List of UK top-ten singles in 2007

Last updated

Leona Lewis had the biggest selling single of 2007 with "Bleeding Love", the first release since her X Factor victory apart from winners single "A Moment Like This". Both singles occupied the top spot in 2007. Leona 166-sRGB (4665374543).jpg
Leona Lewis had the biggest selling single of 2007 with "Bleeding Love", the first release since her X Factor victory apart from winners single "A Moment Like This". Both singles occupied the top spot in 2007.
Mika had four top 10 singles this year. His debut single "Grace Kelly" peaked at number-one in January. Mika-2009.jpg
Mika had four top 10 singles this year. His debut single "Grace Kelly" peaked at number-one in January.
Take That (group member Gary Barlow pictured) went to number-two with "Rule the World", a song featured in the film Stardust. They also had top 10 singles in 2007 with "Patience" and "Shine". Gary barlow in concert face.jpg
Take That (group member Gary Barlow pictured) went to number-two with "Rule the World", a song featured in the film Stardust . They also had top 10 singles in 2007 with "Patience" and "Shine".
Matt Lucas (pictured in wheelchair in character as Andy Pipkin) and Peter Kay collaborated with The Proclaimers on the official Comic Relief single "(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles", which spent three weeks at number-one. LittleBritain.jpg
Matt Lucas (pictured in wheelchair in character as Andy Pipkin) and Peter Kay collaborated with The Proclaimers on the official Comic Relief single "(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles", which spent three weeks at number-one.
Amy Winehouse covered The Zutons song "Valerie", providing the vocals for Mark Ronson's production and reaching number two in October. WinehouseLA.jpg
Amy Winehouse covered The Zutons song "Valerie", providing the vocals for Mark Ronson's production and reaching number two in October.

The UK Singles Chart is one of many music charts compiled by the Official Charts Company that calculates the best-selling singles of the week in the United Kingdom. [1] Since 2004 the chart has been based on the sales of both physical singles and digital downloads, with airplay figures excluded from the official chart. [2] [3] This list shows singles that peaked in the Top 10 of the UK Singles Chart during 2007, as well as singles which peaked in 2006 and 2008 but were in the top 10 in 2007. The entry date is when the single appeared in the top 10 for the first time (week ending, as published by the Official Charts Company, which is six days after the chart is announced).

Contents

One-hundred and thirty-four singles were in the top ten in 2007. Seven singles from 2006 remained in the top 10 for several weeks at the beginning of the year. "Crank That (Soulja Boy)" by Soulja Boy Tell'em was the only single from 2007 to reach its peak in 2008. [4] Twenty-eight artists scored multiple entries in the top 10 in 2007. Calvin Harris, Mark Ronson, Mika, OneRepublic and Scouting for Girls were among the many artists who achieved their first UK charting top 10 single in 2007.

New rules were introduced this year to alter how single downloads are counted, with a physical copy no longer having to be currently available in the shops for a single to be eligible for the charts. Snow Patrol were the most high profile act to benefit from the change, with their song "Chasing Cars" returning to the top 10, months after first release the previous year. "Baby's Coming Back"/"Transylvania" by McFly also became only the third single in chart history to fall straight from number-one out of the top ten the following week.

The 2006 Christmas number-one, "A Moment Like This" by 2006 X Factor winner Leona Lewis, remained at number-one for the first three weeks of 2007. [5] The first new number-one single of the year was "Grace Kelly" by Mika. [6] Overall, eighteen different singles peaked at number-one in 2007, with Leona Lewis [7] [8] Sugababes [9] [10] and Timbaland [11] [12] (2) having the joint most singles hit that position.

Background

Multiple entries

One-hundred and thirty-four singles charted in the top 10 in 2007, with one-hundred and twenty-five singles reaching their peak this year (including the re-entries "All I Want for Christmas is You" and "Fairytale of New York" which charted in previous years but reached peaks on their latest chart run).

