Earlier this spring, Lana Del Rey released a handful of singles from her upcoming album. The project has gone by several different names, but the singer-songwriter has revealed that, at the moment, she’s not sharing its title or release date. Both of her most recent cuts, “Henry, Come On” and “Bluebird,” have fallen off the charts in the United Kingdom after brief stints as bestsellers.
While she may not claim a current hit in the country, two of the Grammy-nominated musician’s full-lengths not only appear on official rosters, but have managed to return — each on a different tally.
Born to Die Returns to One Chart
Between her two releases that reenter at least one U.K.-based list, Born to Die is Del Rey’s higher-rising win this time around. The collection breaks back onto the Official Vinyl Albums chart at No. 28.
Born to Die is one of the bestselling vinyl albums of the past decade worldwide, and yet it has somehow never cracked the top 10 on this U.K. tally. Del Rey’s breakout project has climbed as high as No. 12 during the 64 total weeks spent somewhere on the sales list.
Ultraviolence Sneaks Back onto the Albums List
The follow-up to Born to Die, Ultraviolence, is also a bestseller once more in the U.K. The set narrowly finds its way back to the Official Physical Albums chart, which ranks the bestselling projects on formats that fans and consumers can physically hold, whether they be CD, cassette, or vinyl. This frame, Ultraviolence steps back in at No. 89. The title has now spent 120 weeks on the Official Physical Albums list.
Born to Die is the Bigger Winner
Ultraviolence only manages to reappear on that one list, but Born to Die takes up space on five separate rankings. In addition to the vinyl tally, it returns to the top 40 on both the Official Albums Sales and Official Physical Albums charts, reconfirming its status as a strong seller on the three purchase-only tallies.
The project holds at No. 59 on the Official Albums Streaming list and even rises a few spots on the Official Albums chart, which tracks the most consumed full-lengths and EPs across the U.K. Just last frame, it celebrated 300 total weeks on that main ranking.