List of songs which have spent the most weeks on the UK Singles Chart

Last updated

The following is a list of songs that have charted for 100 weeks or more in total on the UK Singles Chart Top 100, according to the Official Charts Company (OCC). [1] The chart here is as recorded by the OCC, i.e. usually a Top 50 from 1960 to 1978, Top 75 from then until 1982, and Top 100 from 1983 onwards. In the pre-digital age, records with re-recorded vocals (for example, live versions) and Remixes released with substantially different catalogue numbers did not count towards the total and were seen as new hits (see "Blue Monday" as an example). In the digital age, if versions of a record are substantially the same tune, whether the release is remixed, live or re-recorded, they are combined under one chart entry, unless the record company has requested a version to be listed as a separate entry. [2] [3]

Contents

With over 380 weeks in the chart, "Mr Brightside" [4] by the Killers has had more weeks in the Top 100 than any other single in over 70 years of chart data, [5] and is also now in second place in the Top 75 long runners list (as previously used in The Guinness Book Of Hit Singles). "Someone You Loved" by Lewis Capaldi currently leads this list, with the song having been in the Top 75 for a few months longer than the records in the runners up position. Last Christmas has spent the most weeks in the Top 3. All I Want for Christmas Is You has spent the most weeks in the Top 10 and Top 40. When only a Top 50 was compiled, Frank Sinatra's "My Way" set a record which still stands: 122 weeks in the Top 50 between April 1969 and January 1972. It also held the record for most weeks in the top 40 with 75, until The Pogues' "Fairytale of New York" achieved its 76th week in the region in 2021 and most weeks in the top 75 with 124, which was surpassed by Ed Sheeran's "Perfect" in 2021.

The longest unbroken run in the Top 100 is 105 weeks for “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd, which also holds the longest consecutive run in the top 75 (103 weeks). Engelbert Humperdinck's "Release Me" held the record run in the Top 50, at 56 weeks, for over 40 years [6] until beaten by "All of Me" by John Legend with 58 consecutive weeks in the top 50 (since passed by "Thinking Out Loud" with 63 weeks). The song with the most weeks at No. 1 is "I Believe" by Frankie Laine which stayed in the Top 10 for 35 weeks, 18 of them at No. 1 and a further seven at No. 2. Also noteworthy is "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets, the only song released in the 1950s to appear in the lists, which achieved 36 of its weeks when only a Top 20 or Top 30 were published.

In the pre-digital era, Christmas-themed songs were often re-released in different years and several have continued to chart each year from the mid-noughties onwards. "Merry Xmas Everybody" by Slade has had 27 chart runs in 30 different years (1973–74, 1980–87, 1989–90 and 2006–23), while "Fairytale of New York" by the Pogues and Kirsty MacColl has reached the Top 10 ten times and spent a record 70 weeks in the Top 20 and 84 weeks in the Top 40. In a similar but more modest way, since 2007, "Thriller" by Michael Jackson [7] and "Ghostbusters" by Ray Parker Jr. [8] have charted at Halloween in fifteen and thirteen years, respectively.

The numbers shown are up to the chart for week ending 11 May 2023.

Songs with 20 or more weeks in the Top 10

29 songs have spent 20 or more weeks in the Top 10 of the UK Charts. "All I Want for Christmas Is You" by Mariah Carey holds the record for the most weeks in the Top 10 history with 44 weeks. "Last Christmas" by Wham! holds the record for the most weeks in the top 10 by a British act with 41 weeks. "I Believe" by Frankie Laine holds the record for the most consecutive weeks in the top 10 with 35 weeks. "Fairytale of New York" by The Pogues featuring Kirsty MacColl holds the record for the most weeks in the Top 10 without reaching number one with 33 weeks.