Twenty-eight artists scored multiple entries in the top 10 in 2007. American rapper Akon, fellow countryman producer Timbaland and Lebanon-born British singer Mika shared the position of most top 10 entries in 2007 with four each, although Akon's "Smack That" - a collaboration with Eminem - peaked in 2006. [13] Mika's debut number-one single "Grace Kelly" acted as a breakthrough for the singer, [14] who won the BBC's Sound of 2007 poll, [15] as he went on to record three further top 10 entries during the year ("Love Today", "Big Girl (You Are Beautiful)" and "Happy Ending"). [16]

Akon's other hit solo singles in 2007 included the number three peak "I Wanna Love You" in February [17] and "Don't Matter" which reached the same spot in May. [18] He also featured on the number two single "The Sweet Escape" by Gwen Stefani, just missing out on number-one in March. [19] Timbaland had two number-one singles in 2007: "Give It to Me" featuring Nelly Furtado and Justin Timberlake in April, [12] followed by "The Way I Are with Keri Hilson in July. [11] His feature on 50 Cent's "Ayo Technology" (also featuring Justin Timberlake) [20] reached number two, and "Apologize" with OneRepublic peaked one spot lower. [21]

Three British acts in the form of Girls Aloud, Mark Ronson and Take That all achieved three top 10 entries in 2007, along with German dance group Cascada and American singer Justin Timberlake. Take That, who only returned unexpectedly as a four-piece in late 2006 following a ten-year hiatus, had a very successful year, as "Shine" was a number-one single [22] and "Rule the World" reached number two behind Leona Lewis' "Bleeding Love" in October 2007. [7] "Patience" had also reached number-one in 2006 and remained in the top 10 at the beginning of 2007. [23]

Girls Aloud added another number-one to their collection: "Walk This Way", a cover of the Run DMC and Aerosmith song, for Comic Relief with Sugababes. [24] "Sexy! No No No..." peaked at number five in September, [25] while "Call the Shots" ended their year in December, reaching number three. [26] Mark Ronson's "Stop Me" was a number two entry in April. [12] He produced Lily Allen's cover of "Oh My God" originally by Kaiser Chiefs, which reached number eight in July, as well as Amy Winehouse's interpretation of The Zutons' "Valerie", peaking at number two in October. [27]

Dance group Cascada's total included "Truly Madly Deeply" from the end of 2006, when it had peaked at number four. [28] "Miracle" landed at number eight in March [22] and "What Hurts the Most" sneaked into the top 10 in the week before Christmas. Justin Timberlake had one more entry in addition to "Give It to Me" and "Ayo Technology". "What Goes Around.../...Comes Around" made it to number four in March. [19]

Barbadian singer Rihanna was one of a number of artists with two top-ten entries, including number-one single "Umbrella", which stayed at the top of the chart for ten weeks. [29] Avril Lavigne, Calvin Harris, Fedde Le Grand, Gym Class Heroes, Leona Lewis, Mutya Buena, Nelly Furtado and Snow Patrol were among the other artists who had multiple top 10 entries in 2007.

Change to chart rules

The new chart rules regarding downloads, introduced at the start of the year, enabled Scottish/Irish band Snow Patrol to re-enter the top 10 with "Chasing Cars, a song that originally charted in summer 2006, without a physical copy of the record being in the shops at that time. [30]

McFly number-one's rapid drop

"Baby's Coming Back"/"Transylvania" by McFly joined a unique club of singles whose only one week in the top 10 was at number-one. It repeated the feat of "One Night"/"I Got Stung" and "It's Now or Never", both by Elvis Presley, from 2005. It held the record for the sharpest fall from number-one until "A Bridge over You" by Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Choir (2015) took this over in 2015 - its drop to number 29 was beaten by the charity single, which fell to number 29 after one week at the top of the chart.

Chart debuts

Forty-seven artists achieved their first top 10 single in 2007, either as a lead or featured artist. Of these, five went on to record another hit single that year: Calvin Harris, The Enemy, Groove Armada, Gym Class Heroes and The Hoosiers. Mark Ronson scored two more top 10 singles in 2007. Mika had three other entries in his breakthrough year.

The following table (collapsed on desktop site) does not include acts who had previously charted as part of a group and secured their first top 10 solo single.

