Week Ending July 12th 2008
More on that later, because although this weeks Number One act on the singles chart did indeed appear at Glastonbury and memorably performed his single for the benefit of the BBC cameras it would only dilute what he has achieved by suggesting it was entirely down to his appearance at Worthy Farm. Dylan 'Dizzee Rascal' Mills has been releasing singles and albums and winning awards ever since he was 18 years old, but for some reason his hits have never quite managed to hit the big time. He seemed to be on his way when 'Stand Up Tall' reached Number 10 (not 11 as the BBC are erroneously reporting) in 2004 but when the single releases from his last album 'Maths + English' made 20, 22 and 23 in 2007 it seemed he was destined for mid-table obscurity.
Unusually the change in his chart fortunes comes as he leaves the guiding had of XL Recordings who signed him as a teenager and strikes out as a total independent on his own Dirtee Stank label. Clearly it has done him the world of good as this week 'Dance Wiv Me' shoulders all competition out of the way as its downloads alone make it the biggest selling single of the week. Not that Dizzee should get all the credit of course, as the track is very much a genre-hopping ensemble effort with contributions from Calvin Harris and Diz's own protégé Chrome. It is to say the least a quite compelling combination as the warring musical styles of the three participants combine in a way that is almost magical, the Grimecore vocals from Dizzee Rascal bounce over the top of Harris' electronic beats before giving way to the smooth R&B tones of Chrome. This is three and a half minutes of three men having a whale of a time on a record that is fun, accessible and yet amazingly true to the musical roots of all three participants at the same time.
Dizzee Rascal thus hits the top with his 11th chart single, Calvin Harris with his third, whilst Chrome begins his chart career with a peak that he will never be able to better. Eyebrows will of course be raised at the liberties the title of the track takes with the English language, 'Dance Wiv Me' arguably the first deliberately misspelled title for a Number One hit since the Pussycat Dolls topped the chart with 'Stickwitu' in late 2005. Such dictionary mangling is of course hardly new with Slade having spent half their career in the 70s releasing singles spelled with Wolverhampton patois whilst a decade later Prince would habitually write song titles in textspeak - some years before the SMS message had even been invented.
A spectacular debut at the top inevitably overshadows the second biggest hit of the week, so due credit here to Basshunter who follows up the Number One smash 'Now You're Gone' with 'All I Ever Wanted' which narrowly failed to make the runners up slot and so has to content itself with a Number 3 entry. Just like his first hit, Jonas Altberg charts with an English language remake of a single he first released two years ago in his native Sweden. Just as 'Now You're Gone' was originally 'Boten Anna', a song about irc chatbots, 'All I Ever Wanted' began life as 'Vi sitter i Ventrilo och spelar DotA' and in true geek style dealt with sitting in an online chatroom whilst playing a custom Warcraft III map. The roots of the track go even further back than that, its melody based heavily on cult 2001 French club track 'Daddy DJ' which only ever made it to these shores as an import.
Incidentally, the chart duel between the Basshunter and Dizzee Rascal singles could well extend to a second week, both tracks arriving in physical form this week (July 7).
One more single penetrates the Top 10 this week and as expected it is 'Stay With Me' from Ironik which vaults 11-6 as physical sales are added to the mix. The single fares slightly better than the other three notable physical releases of the week, 'We Made It' from Busta Rhymes and Linkin Park holding firm at Number 10, whilst 'When You Touch Me' from the Freemasons featuring Katherine Ellis can only creep to Number 23. Perhaps most surprisingly of all Estelle proves the old maxim that you are only as good as your last hit. As 'American Boy' actually rebounds to Number 21 this week, the followup 'No Substitute Love' arrives at a miserable Number 30 from where you suspect it will progress no further.
For a second week running Chris Brown claims two simultaneous Top 5 hits as 'No Air' slips to Number 4 with 'Forever' one place behind. As you may have read in the comments to last week's Chart Watch UK, both Sean Paul and Elton John can lay claim to being the last artists to manage this double. I'm tempted to discount Elton John from the list simply because one half of his two 2005 Top 5 hits was via his 34 year old sampled vocals on 2Pac's 'Ghetto Gospel. His co-credit was merely for publishing reasons rather than any direct contribution to the track so you could argue he was part of the production rather than an actual performer on the single. Sean Paul in 2003, like Chris Brown today qualifies for the honour by the back door, the artists performing one Top 5 hit on their own and the other as a guest star on someone else's track (Blu Cantrell's 'Breathe' for Sean Paul). Is it therefore correct to argue that Whitney Houston still can claim to be the last artist with two simultaneous Top 5 hits, given that 'I Will Always Love You' and 'I'm Every Woman' were her own brand new solo recordings?
