1. Singles
  2. Albums
  3. Film
  4. MoreView all charts
Previous
Next

Official Singles Chart on 23/10/2015

23 October 2015 - 29 October 2015

The Official UK Singles Chart reflects the UK’s biggest songs of the week, based on audio and video streams, downloads, CDs and vinyl, compiled by the Official Charts Company. The UK Top 40 is broadcast on BBC Radio 1 and MTV, the Top 100 is published exclusively on OfficialCharts.com. View the biggest songs of 2024 so far.

 

Hot right now

Decorative flameDecorative flameDecorative flame

Join the conversation by joining the Official Charts community and dropping comment.

Already registered?

Log in

No account?

Register

avatar

Lord Rafox

0

Oh my god, i LOVE that new ELO song, when i was a boy, it's defentley worth listening to!

A

Ashton

0

Sup

SF

Simon Flynn

0

Take that's new single is awful and is lucky to be at 56.

SF

Simon Flynn

0

It's true, they have an urban music chart. Isn't that the top 40! The Rolling Stones have a new single out as well as Tom Jones. These artists still sell albums but not singles. Even up to the early 1990's their was such diversity in music groups in the charts. The muxic industry has changed as much as life has I guess.

A

addickted2hcharlton

0

Even the Chrissmass songs are better than wass in the charts nahadays, arf the time I don't know the ar'ists on ere.

avatar

etin

0

really tired to see recurrent songs in chart. 90's were great. we even could see 20 new entries

A

addickted2hcharlton

1

Yeah but the 70s n 80s were even better n all.

avatar

Painmix King

-1

Thinking it over the other period in time when the charts were awful was the late 90's - early noughties when in complete contrast to the modern charts some tunes would enter straight into the Top 10 but only stay in the Top 75 for 4 or 5 weeks, as records were played on the radio for about 3 weeks before you could actually buy them, so everyone went out as soon as it was released and more often than not the records entry position was it's peak position

avatar

etin

0

take that only #56 .. why ?

H

Huss

0

i am a big fan...love them loads, but this single has no "take that" magic :-( i feel very sad to say that.

avatar

etin

0

take that only #56 .. why ?

avatar

I Am A Stegosaurus

0

Where's John Newman's 'Tiring Game?' And songs like Cheerleader and Ain't Nobody were set to fall out the top 40 but stayed in yet songs like Levels and Here For You were set to enter!

avatar

Painmix King

5

Only 6 brand new entries in the whole Top 100. The charts are a complete farce these days. Can't the compilers see that. In the good old days a song did well to stay in the charts 20 weeks. Now it's done poor if that's all the length of it's chart run is. Also, where's all the rock bands! I know they do well in the album charts but surely there must be enough people downloading some songs to make the 100. UK used to be the envy of many with it's sales only chart, but now we're no better than anyone else. Rant over :-(

RT

Richard Thomas

3

Could not agree with you more. Everything hangs around for ages. It's so boring. There's no churn. Plus when the number one song is no longer the best selling song of the week, it totally undermines the point of it all. Streaming is given way too much credit. Absolute farce as you say.

avatar

Wayne Nevin

4

A justified rant. The current charts can not even be compared to those of the past. Most artists don't release physical CD singles now and people streaming have no need to even pay for a download so when you read of artists breaking records you have to ask yourself would they be doing so if the fans had to pay for the music? I doubt very much the songs being streamed millions of times would have sold millions on CD as they don't even translate into download sales.
Airplay is seemingly saturated with the same artists and sound-alikes on a loop. It's not only rock bands that are neglected. In my opinion there are some outstanding singer songwriters who have been overlooked who I feel given the opportunity, (via airplay), would appeal to the masses. Although they all have their own fans, Brandi Carlile, Duke Special, Horse McDonald, Jewel Kilcher, Amanda Ghost, Terra Naomi, Tina Arena, Daughtry, Simon Scardanelli, Richard Marx, Tim Mcgraw, Trisha Yearwood,Jennifer Rush and Clare Maguire are just a few who come to mind. Anyone else out there despairing at the state of the charts and lack of support for their favourite artists?

avatar

Obvious Bike

0

If it bothers you that much why not complain to the Official Chart Company? I kind of agree though.

avatar

David AC

2

Streams only count when they are paid for streams. Free streaming doesn't count towards the chart.

avatar

I Am A Stegosaurus

0

Good point about rock bands, you can tell the Charts company don't like rock bands. Look at all the big rock songs in the past three years that all had a chance of hitting 1.

LE

Lee Evans

1

Couldn't agree more with Wayne & Painmix - a shambolic state of affairs. The charts today are just a shadow of their former self and not representative in any way of the true popularity of a given song at a given time. I cannot believe the quality of songs getting to number one, many of them failing to sell more than 5,000 copies in a week. In the 70's/80's when the charts were truly representative, singles would have to sell millions just to get into the Top 10. And over the past year we have seen first-rate releases from the likes of Pink Floyd, David Gilmour, U2, The Eagles, Don Henley, Rod Stewart, Simply Red, Bon Jovi, Marc Almond and many other artists of their ilk and these singles don't even dent the Top 200 - it's a joke

A

addickted2hcharlton

0

Thass juss wot I think on ere.

A

addickted2hcharlton

0

Thass shockin juss shockin.

avatar

simon_g42

0

No number one in history has come anywhere near selling as few as 5,000 copies. In one of his weeks at number one, Justin Bieber's actual sales were below 20,000, but they were not even close to 5,000. As for the 1970s and '80s, I suggest you look at the list of million-selling singles. That will show you how wrong your assertion about that decade is.

avatar

simon_g42

3

Sorry? The OCC records sales and streams. They don't have any sort of filter to exclude songs they don't like. The simple fact is that rock bands don't sell many singles. By your logic, I should be blaming the Returning Officers for the fact that we have a Tory government.