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British artists in a historic clean sweep of 2022’s Official Top 10 singles… while 150 billion audio streams are surpassed in a calendar year for the first time



 

  • British artists accounted for all the Top 10 of the end-of-year Official Singles Chart of 2022 – the first such clean sweep since such charts were published over 50 years ago – led by Harry Styles and incl. Cat Burns, Ed Sheeran, Glass Animals, LF System, Sam Fender, and Kate Bush among others.
  • UK recorded music consumption rose 4.3% to 166.1 million albums (or their equivalent) in 2022 –an eighth consecutive annual rise fuelled by streaming & label investment in artists and new music
  • Annual audio streaming numbers broke through the 150 billion mark for the first time in the UK, more than doubling in five years to 159.3 billion (2017: 68 billion audio streams).
  • Vinyl purchases registered an increase for the 15th year in a row as LP sales of 5.5 million units reached their highest level in over 30 years.
  • Independent labels grew their share of the market for a fifth year in a row, with nine indie titles topping the weekly Official Albums Chart, including releases by The 1975, Central Cee & Wet Leg.

 

Record labels association the BPI today reports that UK artists have made history by claiming a clean sweep of the year’s Top 10 singles for the first time ever, according to its analysis of Official Charts Company data.

Based on combined streaming and sales activity, all the Top 10 of the UK’s Official Singles Chart of 2022 were by, or featured, domestic artists – the first time this has happened since the music industry began publishing year-end sales charts more than 50 years ago. This clean sweep was led by Harry Styles’ As It Was and also included hits by Calum Scott,Cat BurnsEd SheeranGlass AnimalsKate Bush, LF System and Sam Fender.

 

BRITS CLEAN SWEEP OF OFFICIAL SINGLES CHART 2022 – © Official Charts Company

Pos.      Artist & Title                                                                                                                   

  1. Harry Styles – As It Was
  2. Ed Sheeran – Bad Habits
  3. Fireboy DML & Ed Sheeran – Peru
  4. Cat Burns – Go      
  5. Ed Sheeran – Shivers
  6. Kate Bush – Running Up That Hill
  7. Glass Animals – Heat Waves      
  8. Lost Frequencies & Calum Scott – Where Are You Now
  9. LF System – Afraid To Feel
  10. Sam Fender – Seventeen Going Under                                                           


UK artists were also behind 15 of the year’s Top 20 singles and close to 60 (58%) of the year-end Top 100 –highlighting the extent to which streaming is enabling diverse domestic talent from all backgrounds, genres and eras to thrive. This strong homegrown presence is also significantly up compared to 2008, the year before Spotify launched in the UK and when the market was led by digital downloads and CDs. Then, UK artists claimed four of the year’s Top 10 singles, seven of the Top 20 and just over 40% of the Top 100.

This exceptional performance by domestic artists came as UK recorded music consumption increased for the eighth consecutive year in 2022, with a landmark of more than 150 billion audio streams surpassed in a calendar year for the very first time, while three billion streams in a chart week is now commonplace.

In total 166.1 million albums or their equivalent were either streamed or purchased across all formats by music fans in the past year.  Overall, Streaming Equivalent Albums (SEA) made up a record 86.1% of the market with over 159 billion individual audio streams generated across the year – up 8.2% on 2022 and more than double the volume achieved in 2017, when the market had 68.1 billion audio streams.

The Top 10 clean sweep by domestic artists on the year-end chart reflects a memorable 12 months in which UK artists spent more weeks at No. 1 on the Official Singles Chart than in any previous year this century. Artists from the UK ruled for 36 weeks across the year, led by As It Was (10 weeks at No.1), LF System’s Afraid To Feel (8 weeks at No. 1), Dave’s Starlight (4 weeks at No. 1), Sam Smith’s Unholy (with German artist Kim Petras) (4 weeks at No. 1), and Kate Bush’s Running Up That Hill enjoying a three week run.
 

YolanDa Brown OBE DL – artist, music education campaigner and BPI Chair, said:
“It’s wonderful to see so many exciting new artists breaking through to thrive alongside more established UK artists – leading the next wave of British talent to global success thanks to the compelling mix of their creativity and  artistry, the ever expanding opportunities afforded by streaming and the support of their record labels. I congratulate British artists and their teams on another year of brilliant success.”  

Harry Styles was also behind 2022’s top album with his Grammy and Mercury shortlistedHarry’s House, making him the first artist since Lewis Capaldi in 2019 with Someone You Loved and Divinely Uninspired To A Hellish Extent respectively to have the year’s top single and album. Harry’s House led Ed Sheeran’s =, which ranked as the No. 2 album for a second consecutive year, while Taylor Swift’s Midnights was the year’s third biggest album, having become the only album in 2022 to achieve more than 200,000 chart-eligible sales in a single week. UK artists have now provided the year’s top album in 21 of the 23 years this century.