Mind you, Chris Brown is this week just one of no less than three acts to claim two simultaneous Top 20 hits. He is joined by the Ting Tings whose former Number One 'That's Not My Name' slips to Number 13, nicely meeting 'Shut Up And Let Me Go' which rises to Number 15. Also doing the double is Madonna. Her own former Number One '4 Minutes' is at Number 17, one place below the followup 'Give It 2 Me' which has now recovered from its Top 30 stutter last week to claw a place in the Top 20. Madonna goes physical next Monday (July 14th) with the Ting Tings following a week later. Honourable mention must also be made here of both Flo Rida and Estelle who have duopolies of their own with two singles apiece inside the Top 30 whilst Coldplay and Duffy round things off with two simultaneous Top 40 hits at present.
So then to the Glastonbury Effect which inevitably impacts the album chart rather more than the singles listings apart from a couple of notable exceptions. Albums from the Ting Tings and of course Amy Winehouse charge back into the Top 10 with Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Elbow, Last Shadow Puppets and Kings Of Leon amongst those to put on sales in the wake of their festival performances. Singles wise it is perhaps the aforementioned MGMT who turn out to be the surprise package with current single 'Electric Feel' surging 31-22 and previous hit 'Time To Pretend' reappearing at Number 60 after it first peaked at Number 35 in early April.
Leave it to one man in particular however to land the most out of the blue hit of all. As I discussed on the podcast last week, quite aside from the fuss that surrounded his headline status, Jay-Z was in the unusual position of not having any current product to sell whilst at the same time maybe introducing himself to an audience who had never before seen him perform. The net result is the arrival at Number 35 on the singles chart of his 2004 hit '99 Problems', the track making its first Top 75 appearance since early 2005. The song gets a solitary chart run for the very first time, having originally been released as a double a-side with 'Dirt Off My Shoulder'. With the 2004 single having long since been deleted, '99 Problems' charts here as a standalone album cut with its "weeks on chart" count reset. Not far behind in sales terms perhaps inevitably is 'Numb/Encore' which moves 64-45, the closest it has come to a Top 40 re-entry since its original chart run in the first half of 2005. As noted by commenters last week, the track is now within a few thousand sales of becoming the biggest selling single never to reach the Top 10, the single having never climbed beyond Number 14 despite scaling the peak three times three years ago. This is the track's 41st week as a Top 40 hit which you may be surprised to learn only makes it the second most charted single to feature Jay-Z. The first? Rihanna's 'Umbrella' of course which needs just one more week in the Top 75 to join the elite band of 52 week hits.
Finally whilst we are on the subject of long-running hits, a tip of the hat to 'Rockstar' from Nickelback which this week drops out of the Top 40 for the first time since it first entered on November 17th 2007. Frustratingly it means they fall just short of setting a new record, only able to match the 37 week continuous Top 40 run clocked up by Frankie Goes To Hollywood with 'Relax' way back in 1984.

James, as you correctly say, "'Numb/Encore'... moves 64-45" this week.
But you then say, "This is the track's 41st week as a Top 40 hit..."
How can it be having another week as a Top 40 hit if it's only at #45? It doesn't make sense.
I have an eye for detail, but I think some folks on here are being a tad pedantic over certain stats. Don't let it get to the point where people are afraid to post a comment for fear of being 'tripped up'. James does an informative and enjoyable commentary - Let's be thankful instead of critical.
I think it's great the charts have become less predictable. Who would've said a week ago that Dizzee Rascal would be number one? Next week should be a no-brainer though. With 'Dance Wiv Me' considerably ahead of the rest, and with the CD now available, it should stay at the top.
btw our current Number 1 single (sorry dizzee rascal fans) is awful! but then again i wasn't expecting much from a talentless rapper. And its a shame that the actually decent tracks don't even make the top 40...
