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Taylor Swift breaks all kinds of records and kicks Despacito off the top spot


New York - Taylor Swift's vengeful new track topped the US singles chart on Tuesday with the year's highest one-week sales, halting the historic reign of global sensation Despacito.

Look What You Made Me Do, a dark dance track that is the first single off Swift's upcoming album Reputation, pushed Despacito to number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the week through Thursday.

The pop superstar's song has broken the one-day streaming record on Spotify - to which Swift recently returned after a high-profile boycott.

Tracking service Nielsen Music said Look What You Made Me Do had the second highest number of streams ever over all platforms, trailing the 2013 viral dance craze track Harlem Shake.

A post shared by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on

Look What You Made Me Do also posted the year's most downloads, at 353 000, the most since Justin Timberlake's feel-good summer song Can't Stop the Feeling! in May 2016.

Swift ended the 16-week streak at the top of Despacito, the reggaeton track by Puerto Rican pop star Luis Fonsi with rapper Daddy Yankee, whose remix featured pop celebrity Justin Bieber.

Despacito tied One Sweet Day, the 1995 ballad by Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men, for the most weeks at number one. The feat is all the more striking as few non-English songs have dominated the US charts.

A new side to Taylor 

Look What You Made Me Do - accompanied by a video that opens at a cemetery and depicts Swift dressed ghoulishly and wielding a baseball bat - marks a more sinister side to a singer long considered anodyne.

The song appears to hit back at Kanye West, who infuriated Swift a year earlier by boasting in a song that she may sleep with him because he "made that bitch famous" - presumably a reference to how the rapper interrupted her acceptance speech at the MTV Video Music Awards in 2009.

Swift over the weekend released a second track off the new album entitled ...Ready For It? Swift reaches deeper into hip-hop on the song, opening with a heavy beat before a lighter pop chorus.

Swift describes her woeful love life, one of her favourite topics, but hints more openly to sex, singing: "In the middle of my night / In my dreams / You should see the things we do, baby."

The song - like much of Swift's blockbuster previous album, 1989 - is written with the chart-topping Swedish pop producer trio of Max Martin, Ali Payami and Shellback.


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