ArtistNumber of top 10sFirst entryChart positionOther entries
Mika 4"Grace Kelly"1"Big Girl (You Are Beautiful)" (9), "Happy Ending" (7), "Love Today" (6)
Just Jack 1"Starz in Their Eyes"2
The View 1"Same Jeans"3
Jamie T 1"Calm Down Dearest"9
Mason 1"Perfect (Exceeder)"3
Princess Superstar
Klaxons 1"Golden Skans"7
The Fray 1"How to Save a Life"4
The Gossip 1"Standing in the Way of Control"2
Camille Jones 1"The Creeps"7
Andy Pipkin 1"(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles"1
Calvin Harris 2"Acceptable in the 80s"10"The Girls" (3)
Alex Gaudino 1"Destination Calabria"4
Maxïmo Park 1"Our Velocity"9
Mark Ronson 3"Stop Me"2"Oh My God" (8), "Valerie" (2)
Daniel Merriweather 1
The Enemy 2"Away from Here"8"Had Enough" (4)
Gym Class Heroes 2"Cupid's Chokehold"3"Clothes Off!!" (5)
Groove Armada 2"Get Down"9"Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)" (8)
Stush1"Get Down"9
Hellogoodbye 1"Here (In Your Arms)"4
The Twang 1"Either Way"8
Reverend and the Makers 1"Heavyweight Champion of the World"8
Lee Mead 1"Any Dream Will Do"2
Kate Nash 1"Foundations"2
The Hoosiers 2"Worried About Ray"5"Goodbye Mr A" (4)
Jack Peñate 1"Torn on the Platform"7
Kleerup 1"With Every Heartbeat"1
Newton Faulkner 1"Dream Catch Me"7
Plain White T's 1"Hey There Delilah"2
Axwell 1"I Found U"6
Max'C
Sean Kingston 1"Beautiful Girls"1
Freaks 1"The Creeps (Get on the Dancefloor)"9
Scouting for Girls 1"She's So Lovely"7
Ida Corr 1"Let Me Think About It"2
Feist 1"1234"8
OneRepublic 1"Apologize"3
Freemasons 1"Uninvited"8
Bailey Tzuke
Runrig 1"Loch Lomond (Hampden Remix)"9
Tartan Army
T2 1"Heartbroken"2
Jodie Aysha
Soulja Boy Tell'em 1"Crank That (Soulja Boy)"2 [A]
Eva Cassidy 1"What a Wonderful World"1
Leon Jackson 1"When You Believe"1
Notes

Sharam from the American electronic music duo Deep Dish had his first charting top 10 in his own right when his cover of "Party All the Time" (known as "PATT (Party All the Time)") reached number eight in January 2007. [31] Peter Kay featured on The Proclaimers new version of "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" as his Phoenix Nights character Brian Potter. The Comic Relief single went to number-one and also featured Matt Lucas playing Andy Pipkin from Little Britain . Kay had previously been credited on "Is This the Way to Amarillo" in 2005, but this was his first chart hit as Potter. [32]

Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy featured on the Gym Class Heroes top three single "Cupid's Chokehold", his first chart success outside the band. [33] Red Rat appeared on Groove Armada's "Get Down", alongside Stush, although he was not officially credit on the single release. [34]

Mutya Buena, formerly of Sugababes, had her first solo top 10 singles in 2007 with "Real Girl" and her featured credit on Groove Armada's "Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)". [35] Russell Small from Freemasons had previously been a part of the production duo Phats & Small, peaking at numbers 2 and 7 with the singles "Turn Around" (1999) and "Feel Good" (2000) respectively. [36] [37]

Songs from films

Original songs from various films entered the top 10 throughout the year. These included "Signal Fire" (from Spider-Man 3 ) [38] and "Rule the World" ( Stardust ). [9] "When You Believe" from The Prince of Egypt was also covered by Leon Jackson as his winning song on The X Factor . [39]

Charity singles

A number of singles recorded for charity reached the top 10 in the charts in 2007. The Comic Relief single was a new version of The Proclaimers hit "(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles", featuring Peter Kay and Matt Lucas as their characters Brian Potter (from Phoenix Nights and Andy Pipkin (Little Britain) respectively, peaking at number one on 31 March 2007. [40]

Runrig and the Tartan Army, made up of Scotland football fans, recorded an unofficial Children in Need single for 2007, "Loch Lomond". [41] It reached number nine on 24 November 2007, two places higher than the official Children in Need single, "Headlines (Friendship Never Ends)" by Spice Girls, which missed the top 10. [42] Proceeds from the sales of "Any Dream Will Do" by Lee Mead also went towards Children in Need. The song peaked at number two on 30 June 2007. [43]

Best-selling singles

Leona Lewis had the best-selling single of the year with "Bleeding Love". The single spent eleven weeks in the top 10 (including seven weeks at number one), sold over 787,000 copies and was certified platinum by the BPI. [7] "Umbrella" by Rihanna featuring Jay Z came in second place, selling about 511,000 copies and losing out by around 276,000 sales. [29] Mika's "Grace Kelly", [6] "When You Believe" from Leon Jackson [44] and "Rule the World" by Take That [9] made up the top five. Singles by Sugababes, [45] Timbaland featuring Keri Hilson and D.O.E., [12] The Proclaimers featuring Brian Potter and Andy Pipkin, [24] Mark Ronson featuring Amy Winehouse, [27] and Kaiser Chiefs [46] were also in the top ten best-selling singles of the year. [47]