There were 11.6 million CDs and 5.5 million vinyl LPs purchased across the year, as well as 195,000 cassettes and 3.7 million album downloads. Vinyl LPs represented 31.7% of all physical purchases as sales grew for a 15th consecutive year and reached their highest level in over 30 years (stretching back to 1990).
 

Streaming consumption averaged more than 3 billion audio streams each week in the UK in 2022
More than 3 billion audio streams were generated on average every week in 2022, compared to around 1.3 billion each week five years earlier.  Over this time, the UK’s audio streaming market has more than doubled in size from 68.1 billion to 159.3 billion audio streams and was last year over 40 times bigger than in 2012 (3.7bn audio streams).It now takes, on average, 1.3 million audio streams to break into the Official Charts Top 40 Singles and a combined 7 million audio and video streams to land a UK Number 1 single.
 

Harry Styles’ As It Was streamed 180.9 million times to become year’s biggest single
Harry Styles claimed the top single in a calendar year for the first time with As It Was. It spent 10 consecutive weeks at No.1 on the Official Singles Chart (as well as 15 weeks topping the US Billboard Hot 100 – a record for a UK artist) and became the only track to surpass 180 million streams during 2022.

Having been 2021’s biggest single, Ed Sheeran’s Bad Habits occupied the runners-up spot in 2022 as the track took its cumulative stream count to 354.3 million, while Sheeran was also at No.3 with his collaboration Peru with Fireboy DML and at No.5 with Shivers, another 2021 hold-out.

Despite not topping the weekly Official Singles Chart, BRITs Rising Star 2023 nominee Cat Burns had the year’s No.4 single, biggest debut hit and top single by a female artist withGo, which was first released in July 2020 and peaked at No.2 in June last year. Highlighting a hugely successful year for dance music, it was joined in the all-UK Top 10 by electronic duo LF System’s own breakthrough hit Afraid To Feel and Where Are You Now by Calum Scott (with Belgian DJ and producer Lost Frequencies), alongside hits by Glass Animals(Heat Waves), Kate Bush (Running Up That Hill) and Sam Fender (Seventeen Going Under).
 

Leon Neville, BPI’s Director of Research & Insight, said:
“At a time when streaming has created unprecedented competition coming from every corner of the globe, it is astonishing that in 2022 British artists were involved in all of the top 10 calendar year’s biggest hits in the UK. This outstanding achievement is a testament to the rich music talent that continues to emerge from across the UK’s nations and regions, fuelled by the passion, investment and skills of UK record labels.

“With streaming having led the market to an eighth consecutive annual rise in UK music consumption, this platform is creating new and increased opportunities for labels to connect many thousands of artists with expanding fanbases, while enabling even more of them to succeed.”


Culture Secretary Michelle Donelan said: 
"This clean sweep of the UK singles chart by British artists demonstrates the depth of creative talent we have. Everyone on the list has the ability to capture people's imagination and I would like to congratulate each of them on the achievement. It is amazing to see the breadth of talent from young artists like Ed Sheeran to music legend Kate Bush, showcasing the very best of British. This is fantastic news to kick off the new year and we will carry on backing our artists and musicians so they can continue this success through 2023 and beyond."
 

Driven by streaming, a hugely diverse range of talent featured among the year’s biggest hits.
Much of the talent that thrived thanks to streaming was UK based.  This included global superstars AdeleDua LipaElton John and Sam Smith, major pop artists such asGeorge EzraLewis CapaldiMimi Webb and Tom Odell, hip-hop/rap acts including A1 x J1AitchArrDeeDaveD-Block EuropeSwitchOTR and Tion Wayne, dance talent including Bad Boy Chiller CrewBecky HillBru-CEliza Rose, Jax Jones and Nathan Dawe, and rock bands and artists such as Arctic MonkeysColdplaySam Ryder and Tom Grennan.

Fast-emerging UK singer-songwriter, Tom Speight, who has already amassed over 200 million streams globally alongside a Top 40 hit, said:

“It’s such an exciting time to be an artist, with so many ways now to connect with fans around the world thanks largely to streaming and the support of labels in giving artists greater scope to succeed.  With a new album out this year, I’m optimistic that streaming will help to make this my breakthrough year.”
 

Streaming generating new audiences and revenue for classic hits of the past
Kate Bush is placed among an end of year Official Singles Chart Top 10 for the first time in her long and distinguished career with Running Up That Hill at No.6 overall after it was heavily featured in the fourth season of the Netflix series Stranger Things. First released in 1985, when it peaked at No.3, the self-penned, self-produced track topped the Official Singles Chart for three weeks in 2022 and was streamed 124 million times in total last year, 997% more than it managed in 2021.

