The Beatles rarely experience a slow week on the charts in the United Kingdom, the band’s home turf, but some frames show an extra boost attached to the group’s catalog. Right now, the most successful rockers of all time are climbing across both song and album tallies, with multiple titles from different eras enjoying another exciting frame.
1967–1970 Leads the Way for Beatles Albums
Among the group’s many full-lengths, 1967–1970 is the biggest winner this frame. The late-career-spanning compilation improves to No. 64 on the Official Albums chart, while on the Official Albums Streaming list, it also rises, moving to No. 50. The set has now spent 121 weeks on the main albums tally and 116 on the streaming chart — an impressive run for a collection first released in the mid-’70s.
1962–1966 Scores a Double-Digit Gain
The companion set 1962–1966 also makes gains, though its rise comes on just one list. The release jumps 11 spaces to No. 88 on the Official Albums Streaming chart after nearly falling away last frame. The title, which gathers early Beatles tunes, has only spent about half as many weeks on the streaming ranking as 1967-1970 has.
Early Beatles Singles Climb on Multiple Tallies
Three Beatles tracks appear on U.K. song rankings this frame, and two of them land on more than one chart. “I’ll Get You” rises to No. 15 on the Official Physical Singles chart and to No. 13 on the Official Vinyl Singles list. “All My Loving” moves up on both tallies as well, lifting to No. 17 on the physical ranking and No. 14 on the vinyl-specific roster.
“Now and Then” Remains Historic, Despite a Drop
The only Beatles track currently charting that slips this frame is “Now and Then.” The single, marketed as the final from the outfit, falls nearly 20 spots to No. 75 on the Official Physical Singles chart, but it holds as the only one of the group’s current entries to have reached No. 1 on the lists on which they all appear at the moment. It’s also the longest-charting of the bunch, as it reaches its eighty-first week on the tally.