
Harry Styles’ Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally continues to hold court atop the U.K. chart summit.
The “Aperture” singer’s fourth LP enters a second consecutive week at No. 1 on the U.K.’s Official Albums Chart (dated March 20). The album has already broken multiple records for Styles, including earning him the biggest U.K. opening week of his career to date, with the Official Charts Company reporting that it shifted 183,000 units – also making it the biggest release of 2026 so far.
Kiss All The Time… has also enjoyed huge international success, entering the charts at No. 1 in 19 other countries, including the Billboard 200 with 430,000 equivalent album units earned in the U.S. in the week ending March 12, according to Luminate.
Olivia Dean’s blockbuster second album The Art Of Loving remains at No. 2, while completing the podium finish is James Blake, who secures a career best with Trying Times closing out at No. 3 this week.
It makes Blake’s fifth top 10 accolade to date in the U.K., joining his self-titled 2011 debut (No. 9), 2013’s Overgrown (No. 8), 2019 LP Assume Form (No. 6) and 2021’s Friends That Break Your Heart (No. 4). The new album also tops this week’s Official Record Store and Official Vinyl Albums Charts, selling the most copies on wax this week.
Fleetwood Mac compilation 50 Years – Don’t Stop lands at No. 4, while Tate McCrae’s 2025 LP So Close To What skyrockets 17 places up to No. 5, following the release of a new vinyl variant of its deluxe edition. It marks the highest position the album has charted at since December last year, while it debuted and peaked at No. 2 upon release in March 2025.
Elsewhere, following the release of latest single “Porch Light” from his upcoming album The Great Divide (due Apr. 24), Noah Kahan’s previous chart-topper re-enters the top 10 this week at No. 10.
Super-producer Calvin Harris continues to see gains for his 2024 project 96 Months, which re-entered the top 40 for the first time since September 2025 last week, and has since elevated eight spots to No. 31.




