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Monday, 8 January 2007, 08:18 GMT

Top 40 change helps Snow Patrol

Snow Patrol Rock band Snow Patrol are back in the UK top 10 after rules were changed to allow any song purchased online to be counted towards the singles chart.

The group have reached number nine with their single, Chasing Cars, which first charted at number six last July.

Previously, downloads only counted towards the chart if the song was available to buy on other formats.

The revamp did not alter the top spots in the single and album charts, which Leona Lewis and Take That took again.

Big shake-up

Lewis, who won the ITV show the X Factor, has now been at number one for three weeks with her single A Moment Like This.

The highest new entry comes from Eric Prydz, whose remix of the Pink Floyd classic Another Brick In The Wall enters the chart at number two.

There are also new hits for U2 and JoJo - whose single, Too Little Too Late, would not have been eligible for the chart until next week under the previous rules.

TOP FIVE SINGLES

Source: Official UK Charts Company

Snow Patrol's album, Eyes Open which is in its 36th week of release, continues to ride high in the charts at number three.

The new rules have been hailed as the biggest shake-up in the chart since its inception in 1952, and could mean old favourites might make their way back.

Until now downloads only counted towards chart positions if they were purchased within a week of the physical single being released and two weeks of it being deleted. But this week's Top 40 sees several deleted songs re-entering the chart, including Crazy by Gnarls Barkley which was the biggest selling single of 2006, and is now at number 30.

Broader representation

Nelly Furtado's Maneater also re-appears at number 38 after originally making number one in June last year.

Outside the top 40, four songs from the High School Musical soundtrack have entered the chart - including two that were previously considered album tracks.

Michael Andrews and Gary Jules' single Mad World, the Christmas number one in 2003, is another re-entry at number 58.

The song, which featured in the cult movie Donnie Darko and can currently be heard in the advert for Xbox 360 game Gears of War, made its last chart appearance April 2004.

TOP FIVE ALBUMS

Source: Official UK Charts Company

Industry experts believe the charts will never be the same again because downloads will change the pattern of how tracks climb.

"Under the new rules, anything and everything is eligible," said HMV spokesman Gennaro Castaldo.

"The charts will now offer a much broader representation of the nation's music tastes," he added.

It is rumoured EMI is considering releasing The Beatles' back catalogue as downloads for the first time.

Castaldo thinks if that happens then a "top 10 made up entirely of their music would be almost guaranteed".




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Related to this story:
Downloads send year's chart Crazy (02 Jan 07 |  Entertainment )
Leona celebrates New Year at top (31 Dec 06 |  Entertainment )
Chart revamp puts downloads first (29 Dec 06 |  Entertainment )

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