The Charlatans' "Wonderland" (Universal) debuted at No. 2, followed by Bob Dylan's "Love and Theft" (Columbia) at No. 3. For Dylan, it was his best showing with a new album since "Saved" peaked at the same position in 1980.
Pepper/Jive's cutting-edge club act Grove Armada entered at No. 5 with "Goodbye Country (Hello Nightclub)" and English pop vocalist Louise, once of 1990s chart mainstay Eternal, bowed at No. 9 with her "Changing Faces: The Best Of" collection. Below those, with only
the fifth highest new entry of the week, was Mariah Carey's "Glitter" (Virgin), which just made the top-10 at No. 10.
On the singles survey, after a close battle all week with Bob the Builder's "Mambo No. 5" (BBC Music), Austrian artist DJ Otzi emerged triumphant at No. 1 with "Hey! Baby (Uhh Ahh)" (EMI). The track, a remake of Bruce Channel's U.S. No. 1 from 1962, first charted in Austria and Germany last October.
More recently, it reached No. 1 in Ireland this summer and No. 2 in Denmark, where it was in the top-10 from May until two weeks ago. Otzi, otherwise known as Austrian-born Gerry Friedle, had already reached No. 41 with the single in the U.K. on import sales alone.
Also on the singles chart, N-Trance's crossover club anthem "Set You Free (All Around the World)" proved its durability by becoming a top-5 hit for the second time in less than seven years, and a top-40 entry for the third time in little more than that. The track, by production duo Dale Longworth and Kevin O'Toole, reached No. 39 in May 1994 and No. 2 the following January. It reappears with another set of mixes this week at No. 4.
Europe's record markets as a whole also announced the Jamiroquai album as their new favorite, as it went straight to the top of Music & Media's European Top 100 Albums chart. The band's last set, 1999's "Synkronized," also hit that peak, but in its second chart week. "A Funk Odyssey" also enjoyed strong first-week sales in Germany (No. 2), Ireland (No. 3), Austria (No. 4), and Finland (No. 7). The opening single "Little L" holds at No. 1 in Spain.
"Let Me Blow Ya Mind" by Eve featuring Gwen Stefani (Interscope) spends a second week at the top of the Eurochart Hot 100 Singles tally, on which the recent French hit "Starlight" by Supermen Lovers (Vogue) rockets 68-7. The single, which has spent six months on the chart, debuted last week at No. 2 in the U.K.



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