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Kendrick Lamar claims first UK number one album with To Pimp A Butterfly

The US rapper knocked Sam Smith off the top spot

Daisy Wyatt
Monday 23 March 2015 06:55 EDT
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Kendrick Lamar performs on the Marilyn Stage during day 1 of the 2014 Budweiser Made in America Festival at Los Angeles Grand Park on August 30, 2014 in Los Angeles, California
Kendrick Lamar performs on the Marilyn Stage during day 1 of the 2014 Budweiser Made in America Festival at Los Angeles Grand Park on August 30, 2014 in Los Angeles, California (Christopher Polk/Getty Images for Anheuser-Busch)

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Kendrick Lamar has scored his first UK number one album with To Pimp A Butterfly.

The US rapper knocked Sam Smith’s In The Lonely Hour into second place with his third studio album.

To Pimp A Butterfly beat Kendrick’s last chart record, which saw his 2012 UK debut Good Kid M.A.A.D City enter the charts at number 16.

Kendrick’s new album broke Spotify’s streaming record last week, notching up 9.6 million streams on the album’s first full day of release.

The cover of Kendrick Lamar's new album, To Pimp A Butterfly
The cover of Kendrick Lamar's new album, To Pimp A Butterfly (Kendrick Lamar/TDE)

To Pimp A Butterfly was also named the most-streamed album in the UK top 40, earning 3,722 streams in a week.

The jazzy album marks a more political direction for the young rapper, with songs about racial injustice and economic inequality in the US.

Elsewhere in the charts, Dire Straits star Mark Knopfler earned the highest-charting album of his career with his eighth studio opus Tracker coming in at Number 3, while Ed Sheeran's X was at 4.

Rounding off the Top 5 was Van Morrison's Duets - Re-working The Catalogue. The singer-songwriter's 35th studio album is his highest-charting collection since 2005's Magic Time, which peaked at 3.

Meanwhile Icelandic composer Olafur Arnalds, who provided the music for ITV series Broadchurch, topped the Official UK Classical Chart for the first time with The Chopin Project.

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