On January 30, 2026, the Official UK Charts quietly posted an update that sent shockwaves through the music industry. Eminem’s Curtain Call: The Hits—a compilation album released in 2005—had reached its 707th week on the chart. Even more baffling, the album didn’t merely linger near the bottom. It climbed back up to No. 29, outperforming dozens of brand-new releases backed by heavy marketing, playlist placement, and viral campaigns.

In an era where albums often peak and disappear within weeks, this statistic feels almost impossible.
Curtain Call: The Hits is now more than two decades old, yet it continues to behave less like a legacy release and more like a permanent fixture. With zero new promotion from Eminem himself, no anniversary push, and no viral moment engineered by a label, the album keeps selling, streaming, and resurfacing as if time simply doesn’t apply to it.
Industry analysts point to a rare combination of forces driving the phenomenon. First is the structure of modern chart rules: Eminem’s most streamed songs—“Lose Yourself,” “Without Me,” “Stan,” and “Mockingbird”—are all credited to the compilation rather than their original albums. Those songs alone still generate hundreds of millions of streams annually in the UK. Every replay quietly feeds the same 2005 record.
But streaming doesn’t tell the full story.
There has also been a steady and surprising surge in physical vinyl sales, fueled by collectors and younger listeners discovering Eminem’s catalog in a tangible format for the first time. Retail data suggests a large portion of new buyers weren’t even alive when The Marshall Mathers LP dominated the charts. For them, Curtain Call functions as a perfectly curated entry point—aggressive, emotional, cinematic, and brutally honest in a way that still cuts through today’s polished pop-rap landscape.
What makes the achievement even more striking is how sharply it contrasts with modern release patterns. Many Gen Z chart-toppers debut high thanks to social media momentum, only to vanish within four to six weeks. Curtain Call does the opposite. It rarely spikes. It simply refuses to leave.
As of early 2026, the album has surpassed 2.7 million units sold in the UK and crossed 7 billion total UK streams, numbers that rival active-era superstars. It now stands as the longest-charting hip-hop album in UK history, sharing rare air with catalog giants like Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours and ABBA’s Gold.
Even the success of Curtain Call 2, released in 2022, hasn’t diluted the original’s dominance. Instead, it has reinforced the idea that Eminem’s catalog operates on a different axis entirely.
While trends rise and collapse at algorithmic speed, Curtain Call: The Hits has become something else: musical infrastructure. A default setting. Proof that when a catalog is strong enough, promotion becomes irrelevant.
707 weeks in, the curtain still hasn’t fallen—and there’s no sign it ever will.
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