SongArtistYear first
entered chart
Chart
peak
Total weeks
in top 10
Consecutive
weeks
Reference
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" Mariah Carey 19941445 [9]
"Last Christmas" Wham! 19841417 [10]
"As It Was" Harry Styles 202213718 [11]
"I Believe" Frankie Laine 195313535 [12]
"Fairytale of New York" The Pogues featuring Kirsty MacColl 19872335 [13]
"Someone You Loved" Lewis Capaldi 201813120 [14]
"Cruel Summer" Taylor Swift 201922913 [15]
"Secret Love" Doris Day 195412727 [16]
"Calm Down" Rema 202232725 [17]
"Don't Start Now" Dua Lipa 201922518 [18]
"The Happy Wanderer"Obernkirchen Children's Choir195422422 [19]
"Terry's Theme from Limelight" Frank Chacksfield 195322323 [20]
"One Dance" Drake featuring Wizkid and Kyla 201612323 [21]
"Stick Season" Noah Kahan 202312323 [22]
"Because You're Mine" Mario Lanza 195232222 [23]
"What Do You Mean?" Justin Bieber 201512222 [24]
"Shape of You" Ed Sheeran 201712222 [25]
"Bad Habits" Ed Sheeran 202112222 [25]
"Peru" Fireboy DML and Ed Sheeran 202122222 [25]
"Blinding Lights" The Weeknd 201912221 [26]
"The Song from Moulin Rouge" Mantovani 195312221 [27]
"Prada"Cassö, Raye and D-Block Europe 202322214 [28]
"Relax" Frankie Goes to Hollywood 198312210 [29]
"She Loves You" The Beatles 196312121 [30]
"(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" Bryan Adams 199112121 [31]
"Oh Mein Papa" Eddie Calvert 195312020 [32]
"Little Things Mean a Lot" Kitty Kallen 195412020 [33]
"Love Is All Around" Wet Wet Wet 199412020 [34]
"Happy" Pharrell Williams 201312020 [35]
"Thinking Out Loud" Ed Sheeran 201412020 [25]
"Cara Mia" David Whitfield with Mantovani and His Orchestra195412019 [36]
"Rock Around the Clock" Bill Haley and His Comets 195512015 [37]
"Greedy" Tate McRae 202332011

Songs with 50 or more weeks in the Top 40

The Top 40 chart has been broadcast weekly on BBC Radio 1 (currently as The Official Chart ) since 12 November 1978 and is often referred to as 'the charts'. Appearing in the Top 40 can greatly increase a song's exposure on television and radio. "All I Want for Christmas Is You" by Mariah Carey holds the record for the most weeks in the Top 40 history with 87 weeks. In June 2015, "Thinking Out Loud" by Ed Sheeran became the first (and so far only) single to stay in the Top 40 for 52 consecutive weeks - equivalent to one year, [38] having spent a record-breaking 18 weeks in the chart before reaching No. 1. [39]

SongArtistYear first
entered chart
Chart
peak
Total weeks
in top 40
Consecutive
weeks
Reference
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" Mariah Carey 19941947 [9]
"Fairytale of New York" The Pogues featuring Kirsty MacColl 19872898 [13]
"Last Christmas" Wham! 198418311 [10]
"My Way" Frank Sinatra 196957516 [40]
"Heat Waves" Glass Animals 202057330 [41] [42] [43]
"Blinding Lights" The Weeknd 201917048 [26]
"Someone You Loved" Lewis Capaldi 201816949 [14]
"As It Was" Harry Styles 202215933 [44]
"Thinking Out Loud" Ed Sheeran 2014156*54 [25]
"All of Me" John Legend 2014254*44 [45]
"Do They Know It's Christmas?" Band Aid 198415311 [46]
"Dance Monkey" Tones and I 201915250 [47]
"Stranger on the Shore" Acker Bilk 196125245 [48]
"Bad Habits" Ed Sheeran 202115229 [25]
"Merry Xmas Everybody" Slade 19731529 [49]
"Happy" Pharrell Williams 201315049 [35]

* includes 5-day 'week' ending 9 July 2015, when the chart week changed from Sunday-Saturday to Friday-Thursday.

Songs with 50 or more weeks in the Top 75

The Top 75 was published each week by Music Week magazine until March 2021 (when it became a monthly publication), [50] with records reaching the top 75 described as hits (as in the case of The Virgin/Guinness Book of British Hit Singles). Since March 2021, the Official Charts Company have compiled a monthly Top 75 chart countdown for the publication. In regards to the weekly chart, the longest continuous run in the Top 75 is 103 weeks for "Blinding Lights" by The Weeknd (December 2019 to November 2021). In 2014, "Happy" by Pharrell Williams and "Let It Go" by Idina Menzel became the first singles ever to stay in the Top 75 for a whole calendar year, since also achieved by “Blinding Lights” in 2020. Frank Sinatra's "My Way" held the record for most weeks in the top 75 for nearly 50 years until it was broken by "Perfect" in 2021. [4]

