Beyoncé holds all of the playing cards as “Texas Hold ‘Em” blasts into the U.Okay. prime 10.
The new single, the primary from Bey’s forthcoming Renaissance Act II (Columbia/Parkwood Ent) mission, bows at No. 9 on the Official U.Okay. Singles Chart, revealed Friday, Feb. 16.
With that quick begin, the pop celebrity luggage a twenty second U.Okay. prime 10 single. Act II will mark Bey’s eighth studio report, 4 of which have gone to No. 1 within the U.Okay.
Three cuts from Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign’s Vultures 1 (YZY) fly into the Official Chart – the utmost allowed from anyone album. All crack the highest 20, led by “Carnival” (at No. 12), “Burn” (No. 17) and “Back To Me” (No. 18).
At the highest of the tally is Noah Kahan’s “Stick Season” (Republic Records), which logs a seventh straight week at No. 1. With its dad or mum album climbing to the summit of the Official U.Okay. Albums Chart, Kahan has his first profession U.Okay. chart double. A brand new version of the Stick Season album yields the monitor “Forever,” which arrives at No. 31 for his fifth U.Okay. prime 40 single.
Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Saltburn-powered “Murder On The Dancefloor” (Polydor) holds at No. 2 on the Official Singles Chart, lower than 600 mixed items forward of Benson Boone’s “Beautiful Things” (Warner Records), the OCC reviews. “Beautiful Things” lifts 5-3, a brand new peak place for the 21-year-old Washington-born singer-songwriter.
Also on the rise is YG Marley’s “Praise Jah in the Moonlight” (YG Marley Music), up 9-5. That’s a profession excessive for Marley, the grandson of the late, nice Bob Marley and son of Ms. Lauryn Hill.
English singer and TV presenter Wes Nelson enjoys a prime 40 debut with “Abracadabra” (Moor), his collaboration with homegrown R&B favourite Craig David. It’s new at No. 37, following the pair’s stay efficiency on ITV’s Love Island All Stars, for Nelson’s fourth U.Okay. prime 40 single and David’s twenty sixth.
Finally, Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” (Rhino) returns to the highest 40 following her uncommon efficiency of the ‘80s hit at the 2024 Grammy Awards. “Fast Car” reenters at No. 38, after Chapman and country star Luke Combs performed the song on the Grammys on Feb. 4, marking Chapman’s first stay tv look since 2015. Originally launched in 1988, “Fast Car” reached its peak of No. 4 in 2011, and has been launched to nation audiences by Combs’ trustworthy rendition which appeared on 2023’s Gettin’ Old and have become a U.S. hit.
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