Miley Cyrus stands tall on the U.Ok. singles chart as “Flowers” (through Columbia) arrives at No. 1, for her third chief.
“Flowers” blooms with imposing numbers. Throughout its first chart cycle, “Flowers” racks up 92,000 chart models, together with complete streams of almost 10 million. That’s Cyrus’ biggest-ever opening week for streams, the Official Charts Firm experiences, and the market’s largest debut week since Harry Types’ “As It Was” blasted to the summit in Could 2022.
Lifted from Cyrus’ forthcoming eighth studio album Countless Summer time Trip, “Flowers” received away to a sizzling begin all over the place. The one opened at No. 1 on Australia’s chart, and it smashed Spotify’s world one-week streaming mark. The monitor will make its official mark on the Billboard Scorching 100 when the newest charts are unveiled Monday (Jan. 23), although Billboard readers already voted it as their favourite new launch final week.
Beforehand, Cyrus lead the Official U.Ok. Singles Chart with “We Can’t Cease” (from 2013) and “Wrecking Ball” (2013), the latter incomes her a chart double as its dad or mum Bangerz concurrently led the nationwide albums survey.
Positions 2-6 are unchanged on the present survey, whereas St. Louis-raised Metro Boomin luggage a career-best with “Creepin’” (Republic Information), that includes the Weeknd and 21 Savage. It’s up 11-7 for Metro Boomin’s first-ever U.Ok. prime 10 single.
Additional down the record, British singer and songwriter Mimi Webb lands her sixth prime 40 with “Crimson Flags” (Epic). It’s the second-highest new entry this week at No. 23.
Additionally new to the chart, printed Jan. 20, is Fredo’s “Move” (PG Information), new at No. 30. It’s the London rapper’s seventeenth prime 40 look.
Lastly, Shakira scores her first U.Ok. prime 40 look in nearly a decade with “Bizarrap – BZRP Music Periods #53” (through Dale Play), the break-up tune minimize Argentine DJ and YouTuber Bizarrap. It’s new at No. 31, Shakira’s thirteenth prime 40 hit — and first for the Colombian star since 2014’s “Empire” (No. 25 peak).