI.
It might sound far fetched, but it's heading that way.
The only other artists to do that have been Madonna, Elvis Presley and (bizarrely) Lonnie Donegan.
Kylie is still waiting for a no.7 or no.9 hit to complete her set.
I've looked back at the Top 40 charts and made a list of the new entries for the past decade. The figures don't include hangers-on from the previous year or re-entries (however old), but they do include re-issues and remixes
Number of Top 40 new entries per year:
1999: 582 new entries
2000: 547 new entries
2001: 558 new entries
2002: 569 new entries
2003: 622 new entries
2004: 595 new entries
2005: 607 new entries
2006: 498 new entries
2007: 387 new entries
2008: 272 new entries
So you can see the annual number of new entries was around 600 until downloads took over, where the number of new songs has declined at an alarming rate. James' commented a few weeks ago about how overall sales had risen since 2006 and this was good for the chart, but at the cost of about 50% of the new entries.
Let's hope that 2009 doesn't see a further decline...
I'd agree that a few more new entries each week might make the charts more interesting, but the key question is whether the charts are actually now a more accurate reflection of the forty favourite songs of the week of the nation than they were in 2003, when all songs debuted high then fell purely on the basis of a strong marketing campaign.
On the down side, it's reduced the amount of new music on our charts, but on the upside, it's probably true to say that the track at number one is the present favourite of the nation, whereas it wasn't the case back in the early part of the decade.
I still think the charts now make for more interesting casual observation than they did back ten years ago, where 95% of songs peaked in their first week.
I also still think the music industry is stupid for not selling download copies of records the minute they start publicising them(Kelly Clarkson's new single is being marketed now, but not released for weeks). It's first week A-level economics - make sure supply meets demand, or you're just encouraging people to steal it instead.
Irrespective of personal opinions on What is a sale, in the new ongoing download age 1 sale still equates to 1 sale 30 years ago. Which brings me to the charts of the late 70's. In 1979 approx 90 million sales were 'logged' for singles. This figure was finally beaten in 2008 with approx 106 million 'logged sales'. All early indications are that 'logged' sales will increase to 150 million+ this year.
Back to the late 70's when you would average 5 or 6 new entries in the top 40 each week. records would generally stay in the top 40 for an average of 8 weeks, and there was a new number one on an average every 3 weeks.
I also seem to recall a list of the top 500 selling singles of 1978, of which half of them (250) made the top 40. Another interesting fact was that in those days you could find 7" or 12" top 40 singles at least 6 months after their release, often a lot longer.
Does this all sound familiar (yes 2008), we have gone full circle.
The marketing techniques of the late 90's early 00's ruined the singles chart, but capitalised on the cd single explosion. The download era makes tracks available indefinitely.
The Official singles chart is more accurate & in better shape than it ever has been before.
This makes rival charts even more irrelevant than they have been in recent years :)
The slower turnover means I get to hear and like more songs and I've actually started buying a lot more as a result. If "Low' by Flo Rida & T-Pain had only been in the chart for 4 or so weeks, for example, I'd still LOATHE it as I did initially, but thanks to it's prolonged run I ended up thinking it was great. The same goes for many other tracks, particularly the RnB / Hip-Hop ones with less initial appeal.
Such wow stats! :)
I don't mind them charting in few weeks in Top 40 but some don't even sell well to last longer.
Hooray for Lady Gaga at No.1 a second week! Although "Poker Face" peaked much lower than i expected and hoped...
Geez whats taking "Breakeven" so long to reach the Top 20? If that rubbishy "Day N Nite" can reach No. 2 surely theres hope for "Breakeven"?
Jordin Sparks "Tattoo's" peak of No. 24 isn't a COMPLETE failure James....i bet the Kaiser Chiefs, Snow Patrol, Razorlight and all the other acts that everyone's slowly forgetting about would killed to get their follow-ups singles as high up in the charts as that!
So, i believe Jonathan Ross' suspension ends now, and his Friday chat show returns this week. Franz Ferdinand are set to perform their new single on the show, so i'll check it out...
Then record shops used to cash in on those looking for a certain track. So you went away with the record you came for and one 'new' one. This happened a lot because of TOTP on Thursday so the kids went in the stores Friday and Saturday. And in the 70's the release dates for new records was Friday not Monday.
Compare that today. The only detailed new release site for downloads (as far as I can tell)is Tesco!
The problem is that downloads need a TV slot for new material from artists. However what we are going to get next is more old tracks back in the 40 as the Brit Awards airs on TV.
Mind you if you are a fan of the chart show on Radio One, you apprently need to be told every five minutes by Reg that the track is avaiable to buy or download! YES REG it's a 'sales' chart! People have bought them!!
Sorry i'm being critical of you James but you sometimes give the impression that a song that doesn't reach the Top 20 is an automatic flop or disappointment...for example, "Breakeven" by the Script has stayed in the Top 40 for 11 weeks now without reaching the Top 20...although i would have liked to have seen it in the Top 20 the fact that it is selling reasonably well and is holding on to the Top 40 must be enough to constitute a hit! i dunno, maybe we just have different opinions on what chart placings are considered hits and flops...again sorry im being critical...you can ignore me if you want lol
Kings of Leon -
8 Use somebody (Down 3, Peak so far 2)
14 Sex on fire (Down 2, Peak 1)
Rihanna -
20 Live your life (Down 7, Peak so far 2)
32 Rehab (Down 4, Peak so far 16)
Saturdays -
4 Issues (Up 2, Peak so far 4)
33 Up (Down 1, Peak so far 5)
Beyonce -
12 If I were a boy (Down 5, Peak 1)
7 Single ladies (Up 1, Peak so far 7)
Kanye West -
11 Heartless (Up 3, Peak so far 11)
34 Love lockdown (Down 4, Peak so far 8)
Britney Spears -
17 Circus (Up 7, Peak so far 17)
22 Womanizer (Down 5, Peak so far 3)
Girls Aloud -
10 The loving kind (Up 29, Peak so far 10)
37 The Promise (Down 12, Peak 1)
Pink -
26 Sober (Up 11, Peak so far 26)
36 So what (Down 10, Peak 1)
Alesha Dixon -
23 Breathe slow (Up 16, Peak so far 23)
25 The boy does nothing (Down 5, Peak so far 5)
Lady Gaga -
1 Just dance (NM, Peak 1)
30 Poker face (NE,Peak 30)
Please join my new facebook group 'UK Top 40 Chart Chat'
I have no complaints about the declining number of new entries on the chart over the past decade. I'd much rather have the chart the way it is today than the way it was ten years ago. I remember in the year 2000 you could actually look at the release schedules a couple of months in advance and predict the number one for the next 8 weeks. Your predictions would never be far wrong.
The fact is the official chart is a reflection of legally purchased music in the uk. I fail to understand why people would have issue with that? If new artists are not getting a fair deal then perhaps someone has to come up with a way to market them. Everytime a track features on prime time tv this seems to be reflected in the chart. Therein lies the solution for new acts, perhaps?
If TV execs can clog our screens with car crash tv such as X Factor, then why not a show that profiles unsigned or newly signed artists?