Top-ten singles

Key
SymbolMeaning
Single peaked in 2006 but still in chart in 2007.
Single released in 2007 but peaked in 2008.
(#)Year-end top ten single position and rank
EnteredThe date that the single first appeared in the chart.
PeakHighest position that the single reached in the UK Singles Chart.
Entered
(week ending)
Weeks
in
top
10
SingleArtistPeakPeak
reached
(week ending)
Weeks
at
peak
Singles in 2006
19 August 20067"Chasing Cars" ‡ [B] Snow Patrol 616 September 20061
25 November 20069"Smack That" ‡ Akon featuring Eminem 125 November 20061
11"Patience" ‡ Take That 12 December 20064
9 December 20068"Boogie 2nite" ‡ Booty Luv 216 December 20061
16 December 20063"Wind It Up" ‡ Gwen Stefani 323 December 20061
23 December 20065"Truly Madly Deeply" ‡ Cascada 423 December 20061
4"You Know My Name" ‡ Chris Cornell 723 December 20061
30 December 20065"A Moment Like This" ‡ Leona Lewis 130 December 20064
Singles in 2007
6 January 20071"Different World" Iron Maiden 36 January 20071
3"PATT (Party All the Time)" Sharam 86 January 20072
13 January 20074"Proper Education" Eric Prydz vs. Floyd 213 January 20072
1"Window in the Skies" U2 413 January 20071
20 January 200711"Grace Kelly" (#3) Mika 127 January 20075
7"Starz in Their Eyes" Just Jack 227 January 20072
6"Too Little Too Late" JoJo 427 January 20072
27 January 20074"Same Jeans" The View 327 January 20071
2"I Luv U" The Ordinary Boys 727 January 20071
1"Calm Down Dearest" Jamie T 927 January 20071
3 February 20074"Perfect (Exceeder)" Mason vs. Princess Superstar 33 February 20071
5"This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race" Fall Out Boy 210 February 20071
2"Golden Skans" Klaxons 73 February 20071
1"Famous Last Words" My Chemical Romance 83 February 20071
10 February 20071"The Prayer" Bloc Party 410 February 20071
5"I Wanna Love You" Akon featuring Snoop Dogg 324 February 20071
11"How to Save a Life" The Fray 414 April 20071
17 February 200710"Ruby" (#10) Kaiser Chiefs 13 March 20071
11"The Sweet Escape" Gwen Stefani featuring Akon 217 March 20072
3 March 20073"Lil Star" Kelis featuring CeeLo Green 33 March 20071
1"Catch You" Sophie Ellis-Bextor 83 March 20071
6"Shine" Take That 110 March 20072
10 March 20072"Standing in the Way of Control" Gossip 710 March 20071
1"Miracle" Cascada 810 March 20071
4"What Goes Around... Comes Around" Justin Timberlake 417 March 20071
17 March 20072"The Creeps" Camille Jones vs. Fedde Le Grand 717 March 20071
1"Say It Right" Nelly Furtado 1017 March 20071
24 March 20072"Walk This Way" [C] Sugababes vs. Girls Aloud 124 March 20071
6"(I'm Gonna Be) 500 Miles" (#8) [C] The Proclaimers featuring Brian Potter & Andy Pipkin 131 March 20073
1"Acceptable in the 80s" Calvin Harris 1024 March 20071
31 March 20078"Girlfriend" Avril Lavigne 27 April 20072
4"Destination Calabria" Alex Gaudino 47 April 20071
1"Our Velocity" Maxïmo Park 931 March 20071
4"Glamorous" Fergie 67 April 20071
14 April 20075"Stop Me" Mark Ronson featuring Daniel Merriweather 221 April 20071
10"Give It to Me" Timbaland featuring Nelly Furtado & Justin Timberlake 121 April 20071
12"Beautiful Liar" Beyoncé & Shakira 128 April 20073
28 April 20072"Brianstorm" Arctic Monkeys 228 April 20071
3"Because of You" Ne-Yo 45 May 20071
2"I Wanna Have Your Babies" Natasha Bedingfield 728 April 20071
1"Away From Here" The Enemy 828 April 20071
5 May 20072"Love Today" Mika 65 May 20071
9"Cupid's Chokehold" Gym Class Heroes 312 May 20071
1"Closer" Travis 105 May 20071
12 May 20072"Your Love Alone Is Not Enough" Manic Street Preachers 212 May 20071
1"Get Down" Groove Armada featuring Stush & Red Rat 912 May 20071
6"Here (In Your Arms)" Hellogoodbye 42 June 20072
19 May 20071 "Baby's Coming Back"/"Transylvania" McFly 119 May 20071
4"Don't Matter" Akon 319 May 20071
2"Flying the Flag (For You)" [D] Scooch 519 May 20071
1"What I've Done" Linkin Park 619 May 20071
1"Take Control" Amerie 1019 May 20071
26 May 200713"Umbrella" (#2) Rihanna featuring Jay-Z 126 May 200710
4"Makes Me Wonder" Maroon 5 226 May 20072
2"Signal Fire" Snow Patrol 426 May 20071
2"Shine" Booty Luv 1026 May 20072
2 June 20074"Real Girl" Mutya Buena 29 June 20072
