50 Years Later, A Beatles Record is Broken

Please Please Me spent 62 weeks in the top 10; Emeli Sandé's Our Version of Events has notched 63

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Chiaki Nozu / WireImage / Getty Images

Emeli Sande performs at Hammersmith Apollo on April 8, 2013, in London.

It seemed like a record that couldn’t be broken: when The Beatles released their album Please Please Me in 1963, it held onto one of the Top 10 slots on the British album chart for 62 whole weeks, the longest run ever for a debut album.

That was then. As of this week, the Scottish singer Emeli Sandé has broken that record, according to the U.K.’s Official Charts Company. Her debut album Our Version of Events, the best-selling album of 2012 in the U.K. (1.82 million copies), has been in the top 10 since February of 2012—or, 63 weeks.

(PHOTOS: Celebrating The Beatles as Please Please Me Turns 50)

Sandé told the Official Charts Company that she’s “completely lost for words” since “The Beatles are the greatest band of all time” and tweeted a message of thanks to her followers: “This record is so significant to me for many different reasons. I’m so happy and I’m thankful to you all. We made history!! #OVOE

In the U.S., however, she has yet to break out: her single “Next To Me” (which has made it to the No. 2 spot in the U.K.) is still sitting at 46 on the Billboard Hot 100. But it’s already on its way up—currently sitting at its highest number yet—and this historic news is sure to help it along.

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