SongArtistYear first
entered chart
Chart
peak
Total weeks
in top 75
Consecutive
weeks
Reference
"Someone You Loved" Lewis Capaldi 2018115199 [14]
"Mr. Brightside" The Killers 20041013129 [51]
"Perfect" Ed Sheeran 2017113062 [25]
"My Way" Frank Sinatra 1969512442 [40]
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" Mariah Carey 199411158 [9]
"Last Christmas" Wham! 1984111313 [10]
"Fairytale of New York" The Pogues featuring Kirsty MacColl 198721139 [13]
"Chasing Cars" Snow Patrol 2006611148 [52]
"Heat Waves" Glass Animals 2020510768 [53]
"Blinding Lights" The Weeknd 20191106103 [26]
"Merry Xmas Everybody" Slade 197311009 [49]
"Shotgun" George Ezra 201819180 [54]
"Thinking Out Loud" Ed Sheeran 2014191*73 [25]
"Sex on Fire" Kings of Leon 200819042 [55]
"Do They Know It's Christmas?" Band Aid 198418813 [46]
"Dance Monkey" Tones and I 201918367 [47]
"As It Was" Harry Styles 202218245 [11]
"I Gotta Feeling" The Black Eyed Peas 200917863 [56]
"Rather Be" Clean Bandit featuring Jess Glynne 2014178*73 [57]
"Merry Christmas Everyone" Shakin' Stevens 19851788 [58]
"Use Somebody" Kings of Leon 200827740 [55]
"Shape of You" Ed Sheeran 201717570 [25]
"All of Me" John Legend 2014275*68 [45]
"Rule the World" Take That 200727530 [59]
"Happy" Pharrell Williams 2013174*70 [35]
"Chandelier" Sia 2014674*53 [60]
"Pompeii" Bastille 201327330 [61]
"Someone like You" Adele 201117261 [62]
"I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" Wizzard [42] 20071069 [lower-alpha 1] 6 [63]
"Amazing Grace" Judy Collins 197056732 [64]
"Don't Stop Believin'" Journey 198266648 [65]
"Poker Face" Lady Gaga 200916646 [66]
"Take Me to Church" Hozier 2014266*63 [67]
"I'm Yours" Jason Mraz 2008116547 [68]
"Photograph" Ed Sheeran 20141565*45 [25]
"This Is Me" Keala Settle and The Greatest Showman Ensemble201836565 [69]
"Calm Down" Rema 202236464 [17]
"Head & Heart" Joel Corry featuring MNEK 202016462 [70] [71]
"Counting Stars" OneRepublic 201316459 [72]
"Shallow" Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper 201816439 [66]
"Let It Go" Idina Menzel 2013116363 [73]
"Riptide" Vance Joy 20141062*21 [74]
"Titanium" David Guetta featuring Sia 201116132 [75]
"Wake Me Up" Avicii 201316157 [76]
"Budapest" George Ezra 2014361*52 [54]
"Uptown Funk" Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars 201416149 [77]
"Bad Guy" Billie Eilish 201926137 [78]
"Driving Home for Christmas" Chris Rea 19881061 [lower-alpha 2] 6 [79]
"Radioactive" Imagine Dragons 2012126044 [80]
"Before You Go" Lewis Capaldi 201916050 [14]
"Relax" Frankie Goes to Hollywood 198315948 [29]
"Rehab" Amy Winehouse 200675934 [81]
"Party Rock Anthem" LMFAO featuring Lauren Bennett & GoonRock 201115934 [82]
"Lean On" Major Lazer & DJ Snake featuring 2015259*57 [83]
"Stay with Me" Sam Smith 201415858 [84]
"Rock Around the Clock" Bill Haley and His Comets 195515717 [37]
"Release Me" Engelbert Humperdinck 196715756 [85]
"Pass Out" Tinie Tempah 201015739 [86]
"Rolling in the Deep" Adele 201125643 [62]
"I See Fire" Ed Sheeran 2013135625 [25]
"Hold Back the River" James Bay 2014256*45 [87]
"Sorry" Justin Bieber 201515655 [24]
"Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" Brenda Lee 19624567 [88]
"Stranger on the Shore" Acker Bilk 196125555 [48]
"Make You Feel My Love" Adele 200845534 [62]
"Low" Flo Rida featuring T-Pain 200825538 [89]
"Can't Stop the Feeling!" Justin Timberlake 201625545 [90]
"Price Tag" Jessie J featuring B.o.B. 201115436 [91]
"Let Her Go" Passenger 201325451 [92]
"Sunflower" Post Malone featuring Swae Lee 201835436 [93]
"Insomnia" Faithless 199535319 [94]
"How to Save a Life" The Fray 200745339 [95]
"Somebody That I Used to Know" Gotye featuring Kimbra 201215345 [96]
"Stitches" Shawn Mendes 201515351 [97]
"Gold Digger" Kanye West featuring Jamie Foxx 200525237 [98]
"Moves Like Jagger" Maroon 5 featuring Christina Aguilera 201125252 [99]
"Leave a Light On" Tom Walker 201875218 [100]
"Whatever" Oasis 199435115 [101]
"Umbrella" Rihanna featuring Jay-Z 200715147 [102]
"Viva la Vida" Coldplay 200815141 [103]
"Paradise" Coldplay 201115140 [103]
"Gangnam Style" Psy 201215149 [104]
"Where Are Ü Now" Skrillex and Diplo featuring Justin Bieber 2015151*51 [105]
"Cheap Thrills" Sia 201625151 [60]
"New Rules" Dua Lipa 201715148 [18]
"Feel It Still" Portugal. The Man 201735131 [106]
"Blue Monday" New Order 198335017 [107]
"Rockstar" Nickelback 200725050 [108]
"What Makes You Beautiful" One Direction 201115035 [109]
"A Thousand Years" Christina Perri 2011115017 [110]
"Ho Hey" Lumineers 201285048 [111]
"Feel the Love" Rudimental featuring John Newman 201215026 [112]