9 June 20071"Either Way" The Twang 89 June 20071
5"The Girls" Calvin Harris 316 June 20071
16 June 20072"Heavyweight Champion of the World" [E] Reverend and the Makers 816 June 20071
10"Do You Know? (The Ping Pong Song)" Enrique Iglesias 323 June 20073
23 June 20072"Icky Thump" The White Stripes 223 June 20071
4"Like This" Kelly Rowland featuring Eve 423 June 20071
2"Never Again" Kelly Clarkson 923 June 20071
30 June 20073"Any Dream Will Do" [F] Lee Mead 230 June 20071
1"Smokers Outside the Hospital Doors" Editors 730 June 20071
7 July 20079"Foundations" Kate Nash 27 July 20075
1"Had Enough" The Enemy 47 July 20071
7"Worried About Ray" The Hoosiers 514 July 20071
1"Torn on the Platform" Jack Peñate 77 July 20071
14 July 20074"When You're Gone" Avril Lavigne 314 July 20071
12"The Way I Are" (#7) Timbaland featuring Keri Hilson 14 August 20072
2"Soulmate" Natasha Bedingfield 714 July 20071
9"Big Girls Don't Cry" Fergie 221 July 20071
21 July 20072"Fluorescent Adolescent" Arctic Monkeys 521 July 20071
2"Teenagers" My Chemical Romance 921 July 20071
28 July 20071"Oh My God" Mark Ronson featuring Lily Allen 828 July 20071
4 August 20072"Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)" Groove Armada featuring Mutya Buena 84 August 20071
1"Big Girl (You Are Beautiful)" Mika 94 August 20071
1"Autumnsong" Manic Street Preachers 104 August 20071
11 August 20077"With Every Heartbeat" Robyn with Kleerup 118 August 20071
3"Dream Catch Me" Newton Faulkner 711 August 20071
11"Hey There Delilah" Plain White T's 215 September 20072
18 August 20079"Stronger" Kanye West 125 August 20072
25 August 20071"I Found U" Axwell 625 August 20071
3"Clothes Off!!" Gym Class Heroes 51 September 20071
1"Love Is Gone" David Guetta 925 August 20071
1 September 20078"Beautiful Girls" Sean Kingston 18 September 20074
1"Suburban Knights" Hard-Fi 71 September 20071
8"Ayo Technology" 50 Cent featuring Justin Timberlake & Timbaland 229 September 20071
8 September 20075"Shut Up and Drive" Rihanna 58 September 20071
1"The Creeps (Get on the Dancefloor)" Freaks 98 September 20071
5"1973" James Blunt 415 September 20072
15 September 20072"Sexy! No No No..." Girls Aloud 515 September 20071
6"She's So Lovely" Scouting for Girls 729 September 20071
29 September 20071"Delivery" Babyshambles 629 September 20071
1"The Pretender" Foo Fighters 829 September 20071
6 October 20079"About You Now" (#6) Sugababes 16 October 20074
4"No U Hang Up"/"If That's OK with You" Shayne Ward 26 October 20071
4"Let Me Think About It" Ida Corr vs. Fedde Le Grand 213 October 20072
13 October 200713"Valerie" (#9) Mark Ronson featuring Amy Winehouse 227 October 20071
2"1234" Feist 813 October 20071
20 October 20074"Goodbye Mr A" The Hoosiers 427 October 20071
27 October 20074"Gimme More" Britney Spears 327 October 20071
13"Apologize" Timbaland presents OneRepublic 317 November 20072
1"Happy Ending" Mika 727 October 20071
4"Uninvited" Freemasons featuring Bailey Tzuke 827 October 20073
3 November 200711"Bleeding Love" (#1) Leona Lewis 13 November 20077
12"Rule the World" (#5) Take That 23 November 20074
2"The Heart Never Lies" McFly 33 November 20071
1"Lord Don't Slow Me Down" Oasis 103 November 20071
10 November 20074"Home" Westlife 310 November 20071
17 November 20071"Hot Stuff (Let's Dance)" Craig David 717 November 20071
6"No One" Alicia Keys 624 November 20072
24 November 20073"2 Hearts" Kylie Minogue 424 November 20071
1"Flux" Bloc Party 824 November 20071
1"Loch Lomond (Hampden Remix)" [G] Runrig featuring Tartan Army 924 November 20071
1 December 20076"Heartbroken" T2 featuring Jodie Aysha 21 December 20073
7"Call the Shots" Girls Aloud 38 December 20072
3"Breathless" Shayne Ward 61 December 20071
15 December 20073"All I Want for Christmas Is You" [H] Mariah Carey 422 December 20071
8"Crank That (Soulja Boy)" ♦ Soulja Boy Tell'em 212 January 20081
22 December 20072"What a Wonderful World" Eva Cassidy & Katie Melua 122 December 20071
3"Fairytale of New York" [I] The Pogues featuring Kirsty McColl 429 December 20071
1"What Hurts the Most" Cascada 1022 December 20071
29 December 20074"When You Believe" (#4) Leon Jackson 129 December 20073

