Powered by a collector-friendly release strategy — which included eight different vinyl variants (two signed editions), a standard CD, and a digital download — Virgin struck a chord with both diehard fans and physical music collectors. This multi-format approach catapulted the album to No. 1 on multiple Billboard charts, including Vinyl Albums, Indie Store Album Sales, Top Rock & Alternative Albums, and Top Alternative Albums, underscoring its wide-reaching impact across multiple retail categories and genres.
One of Virgin’s most buzzworthy tracks is “Current Affairs,” which features a sample from Jamaican dancehall star Dexta Daps’ sensual hit Morning Love. The interpolation — handled by renowned production duo DASECA (brothers David and Craig Harrisingh) — introduces an intoxicating Caribbean layer to Lorde’s sonic palette, seamlessly bridging pop and dancehall in a bold cross-genre experiment. DASECA, known for shaping modern dancehall through hits like “Shabba Madda Pot” and the 2024 standout “Everything and Anything” featuring Agent Sasco and Lila Iké, also earn official songwriting credits on the track — marking a significant moment of international recognition for Jamaican producers on a mainstream global release.
Across the pond, the chart-topping success of Virgin marks a major milestone in Lorde’s career, finally earning her the elusive U.K. crown after years of near-misses. “I cannot believe that I’ve got Number 1 in the U.K.! This is absolutely insane,” Lorde told the Official Charts Company. “I felt so much love from the U.K. on Virgin. I cannot thank you enough and I cannot wait to see you on the tour very, very soon.”
Adding to the album’s momentum, Lorde made headlines with a surprise full-album performance at Glastonbury on June 27, unofficially kicking off the Virgin era with an artistic statement that thrilled fans and festivalgoers alike. The intimate yet bold performance of the entire record in one of music’s most sacred spaces cemented Virgin not just as a commercial success but as a cultural event.
With a U.K. and Ireland arena tour on the horizon and dancehall echoes woven into its fabric, Virgin is poised to become one of Lorde’s defining works — both critically and commercially. Its debut at No. 1 on three major markets — the U.S., U.K., and Australia — signals not just a return, but a reinvention. Lorde is no longer the prodigy from Pure Heroine — she’s now a global chart force who, more than a decade into her career, is still finding new ways to captivate, collaborate, and conquer.





