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Society & CultureTuesday, June 16, 2026

Swift Shatters Records as Stones and Pink Floyd Prove Legacy Acts Still Rule the Charts

Taylor Swift surpasses Rihanna and Drake on the Billboard Hot 100, while veteran rockers dominate UK rankings and Mick Jagger eyes a 2027 tour.

Viewed from Washington, the most significant chart development this week is Taylor Swift’s continued rewriting of the American record books. Her latest single, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, granting the singer-songwriter yet another leader on the most competitive songs tally in the United States. With this latest triumph, Swift has now surpassed both Rihanna and Drake in the all-time ranking of artists with the most Hot 100 No. 1s, a feat that underscores her sustained commercial dominance in a market where streaming-era volatility often shortens careers. Analysts in New York note that the achievement is all the more remarkable given that Swift’s 2026 has already been described as an enormously successful period, even by her own lofty standards.

Across the Atlantic, however, the British charts are telling a different story—one of remarkable endurance from rock’s old guard. The Rolling Stones have reached a new chart milestone with their compilation Forty Licks, which continues to cling to the Official Albums Chart decades after its original release, a testament to the band’s unshakeable catalogue appeal. Meanwhile, Pink Floyd narrowly missed a No. 1 debut with their latest retrospective, 8-Tracks, which entered at No. 2 on multiple UK rankings. The collection, released earlier in June, was blocked from the top spot by just one position, yet still became a strong bestseller, reinforcing the British public’s seemingly inexhaustible appetite for the group’s work.

The Stones are not merely living off past glories. Their twenty-fifth studio album, Foreign Tongues, is set for release on 10 July, and promotion is already in full swing with the single “In the Stars.” In an appearance on the US programme Sunday TODAY, frontman Mick Jagger expressed a keen desire to return to the stage, hinting that while no shows are planned for this year, a tour in 2027 is a real possibility. This aligns with reports from Spanish-language media, where Jagger was quoted as saying “Estoy listo” (I’m ready), and Keith Richards reportedly softened his earlier reluctance, suggesting dates could be announced for the following year. The prospect of a Foreign Tongues tour has re-energised fans on both sides of the Atlantic, though the band’s camp remains characteristically cautious about firm commitments.

Elsewhere, Madonna is proving that pop’s original disruptor can still command attention. Her forthcoming album Confessions II has already yielded three singles, the latest being “Love Sensation,” which became an instant top 10 smash on multiple UK charts. The track arrived just days before its official music video, following earlier cuts “I Feel So Free” and the collaboration “Bring Your Love” with Sabrina Carpenter. While the full album is not due until 3 July, the staggered release strategy is keeping Madonna firmly in the conversation, a reminder that her chart power, though less consistent than in her imperial phase, can still produce sharp spikes of commercial success.

In a curious twist, Post Malone has doubled his presence on a UK chart thanks to a decade-old hip-hop track. “Go Flex,” originally released in 2016, suddenly surged to become a bestseller, joining his current country-infused hits on the same ranking. The resurgence comes as Malone prepares his seventh project, The Eternal Buzz, a double album expected in 2026 that will further explore his genre-hopping instincts. The unexpected revival of an early rap cut highlights the streaming era’s ability to breathe new life into back catalogues, a phenomenon that benefits both emerging superstars and the legacy acts currently dominating the album charts. As the industry looks ahead, the coming months will test whether the Stones can convert their chart milestones and Jagger’s readiness into a blockbuster tour, and whether Swift’s historic pace can be maintained in a year already crowded with high-profile releases.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

67%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressContinental European press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Progressive
TriumphPragmatism

Taylor Swift has made history on the Billboard Hot 100, surpassing Rihanna and Drake for a new record. The Rolling Stones have reached a chart milestone with a compilation, while their upcoming album 'Foreign Tongues' is expected to top the UK charts. The global music landscape is witnessing a flurry of activity with major releases and chart triumphs from icons like Madonna and Post Malone.

Continental European press/ DACH+
SkepticismSchadenfreude

The Rolling Stones' new album 'Foreign Tongues' is an embarrassing 'Viagra rock 'n' roll', sounding exhausted and like a bad copy of themselves. Most of the 14 tracks are rejects from better times, with only three songs barely functioning, two of them cover versions. The band is buried by its own past.