On a brighter note, thank you james for posting the commentary as i enjoy reading them! :)
Still surprised in Chris Brown's sudden success on the charts though lol I hope No Air gets to number 1 next week. Any song as long as its not Dizzee Rascal!!! lol
On the subject of Jay-Z, seeing as I'm starting to post here today this seems the ideal time to throw out a question that's bugged me for years, as there's bound to be someone reading who can shed a little light on it... I first heard of him when 'Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)' came out ten years ago, in common with a great proportion of the listening public this side of the Atlantic I imagine. I rather liked it, it was undeniably catchy, while the music critics sneered at his sampling a musical, of all things. Over the last decade he's rarely recaptured that success in our charts, on his own at least, flitting from fairly major "...featuring" credits to fairly minor solo hits, and his albums have had only a fraction of their multi-platinum Stateside success despite the weight of praise heaped on him - yet while the likes of Eminem and Kanye West have been as successful commercially with rap here as in their homeland. It's always seemed to me like a refreshing case of the British audience not fully buying into the mythos, all the critical plaudits that proclaim him the finest exponent of hip-hop the world has ever seen, master of the slickest and most dextrous flow and all sorts of similar accolades... [continues]
Which is fine. I don't have any problem with Jay-Z, I'm sure he's very good at what he does even if most of the frames of reference are outside my comprehension. I've always liked the 'Numb/Encore' collaboration, though I find when I hear it it's not quite as good as I remember it. '99 Problems' has a satisfying oomph to it, a memorable solo outing. He looks cool blowing up a car in Beyonce's 'Crazy In Love' video. The man covered Oasis at Glastonbury as a jest, for heaven's sake; I wish I'd seen it. Like I say, I really enjoyed 'Hard Knock Life', even if the critics didn't. But that is what gets me:
There. Was. Never. Any. Middle. Ground.
Ever! As far as I've seen, at no point in this last decade or more has Jay-Z ever, by common assent, been classed as an OK rapper, someone in the middle of the pack, an average operator in his field. One day in 1998 he was generally regarded, so far as I could tell, as a bit of a lightweight act with a novelty single not worthy of comparison with the serious and deceased likes of Biggie and 2Pac, then all went quiet - on the chart front at least. Then, at some point early in the new millennium, I began to realise that the same guy was being routinely referred to in the music press as a rap genius, the don of everything gangsta, street and hip-hop, the overlord of all rapness. Presumably this was the same set of critics who had derided 'Hard Knock Life', but who had by now been silently overcome by the incontrovertible consensus of opinion wafting unstoppably across the Atlantic when I wasn't looking.
[continues]
Sorry this has spilled across posts, but this has been puzzling me for years...!!
The BBC used to do this, but have stopped doing so for the singles charts.
Also, has anyone heard anything about the next British Hit Singles and Albums release from Gunness? They used to come out annually, but there wasn't one last year for some reason.
Gabriella Cilmi according to the BBC Charts has been on the Singles Charts for 18 weeks.
Delta Goodrem may not do too well over here anymore due to her relationship with Bryan McFadden (ex Westlife). What happened to his career in the UK?
Though they only use a Top 40, so not sure how accurate their charts are once a song falls out of the Top 40 and re-enters at a later date.
James, please include a column for total weeks on charts for the Top 75.
Chasing Cars is a good tune, but by no means a classic like Franks Sinatra's 'My Way'. Therefore it doesn't deserve to beat his chart record.
Sorry re the number of posts, will promise to let someone else get a word in before i post another!
Virgin will release the new updated British Hit Singles volume in November, without the albums, I believe, as Guinness had started doing in the last couple of years.
Alas it won't include 2008 entries.
Love the new number 1!! Best 1 in ages! What's the story with Natasha Bedingfield's Pocketful of Sunshine??? It was scheduled for a July 14th release but now it has disappeared off the release schedules ?????? Thank god the top 10 has a got a badly needed shake up this week . .
Madonna and the Ting Tings new tracks are rising well ahead of release date . . Hope they make a further shake up in the top 10 in the next week or 2!
Poor Rhianna & Maroon 5, thought it was an okay track, #36 this week . . What an embarassment . . Hope it doesn't damage Rhianna's credibility as an artist . . As for Maroon 5 . . Their career is DEAD in the water
I also agree strongly with huntj008 The UK Top 40 on radio 1 is just awful now. I think the reason the show has gone this way is because the show used to be good and non biased playing all 40 songs regardless of whether the songs suited radio 1's image and (in my opinion awful) taste. I think Mark Goodier should have stayed on the show and it should have been moved to Radio 2.
The current top 40 show is not worth listening to, I don't know how they can even call it a chart show. It sounds as though they are just doing a variety show and just happen to mention some chart positions. I seldom listen now and once upon a time I never missed a show.
To think, I once moaned when Scott Mills filled in for Mark, if only Scott would present full time and using the old format now!!!!!!
its worth searching on youtube for the spoofs of it, my fave is I Kissed A Horse, but there's also i kissed a dude, i (did naughty things) to your mum / dad etc etc - hilarious
radio 2 (no i was only listening to it whilst in the car with my dad, i dont tune in) - had picked up on it, so it will be massive over here. bound to get radio 1 and radio 2 support - so will be number 1 here in the next few weeks - no question, watch this space!