some or all weeks in charts when only the Top 50 is compiled.

some weeks in charts when only Top 30 or less is compiled.

* includes five-day 'week' ending 9 July 2015 when the chart week changed from Sunday-Saturday to Friday-Thursday.

Songs with 100 or more weeks in the Top 100

The Top 100 is published each week by the Official Charts Company. 26 songs have reached 100 or more weeks in the Top 100. The longest continuous run in the Top 100 is 105 weeks for “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd.

On 4 February 2022, "Mr Brightside" became the first song to hit 300 weeks in the top 100. [113] It has subsequently passed 400 weeks, spending all but the Christmas period in the Top 100 every year since 2021.

SongArtistYear first
entered chart
Chart
peak
Total weeks
in top 100
Consecutive
weeks
Reference
"Mr. Brightside" The Killers 20041040047 [51]
"Someone You Loved" Lewis Capaldi 20181218100 [14]
"Perfect" Ed Sheeran 2017119167 [25]
"Chasing Cars" Snow Patrol 2006616688 [52]
"Blinding Lights" The Weeknd 20191144105 [26]
"Shotgun" George Ezra 2018113487 [54]
"My Way" Frank Sinatra 1969513325 [40]
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" Mariah Carey 199411318 [9]
"Riptide" Vance Joy 20131012849 [74]
"Fairytale of New York" The Pogues featuring Kirsty MacColl 198721269 [13]
"Sex on Fire" Kings of Leon 2008112489 [55]
"Heat Waves" Glass Animals 20205123100 [114]
"Last Christmas" Wham! 1984112213 [10]
"Another Love" Tom Odell 20121012022 [115]
"Thinking Out Loud" Ed Sheeran 2014111995 [25]
"Dance Monkey" Tones and I 2019111671 [47]
"Shallow" Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper 2018111660 [66]
"Viva la Vida" Coldplay 2008111550 [116]
"Chandelier" Sia 20146114*72 [60]
"Merry Xmas Everybody" Slade 197311149 [49]
"Iris" Goo Goo Dolls 1998311425 [117]
"Bad Habits" Ed Sheeran 2021111449 [118]
"Whatever" Oasis 1994311232 [101]
"I Gotta Feeling" The Black Eyed Peas 2009110975 [56]
"Save Your Tears" The Weeknd 2021210849 [26]
"Radioactive" Imagine Dragons 20121210751 [80]
"Pompeii" Bastille 2013210392 [61]
"Use Somebody" Kings of Leon 2008210364 [55]
"Rule the World" Take That 2007210277 [59]

Some or all weeks in charts when only top 50 compiled.

Some weeks in charts when only top 30 or less compiled.

* Includes five-day 'week' ending Thursday 9 July 2015 when the chart week changed from Sunday-Saturday to Friday-Thursday.

Notable singles

"Blue Monday"

New Order's "Blue Monday" includes the remixed version of the original, which was finally made available as a single for the first time in 1988 with almost the same catalogue number; sales for this shorter version and the original were combined, when calculating its chart position. The second remix, from 1995, charted for four weeks but is excluded from this list. [119]

"Merry Xmas Everybody"

In addition to Slade's total of 114 weeks in the Top 100 [42] for "Merry Xmas Everybody", they also had two remixes of the song, not counted because they were re-recorded with other artists. The first, from 1980, was credited to Slade and the Reading Choir; the second, from 1998, was credited to Slade vs. Flush, [120] which peaked at #30 and accumulated four weeks in the top 100.