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Upd. 06:37 PM1 language · 1 outlet
PreviousSociety & CultureNext
1 outlet|1 language|4 min read
Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Swift Shatters Records as Stones and Pink Floyd Prove Legacy Acts Still Rule the Charts

Taylor Swift surpasses Rihanna and Drake on the Billboard Hot 100, while veteran rockers dominate UK rankings and Mick Jagger eyes a 2027 tour.

Viewed from Washington, the most significant chart development this week is Taylor Swift’s continued rewriting of the American record books. Her latest single, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, granting the singer-songwriter yet another leader on the most competitive songs tally in the United States. With this latest triumph, Swift has now surpassed both Rihanna and Drake in the all-time ranking of artists with the most Hot 100 No. 1s, a feat that underscores her sustained commercial dominance in a market where streaming-era volatility often shortens careers. Analysts in New York note that the achievement is all the more remarkable given that Swift’s 2026 has already been described as an enormously successful period, even by her own lofty standards.

Across the Atlantic, however, the British charts are telling a different story—one of remarkable endurance from rock’s old guard. The Rolling Stones have reached a new chart milestone with their compilation Forty Licks, which continues to cling to the Official Albums Chart decades after its original release, a testament to the band’s unshakeable catalogue appeal. Meanwhile, Pink Floyd narrowly missed a No. 1 debut with their latest retrospective, 8-Tracks, which entered at No. 2 on multiple UK rankings. The collection, released earlier in June, was blocked from the top spot by just one position, yet still became a strong bestseller, reinforcing the British public’s seemingly inexhaustible appetite for the group’s work.

The Stones are not merely living off past glories. Their twenty-fifth studio album, Foreign Tongues, is set for release on 10 July, and promotion is already in full swing with the single “In the Stars.” In an appearance on the US programme Sunday TODAY, frontman Mick Jagger expressed a keen desire to return to the stage, hinting that while no shows are planned for this year, a tour in 2027 is a real possibility. This aligns with reports from Spanish-language media, where Jagger was quoted as saying “Estoy listo” (I’m ready), and Keith Richards reportedly softened his earlier reluctance, suggesting dates could be announced for the following year. The prospect of a Foreign Tongues tour has re-energised fans on both sides of the Atlantic, though the band’s camp remains characteristically cautious about firm commitments.

Elsewhere, Madonna is proving that pop’s original disruptor can still command attention. Her forthcoming album Confessions II has already yielded three singles, the latest being “Love Sensation,” which became an instant top 10 smash on multiple UK charts. The track arrived just days before its official music video, following earlier cuts “I Feel So Free” and the collaboration “Bring Your Love” with Sabrina Carpenter. While the full album is not due until 3 July, the staggered release strategy is keeping Madonna firmly in the conversation, a reminder that her chart power, though less consistent than in her imperial phase, can still produce sharp spikes of commercial success.

In a curious twist, Post Malone has doubled his presence on a UK chart thanks to a decade-old hip-hop track. “Go Flex,” originally released in 2016, suddenly surged to become a bestseller, joining his current country-infused hits on the same ranking. The resurgence comes as Malone prepares his seventh project, The Eternal Buzz, a double album expected in 2026 that will further explore his genre-hopping instincts. The unexpected revival of an early rap cut highlights the streaming era’s ability to breathe new life into back catalogues, a phenomenon that benefits both emerging superstars and the legacy acts currently dominating the album charts. As the industry looks ahead, the coming months will test whether the Stones can convert their chart milestones and Jagger’s readiness into a blockbuster tour, and whether Swift’s historic pace can be maintained in a year already crowded with high-profile releases.

Source divergence

Society & Culture · 1 outlet · 1 language

67%High

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable34%
Neutral33%
Critical33%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressContinental European press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Progressive
TriumphPragmatism

Taylor Swift has made history on the Billboard Hot 100, surpassing Rihanna and Drake for a new record. The Rolling Stones have reached a chart milestone with a compilation, while their upcoming album 'Foreign Tongues' is expected to top the UK charts. The global music landscape is witnessing a flurry of activity with major releases and chart triumphs from icons like Madonna and Post Malone.

Continental European press/ DACH+
SkepticismSchadenfreude

The Rolling Stones' new album 'Foreign Tongues' is an embarrassing 'Viagra rock 'n' roll', sounding exhausted and like a bad copy of themselves. Most of the 14 tracks are rejects from better times, with only three songs barely functioning, two of them cover versions. The band is buried by its own past.

This story appeared in

1 outlet · 1 language

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