Taylor Swift’s The Life Of A Showgirl (via Republic/Universal) continues to twirl on the ARIA Charts, as it enters a fifth consecutive week at No. 1 on the national albums survey, while “The Fate Of Ophelia” retains top spot on the singles tally.
“The Fate Of Ophelia” is Swift’s 13th chart leader in Australia and, with five weeks in the penthouse, it’s her second longest leader after 2022’s “Anti-Hero,” which logged six weeks at No. 1.
The top debut on the latest ARIA Albums Chart, published Friday, Nov. 7, belongs to Florence + The Machine, as the British alternative pop outfit’s sixth album, Everybody Scream (Polydor/Universal) opens its account at No. 4. All of Florence’s albums have cracked the ARIA top 10, including No. 1s for Ceremonials (in 2011), and How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful (2015).
Powderfinger frontman Bernard Fanning returns to the top 10 thanks to the 20th anniversary edition of Tea & Sympathy (Dew Process/Universal), his debut solo album. Tea & Sympathy re-enters at No. 7 on the ARIA Albums Chart, and leads the Australian Albums Chart, the Vinyl Chart and the On Replay Albums Chart.
The veteran Brisbane singer collected the most entries in triple j’s Hottest 100 of Australian music countdown in July, with four total songs, including three with Powderfinger and his solo number “Wish You Well” (at No. 57), lifted from Tea & Sympathy, a chart-topper following its release in late 2005.
Also new to the chart is Vitriol (GYRO), the debut from Western Australia rock outfit Cloning. It’s new at No. 12, arriving ahead of a national tour that gets underway later this month.
Radiohead is back in the headlines, as they prepare for another U.K. tour later in the year. The Rock Hall-inducted British alternative rock act is back in the charts, too, as Hail To The Chief Live Recordings 2003-2009 (via XL) appears at No. 15. The studio version of Hail To The Chief was released in 2023, hitting No. 2.
Paramore singer Hayley Williams impacts the chart with her independently-released solo album, Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party, new at No. 24. The project is an unusual one, which collects and repackages the songs Williams dropped earlier this year across her artist pages and on streaming services.
Close behind is Frankston, Victoria indie rock band the Belair Lip Bombs, which cracks the chart for the first time with Again (Third Man Records/RK), their sophomore set. It’s new at No. 25, and is one of eight homegrown recordings on the ARIA top 50. The Belair Lip Bombs are the first Australian band to sign with Jack White’s Nashville-based Third Man Records.
Further down the list, Brisbane nu-metal band Headwreck just misses out on a top 40 berth with Attitude Adjustment (Ditto). The debut collection drops in at No. 43, for Headwreck’s first appearance on the ARIA Charts.
Over on the ARIA Singles Chart, just one Australian track makes the cut, Tame Impala’s “Dracula” (Columbia/Sony), which lifts 50-37, a new peak position. And just one new single makes its mark for the first time, Lily Allen’s “Pussy Palace” (BMG), at No. 50.