Entries by artist

The following table shows artists who achieved two or more top 10 entries in 2007, including singles that reached their peak in 2006. The figures include both main artists and featured artists, while appearances on ensemble charity records are also counted for each artist. The total number of weeks an artist spent in the top ten in 2007 is also shown.

Canadian singer Avril Lavigne returned in 2007 with two top 10 singles from her album The Best Damn Thing: "Girlfriend" and "When You're Gone". MMVA2007 Avril Lavigne MG 8503.jpg
Canadian singer Avril Lavigne returned in 2007 with two top 10 singles from her album The Best Damn Thing : "Girlfriend" and "When You're Gone".
McFly achieved two top 10 entries in 2007 with the double A-side single "Baby's Coming Back" / "Transylvania" and "The Heart Never Lies". Mcfly-all.jpg
McFly achieved two top 10 entries in 2007 with the double A-side single "Baby's Coming Back" / "Transylvania" and "The Heart Never Lies".
Producer Timbaland had four credited chart singles in 2007 including "The Way I Are" and "Apologize" with OneRepublic. Timbaland1292010.png
Producer Timbaland had four credited chart singles in 2007 including "The Way I Are" and "Apologize" with OneRepublic.
EntriesArtistWeeksSingles
4 Akon [J] [K] 23"Don't Matter", "I Wanna Love You", "Smack That", "The Sweet Escape"
Mika 15"Big Girl (You Are Beautiful)", "Grace Kelly", "Happy Ending", "Love Today"
Timbaland [L] 39"Apologize", "Ayo Technology", "Give It to Me", "The Way I Are"
3 Cascada [K] 5"Miracle", "Truly Madly Deeply", "What Hurts the Most"
Girls Aloud 9"Call the Shots", "Sexy! No No No...", "Walk This Way"
Justin Timberlake [L] [M] 21"Ayo Technology", "Give It to Me", "What Goes Around... Comes Around"
Mark Ronson 19"Oh My God", "Stop Me", "Valerie"
Take That [K] 19"Patience", "Rule the World", "Shine"
2 Arctic Monkeys 4"Brianstorm", "Fluorescent Adolescent"
Avril Lavigne 12"Girlfriend", "When You're Gone"
Bloc Party 2"Flux", "The Prayer"
Booty Luv [K] 6"Boogie 2nite", "Shine"
Calvin Harris 6"Acceptable in the 80s", "The Girls"
The Enemy 2"Away from Here", "Had Enough"
Fedde Le Grand 6"The Creeps", "Let Me Think About It"
Fergie 13"Big Girls Don't Cry", "Glamorous"
Groove Armada 3"Get Down", "Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)"
Gym Class Heroes 12"Clothes Off!!", "Cupid's Chokehold"
The Hoosiers 11"Goodbye Mr A", "Worried About Ray"
Leona Lewis [K] 13"A Moment Like This", "Bleeding Love"
Manic Street Preachers 3"Autumnsong", "Your Love Alone Is Not Enough"
McFly 3 "Baby's Coming Back"/"Transylvania", "The Heart Never Lies"
Mutya Buena [N] 6"Real Girl", "Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)"
Natasha Bedingfield 4"I Wanna Have Your Babies", "Soulmate"
Nelly Furtado [M] 11"Give It to Me", "Say It Right"
Rihanna 18"Shut Up and Drive", "Umbrella"
Snow Patrol [K] 3"Chasing Cars", "Signal Fire"
Sugababes 11"About You Now", "Walk This Way"

Notes

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sugababes</span> English girl group

