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.

In the meantime however, bearing in mind there are a great many people reading these words and flattering me by taking them as an authoritative view it is only right they should be as accurate as possible. Being human I won't always be absolutely correct so it is only right and proper that people on the case should note the appropriate corrections.
Nit pick away people, it is one of the reasons the comment button is there...
ZAVVI in Oxford Street does not sell singles anymore. I was there last night to buy the new Hercules & Love Affair 7" and the section is gone. I asked one of the shop assistants and she said they don't sell anymore so they got rid of the section altogether!
I am deeply shocked.
As for the corrections, it's difficult, as a lover of statistics (and accuracy), to read something that is inaccurate, and say nothing about it, but it is even more tedious to read the petty comments. James is a lot of fun to read.
PS Brett you sound cool.
They have their irritating points, but they're a hell of a lot better than the unlamented JK & Joel. F&R do at least have genuine enthusiasm for what they're doing, whereas the two doofuses before them seemed to be almost embarrassed that they were doing a chart show at all.
The criticisms seem to be that they don't take it seriously enough - well sorry but it's a chart show, not a documentary about starving children. It SHOULD be fun, and it wouldn't be if they earnestly talked about chart movements and nothing else. I actually find it quite angaging that Reggie's stats are almost invariably wrong - kind of adds to his charm.
If all you want is the songs, go and stream them but the idea is to entertain as well as inform, and I reckon they're the best since Mark G left to do charts on Classic FM. Which he did in exactly the same style - was quite funny actually!
Anyway, the defence rests. Let's let them off with a caution. Or something.
Thanks, not sure what makes me sound cool lol, you must have similar feelings about the chart show!
I really hope the Sheffield City Centre branch of Zavvi doesn't ditch singles. I too buy loads of vinyls as I have a jukebox and enjoy having modern and vintage discs in it simultaneously. The recent ease of acquiring 7" vinyl has been great.
1 more comment about vinyl- It's inevitable that the cd single will dissapear soon, I wonder if 7" vinyl will be the format that lasts to the bitter end after cd's and tapes are long gone! It will have gone full circle.
couldnt agree more about the final comments! Ha ha!
They never include the facts and feats for the current year, so i half expected that.
They may have stopped selling vinyl, but the Carlisle branch, the only one in my home county of Cumbria, still stocks cd singles, albeit a limited range of the odd new release and current chart, relegated to a designated part of the store and away from high customer flow. Got one there last Saturday, so to hear that Oxford Street has stopped selling ALL singles must be an error.
If they haven't relegated them to a low traffic flow area of the store perhaps, so (this charming man) next time you are in, search the store again.
HMV are better for singles, and it must be based on sales in certain areas. Just on Monday the Workington branch has a decent singles section of cd and vinyl, but lacks 12" singles, yet the same afternoon 70 miles away in Lancaster when I nipped in there, they've got no vinyl and a poor selection of disc singles. Lancaster is over twice the size of Workington, and I think its a postcode lottery on this matter.
Towns and cities whatever their size, the record shops (HMVs in particular)stock a range based on sales from anything upto a year or more ago, and those under-performing stores only stock the crap or poor choice, and good selling singles stores like Workington have a core range, if at the back of the store. Singles must sell better in West Cumbria (even Carlisle lacks vinyl) than Lancashire's chief county town!
Tapes are finished as far as singles and albums go, but everyone must have tapes at home, but if the 12" singles go, then dance djs won't have any newer material to play.
Tiesto would be lost without his vinyl.
CDs will last longer, but 7" sigles? No good to a dance dj, however, a tool for those disco guys who have 7" vinyl dating back 4 decades, and some of them are in good condition.
I have to agree with those bemoaning the decline of Radio 1's Top 40 show, even if it just proves I'm getting too old (29!) for this lark... It's partly the format change from a straight 40-to-1 countdown to what has been well described here as a variety show, partly the style of presentation. I know that Radio 1 must be seen to be appealling to the ever-decreasing attention spans we supposedly have and compete with whizz-bang 24-hour music TV and internet, and I like Fearne and Reggie and they were fine on TOTP (RIP), but they and JK & Joel (heh, I miss James' "Tweedledee & Tweedledum" comments on them on here - good points from poster no.43 too!) have presided over a period where the countdown has become almost incidental to the general larking about it seems. Even Wes ("Who?") Butters seemed to take it relatively seriously in his ill-starred interlude hosting the show (and of course he's found his niche since as Britain's unlikely chief collector of Kenneth Williams memorabilia...) - but things aren't reverting any time soon I suppose.
Sure it should be entertaining, but put it like this, I can't imagine being a teenager now sitting in my room every Sunday night glued to Radio 1 by the drama of the weekly chart battle, like I was in the '90s under the influence of Bruno Brookes and Mark Goodier. I get my chart fix from this site alone these days (after around 10 years of using Dotmusic under its various names and faithfully keeping up with James Masterton's analyses), which is sad when you think that not so long ago it felt like the nation gathered around its radios between 4 and 7pm each Sunday to find out whether Mr Blobby had managed to dethrone Take That or if Wet Wet Wet were still at No.1 or whether Blur or Oasis would win the race of all races to the chart summit. Especially now that the charts have slowed down again and we're seeing climbers and slow-burners regularly for the first time since about 1994, I can't help that think how that steady build of 39 songs in a row counting down to the all-important Number 1 would sound... well, just right again.
By the way, does anyone else fondly recall the 7pm documentary slot, pre-Dance Anthems' arrival there? They used to air some really interesting little programmes at the end of the Top 40 ten or fifteen years ago. For some reason I always remember first hearing Sharon Osbourne there on one about Ozzy, back when she was only known as his wife and manager (instead of being part of the 'X-Factor' machine, busy destroying the magic of the annual Christmas Number One race) - funny what sticks in the mind eh??
Why is Sweet Child Of Mine been hanging around the Top 100 for the last 2 months ? Is it featured in a commercial or a TV programme???