The Cure returned to the top of the UK charts after 32 years as their long-awaited album "Songs Of A Lost World" went to number one.
The British band released the record, their first studio album in 16 years, on November 1. It went on to outsell the rest of the top five in the UK albums chart combined, the Official Charts Company said.
"It is enormously uplifting, genuinely heartwarming to experience such a wonderful reaction to the release of the new Cure album," lead singer Robert Smith said.
He went on to thank "everyone who has bought it, listened to it, loved it, believed in us over the years".
The Cure last topped the UK album charts in 1992 with "Wish". Their last studio album was "4:13 Dream", released in 2008.
The group, who made their debut in the late 1970s and are known for their post-punk as well as darker melancholic tracks, had long teased a new album, with Smith revealing the "Songs of a Lost World" record title in 2022.

Paris' Louvre raises prices for non-EU tourists to fund renovations
Kiefer Sutherland gets a Christmas glow up in 'Tinsel Town'
Netflix recovers after brief outage during 'Stranger Things' final season premiere
Creative magic of 'Wicked The Musical' to take centrestage in Dubai
Netflix sends off 'Stranger Things' with bike rides and product blitz
Billionaire Richard Branson's wife dies at 80