The Sugababes are an English girl group composed of Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan and Siobhán Donaghy. The lineup changed three times before returning to the original lineup in 2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keisha Buchanan</span> British singer (born 1984)

Keisha Buchanan is an English singer and a founding member of the girl group Sugababes alongside Mutya Buena and Siobhán Donaghy. With the Sugababes, she had six number one singles and two number one studio albums, making them one of the most successful British pop acts of the 21st century. Buchanan was sacked to leave the group in September 2009 and was replaced by Jade Ewen. Buchanan returned to the group in 2012 with the original lineup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Push the Button (Sugababes song)</span> 2005 single by Sugababes

"Push the Button" is a song recorded by English girl group the Sugababes for their fourth studio album Taller in More Ways (2005). Composed by Dallas Austin and the Sugababes, it was inspired by an infatuation that group member Keisha Buchanan developed with another artist. Musically, the song is an electropop and R&B song with various computer effects. It was released as the lead single from Taller in More Ways on 23 September 2005, by Island Records.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hole in the Head</span> 2003 single by Sugababes

"Hole in the Head" is a song performed by British girl group Sugababes, released on 13 October 2003 as the lead single from their third studio album, Three. It was written by Brian Higgins, Miranda Cooper, Tim Powell, Nick Coler, Niara Scarlett, Keisha Buchanan, Mutya Buena, and Heidi Range, and co-produced by Higgins and Jeremy Wheatley. The song was met with acclaim from critics and was a commercial success, entering at the top of the UK Singles Chart. Outside the United Kingdom, the single peaked within the top ten of the charts in ten other countries. It became their only single to chart in the United States, peaking at number ninety-six on the Billboard Hot 100 and topping the Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sugababes discography</span>

The discography of the British girl group Sugababes consists of eight studio albums, four compilation album, four extended plays, thirty one singles, two video albums and eight promotional singles. The Sugababes were formed in 1998 and, at various times, featured three vocalists from Siobhán Donaghy, Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan, Heidi Range, Amelle Berrabah, and Jade Ewen.

This is a summary of the year 2007 in British music. It was the first year of digital downloads being fully integrated into the charts, leading to many songs not given physical releases to enter the chart on download sales alone. Leona Lewis had the most successful single of the year with "Bleeding Love", which achieved sales of 787,652 copies. Her album Spirit became the fastest-selling debut album of all time in the UK. Rihanna spent ten weeks at number one with "Umbrella", the longest stay for any artist at number 1 for thirteen years and the second best selling single of the year, and Amy Winehouse had the biggest selling album of the year with Back to Black.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)</span> 2007 single by Groove Armada and Mutya Buena

"Song 4 Mutya (Out of Control)" is a song produced by British music duo Groove Armada, featuring vocals by recording artist Mutya Buena. Initially intended to feature British singer Estelle, the duo ultimately decided to collaborate with Buena on the song following her departure from girl group Sugababes in December 2005. Supported by a new wave-inspired beat, dance synthesizers and a bass line, it is an uptempo electronic and electropop song. The lyrics were interpreted by the media as an "insult" to Buena's Sugababes replacement Amelle Berrabah, although Buena herself has denied such allegations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">About You Now</span> 2007 single by Sugababes

"About You Now" is a song by British girl group Sugababes from their fifth studio album, Change (2007). Written and produced by Dr. Luke along with Cathy Dennis and Steven Wolf, it was released on 24 September 2007 by Island Records as the lead single from the album, the first to feature Amelle Berrabah on all tracks. An uptempo pop track that combines heavy elements of pop rock and dance-pop, it infuses light electronic sounds. Lyrically, "About You Now" finds the protagonist thinking deeply over her relationship with her love interest from whom she parted.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bleeding Love</span> 2007 single by Leona Lewis

"Bleeding Love" is a song recorded by British singer Leona Lewis for her debut studio album, Spirit (2007). It was originally written and recorded by American singer Jesse McCartney, and was co-written and produced by American singer Ryan Tedder. "Bleeding Love" was released worldwide during the last quarter of 2007, and the first of 2008, as the album's lead single internationally, and as the second single in Ireland and the United Kingdom. McCartney later included his version of the song as a bonus track on the international edition of his third studio album, Departure (2008). It is Lewis' biggest hit, to date, and remains her signature song. As of 2021, "Bleeding Love" has been streamed over two billion times.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Apologize (OneRepublic song)</span> 2007 single by OneRepublic