Running Up That Hill is joined among the Top 40 singles of the year by Tom Odell’s debut single Another Love which, a decade after first being released, returned to the Official Singles Chart Top 20 after building a new audience via Tik Tok. These successes highlight how streaming combined with record label support is generating new audiences and revenue for tracks, sometimes many years after they were first released. Kate Bush’s streaming success this year even saw her break an Official Chart record for the longest time taken for a single to reach Number 1 – some 37 years after Running Up That Hill’s first chart appearance. Kate also became the oldest female artist ever to score a UK Number 1 single thanks to the song’s new-found popularity on streaming platforms.
 

Independents grow their share for the fifth consecutive year – now pushing at nearly 30% of the market
Independent record labels’ share of the UK recorded music market increased for a fifth consecutive year in 2022 to 28.6% (AES). This was up from 26.9% in 2021, while the independent share has grown by nearly a third since 2017 when it stood at 22.1%. Nine independently released LPs topped the Official Albums Chart during the year by 5 Seconds of SummerThe 1975Central CeeDon BrocoFontaines D.C.Louis TomlinsonStereophonicsWet Leg and The Wombats, while over 60 indie albums reached the Top 10.

Among the most noteworthy indie releases of 2022 was Wet Leg’s self-titled album – one of the most successful debut LPs released in the year. It was shortlisted for the Mercury Prize last summer and has since been nominated at the Grammy Awards in the US, where the group are in the running for Best New Act. 

Although it did not reach No.1, Arctic Monkeys’ seventh studio set The Car achieved nearly 120,000 chart-eligible sales in its first week of release in October and became 2022’s biggest new independent album. It was joined in the year’s Top 20 by the group’s 2013 release AM.
 

Vinyl hits a three-decade high as 2022 releases dominate top sellers / CDs & Cassettes remain important
Sales of vinyl LPs grew for the 15th consecutive year in 2022 to 5.5 million units, their highest level since 1990, when …But Seriously by Phil Collins was the year’s biggest-selling studio album, as brand new releases took a greater share of the market. 

Eight of the year’s Top 10 titles were released in 2022, led by Taylor Swift’s MidnightsHarry’s House by Harry Styles and Arctic Monkeys’ The Car, which across the year achieved the three highest one-week sales for vinyl LPs this century.  Midnights sold nearly 62,000 vinyl LPs in its first week of release, The Car almost 38,000 and Harry’s House just over 36,000. The LP Top 10 of the year also included 2022 albums by Liam Gallagher(C’mon You Know) and Muse (Will Of The People).

In 2017, just three of the year’s 10 biggest vinyl LPs were released in the year in question with the top sellers dominated by catalogue titles by artists including The Beatles and Pink Floyd.

More than 11 million Compact Discs were sold in the calendar year. Although this was a drop of 19.3% on the previous year, a number of albums sold in significant quantities on the format, led by Midnights by Taylor SwiftGold Rush Kid by George Ezra and Arctic Monkeys’ The Car.  

Sales of cassettes, whilst still a very small part of the market overall, continued to grow in 2022, up 5.2% year-on-year to 195,000 units. The year’s top sellers included Dance Feverby Florence + The MachineMuse’s Will Of The People and 23 by Central Cee.
 

Physical remains the pivotal ‘kingmaker’ in No.1 Album Chart Success
Physical formats again dominated the top of the Official Albums Chart, accounting for a majority of chart-eligible sales of the No.1 title in most weeks (38) in 2022, while in 33 weeks physical comprised more than 70% of chart-eligible sales of the week’s top album. 

This was led by Don Broco’s Amazing Things (97.7% of chart-eligible sales), Robbie Williams’s XXV (96.9%), Paul Heaton & Jacqui Abbott’s N.K-Pop (96.3%), Olly Murs’s Marry Me (92.0%) and Yungblud by Yungblud (91.4%) when they reached No.1.  Digital download album sales further declined, down 18.9% Y-O-Y but still contributed 3.7 million units to the market. In a further format shift, rock band Muse became the first artists to top the Official Albums Chart with an album released as an NFT (non-fungible token) as their ninth studio album Will Of The People was released in a limited-edition NFT “digital pressing” in addition to CD, digital, vinyl, cassette and on streaming services.

Drew Hill MD Proper Music Group/VP Distribution, Utopia Musicsaid:
"It's fantastic to see another year where physical sales are driving albums to the top of the Official Charts. With 86% of 2022's No.1 records boasting a majority in physical sales, in their first week at the top, it continues to prove that music fans from across all ages and genres are continuing to desire their favourite music in a tangible form; as something to be cherished and collected as well as played on repeat."

 

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