"I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday"

The original version credited to Wizzard 'featuring vocal backing by The Suedettes plus The Stockland Green Bilateral School First Year Choir with additional noises by Miss Snob and Class 3C' [121] spent nine weeks in the charts in 1973-74. When the record was going to be re-released in the 1980s, it was found that the master tapes had been lost and so Roy Wood re-recorded a solo sound-a-like version with children from Kempsey Primary School in 1981 and this was released on Harvest Records, credited to Wizzard with the same catalogue number. [122]

This 1981 version was also re-issued in 1984 when it reached number 23 in the charts. However, the week before Wizzard charted at number 50 on the Top 75 of 09 - 15 December 1984, "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" appeared as a new entry at number 86 credited to Roy Wood and Wizzard. It was this record which re-charted with another week in 1985 and in 1986, giving "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" 11 weeks on the chart overall during the 1980s. [123] [124] [125] [126] In the digital age of streaming and downloads (from 2007 to 2021), the 1981 version has spent 64 weeks in the charts credited simply to Wizzard [42] with the label rights being credited to EMI, making a total of 85 weeks in the Top 100 for the record overall.

In 1995, Wood recorded a live version and released it as a single on his own independent record label Woody Recordings. [127] Credited to Roy Wood Big Band, this live track charted at Number 59 in the UK Singles Chart and stayed in the Top 100 for 2 weeks. [128] Then in 2000, Wood re-recorded the song as part of a medley with The Wombles's song "Wombling Merry Christmas". This medley was released as "I Wish It Could Be a Wombling Christmas Everyday" and reached number 22 in the UK Singles Chart. [129]

"White Lines"

Grandmaster Melle Mel's "White Lines (Don't Don't Do It)" was remixed in 1994 and charted for an additional three weeks, making 46 in total in the top 75 (61 in the top 100 including one in 2004). [130] It was also re-recorded in 1995 by Duran Duran featuring Melle Mel and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five and charted for another five weeks (not counted towards its total). [131]

"Three Lions"

"Three Lions", recorded by Baddiel and Skinner and The Lightning Seeds, is not eligible for the above list for either version but has clocked up an impressive 57 weeks [132] on the UK Singles Chart Top 75 under the guise of "Three Lions" and "3 Lions '98" and 67 weeks in the Top 100. [133] It was originally released in 1996 as "Three Lions", then subsequently re-recorded with different lyrics in 1998 as "3 Lions '98", a version which was re-issued in 2002. Then in 2006, both recordings were re-issued on a Sony DualDisc as "Three Lions/Three Lions '98", with "Three Lions" charting again in 2010 due to downloads. In 2018, "Three Lions" reached No. 1 in the UK Chart for one week, due to England's success at the World Cup, with the 1998 version being combined under the original's sales total, and re-charted in 2021 due to the UEFA Euro 2020 Championship taking place. [134] [135] [136] [137] Skinner, Baddiel and Broudie were also part of a version released in 2010 by The Squad, aptly called "Three Lions 2010"; this version tallied up a further six weeks in addition to the 67 weeks, but is seen as a separate recording act by the Official Charts Company. [138]

See also

Notes

  1. This excludes versions of the same song, released in the physical era, which have the additional credit 'Vocal backing by The Suedettes, plus The Stockland Green Bilateral School first year choir. Additional noises Miss Snob and Class 3C'. The original 1973 version did 9 weeks on the chart peaking at number 4, whilst the re-recording in the 1980s spent 8 weeks on the chart, originally peaking at number 23.
  2. This includes two weeks on the chart in December 1988 at number 61 and 53, when the record was actually the lead track on The Christmas EP alongside "Footsteps in the Snow", "Joys of Christmas" and "Smile"

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"Merry Christmas" is a song by English singer-songwriters Ed Sheeran and Elton John. It was released through Asylum and Atlantic Records as a single on 3 December 2021. The song appears on the Christmas edition of John's collaborative album, The Lockdown Sessions, and originally appeared on the now-removed Christmas edition of Sheeran's fifth studio album, =. Sheeran and John wrote the song and it was produced by Steve Mac. "Merry Christmas" entered at the top of the UK Singles Chart during the chart week of 10 December 2021, becoming Sheeran's twelfth chart-topper in the country and John's ninth number-one single in the country. It also topped the charts in the Flanders region of Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands and Switzerland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sausage Rolls for Everyone</span> 2021 single by LadBaby featuring Ed Sheeran and Elton John

"Sausage Rolls for Everyone" is a song by British blogger couple LadBaby, featuring vocals from British musicians Ed Sheeran and Elton John. It was released through Frtyfve as a single on 17 December 2021. "Sausage Rolls for Everyone" is a remix and comedy version of Sheeran and John's single "Merry Christmas", which was released exactly two weeks earlier. It has a sausage roll theme as a charity single with the proceeds going to The Trussell Trust. It was released as a single on 17 December 2021.

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