"Apologize" is a song written by Ryan Tedder, which first appeared on Timbaland's second studio album Shock Value (2007). It was then released as the third single from that album, along with the original recording by OneRepublic. It accordingly also served as the debut single for OneRepublic's debut album Dreaming Out Loud (2007), produced by Greg Wells. Timbaland's version omits the guitar solo after the second verse in the original, and includes an extra line of percussion, new backing vocals, and added sound samples, in addition to sound mixing and a few other minor changes. The song was the biggest radio airplay hit in the history of the Mainstream Top 40 chart in the United States, with 10,394 plays in one week, until its record was broken by Leona Lewis's "Bleeding Love", which was also co-written by Tedder. The song was a major hit internationally, reaching number one in 16 countries, including Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, Turkey, and the Netherlands, as well as staying at number one for eight consecutive weeks on the Billboard Pop 100 chart. The song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, staying in the top-10 for 25 weeks, and spent 13 weeks at number one in Canada.

This is a summary of the year 2008 in British music in terms of the charts. 21 singles occupied the number one position during the year, with 11 being new.

References

General

Specific

  1. "The Official UK Charts Company". Official Charts Company . Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  2. Roberts, David (2005). Guinness World Records: British Hit Singles and Albums (18th edition). Guinness World Records Limited. p. 14. ISBN   1-904994-00-8.
  3. "New singles formats to save the charts". BBC News . 16 October 2003. Retrieved 21 February 2010.
  4. "Radiohead CD tops UK album chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 6 January 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  5. "Leona celebrates New Year at top". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 31 December 2006. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  6. 1 2 "Rising star Mika hits number one". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 21 January 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 "Leona Lewis storms singles chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 28 October 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  8. "X Factor's Leona has festive No 1". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 25 December 2006. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  9. 1 2 3 "Leona helps smash download record". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 31 October 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  10. "Ebony and Ivory voted worst duet". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 6 October 2007. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  11. 1 2 "Timbaland ends Rihanna chart lead". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 29 July 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  12. 1 2 3 4 "Timbaland takes number one spot". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 15 April 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  13. "Take That return to singles chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 19 November 2006. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  14. "Rising star Mika hits number one". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 21 January 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2010.
  15. "Singer Mika tops BBC talent list". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 4 January 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  16. "Arctics' album storms to the top". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 29 April 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  17. "Mika holds off Brit Award stars". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 18 February 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  18. "McFly go straight to top of chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 13 May 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  19. 1 2 "Take That keep UK chart top spot". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 11 March 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  20. "Kanye West wins UK chart battle". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 16 September 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  21. "Lewis hit song is 2007 top seller". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 12 November 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  22. 1 2 "Take That claim 10th number one". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 4 March 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  23. "Leona celebrates New Year at top". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 31 December 2006. Retrieved 30 March 2010.
  24. 1 2 "Proclaimers stroll to number one". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 25 March 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  25. "Pavarotti back in singles chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 9 September 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  26. "Leona remains top of both charts". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 2 December 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  27. 1 2 "Sugababes beat Britney in chart". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 22 October 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  28. "Take That's domination continues". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 17 December 2006. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  29. 1 2 "Rihanna achieves chart landmark". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 23 July 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  30. "Top 40 change helps Snow Patrol". BBC News . British Broadcasting Corporation. 8 January 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2010.
  31. "Top 10 Dance Albums: Club-land Crossover". LA Weekly. 23 December 2009. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  32. "This is the story of 30 years of The Proclaimers". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 18 June 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  33. Sharp, Tyler (19 August 2016). "What happened to Gym Class Heroes?". Alternative Press. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  34. Ewing, Tom (14 April 2008). "Groove Armada: Soundboy Rock Album Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  35. Corner, Lewis (24 December 2016). "Sugababes then and now: What happened to all six members?". Digital Spy. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  36. "Official Singles Chart Top 100 - 18 April 1999-24 April 1999". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  37. "Russell Small releases 'She'". MN2S. 15 July 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  38. Kaufman, Gil (29 March 2007). "Spider-Man 3 Soundtrack Features Killers, Snow Patrol". MTV.com. MTV. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  39. "Leon Jackson takes X Factor crown". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 16 December 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  40. "The Big One raises record Red Nose Day cash". BBC Press Office. British Broadcasting Corporation. 17 March 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  41. "Scotland fans record charity song". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 14 October 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  42. "Scots back Children in Need night". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 17 November 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  43. "White Stripes take chart by storm". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 24 June 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  44. "Festive double for X Factor stars". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 23 December 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  45. "Sugababes claim number one spot". 30 September 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  46. "Kaiser Chiefs take over UK charts". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 25 February 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  47. "Winehouse and Lewis head charts". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 31 December 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2017.