Robbie Williams has secured a major milestone on the UK album chart, surpassing The Beatles to become the artist with the most number one albums in chart history.Williams’ album Britpop, released last Friday, is the 16th number one of his solo career, which launched in 1997 with Life Thru A Lens.”This is unbelievable. Absolutely unbelievable,” he told BBC News.”I’ve always said my success has been the equivalent of stretching an elastic band from Stoke-on-Trent to the Moon. Well, I reckon the elastic band just got longer, and now it’s orbiting Venus.”He added: “It’s just sensational what has happened. I feel like the Forrest Gump of pop.”The star is currently in Paris for a weekend break with his wife, Ayda Field. He said they would celebrate “with a Coke Zero and a salad”.It’s a far cry from the hedonism of the 1990s, when the star’s initial burst of success was overshadowed by dependency on drink and drugs, and an eventual mental health breakdown.”I’m going to take this week, at least, to remind myself of how lucky I am,” he said. “Because for a while, I didn’t get to do that because of mental illness or whatever. But now I am firmly in a place where the garden is blossoming, and I’m just surveying the pastures.”And, I think that’s the biggest achievement, that I can sit in that [moment] and take a deep breath and smile.”In a neat moment of circularity, Williams’ record-breaking album harks back to the start of his solo career, and the period when he nearly lost himself.The cover art is based on the famous Mick Hudson photo, taken at Glastonbury festival in 1995, of Robbie with bleached blonde hair and a missing tooth. It was an incident that ultimately led to his dismissal from boy band Take That.He has called Britpop “the album that I wanted to write after I left Take That” and a celebration of “a golden age for British music” that harnesses the energy of 90s bands like Oasis and Elastica.Supergrass frontman Gaz Coombes lends a hand on glam-stomp anthem Cocky, and Williams’ former Take That nemesis Gary Barlow appears on a song called Morrissey, written from the perspective of a delusional stalker.Reviews for the record have been broadly positive.The Guardian called it “a wayward yet winning time-machine trip to the 90s” in a four-star review.Rolling Stone also awarded four stars, saying Williams sounded “liberated” and “unrepentantly mad” as he “delivered some of his best songs in years”.The NME gave a more cautious assessment. “An album to be remembered for? Probably not,” wrote Andrew Trendell. “But it’s bold, it’s a laugh, and he’s done it his way. That’s what makes him Robbie.”Across his career, the star now has 21 number one albums, including Take That’s chart-topping LPs like Everything Changes and Progress.Only The Beatles’ Paul McCartney has more in total, with 23 to his name.Nonetheless, Williams said his family would keep him grounded after he has surpassed some of his musical heroes.”A couple of weeks ago, I was with my American in-laws,” he told BBC News. “And I said, to my mother-in-law, ‘You know, Gwen, if I get the next number one album, I’ve had more number one albums than anyone ever’. “And my daughter Teddy, under her breath, turned to the side and went, ‘In the UK’.”So, you know, I won’t get too carried away.”
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Robbie Williams breaks The Beatles’ chart record with his 16th number one album Britpop