
Fall Out Boy's Biggest Hits Will ‘Never Die'
It's been about a year since Fall Out Boy stopped promoting its most recent album, So Much (for) Stardust. The group dropped a music video for a final single in February 2024 and has remained fairly quiet in terms of new music since. The outfit, which helped bring emo and pop punk music to the forefront more than 20 years ago, wrapped its tour in support of the set in May of last year, and while the rockers may be working on new material, there's been no major announcement just yet. The band is back on the Billboard charts this week — not with a new release, but with a fan-favorite collection.
Fall Out Boy reappears on four Billboard rankings in the United States this week, and on each and every one of them, with the same album: Believers Never Die: Greatest Hits. The set moved another 11,500 equivalent album units in the past tracking frame. That figure comes from Luminate, the organization that compiles streaming and sales data for Billboard's tallies. It's enough to send the collection back to the Billboard 200 at No. 117.
Believers Never Die also returns to a trio of genre-specific rankings, in addition to the Billboard 200. It sits highest on the Top Alternative Albums chart, landing at No. 12. The set settles five spots lower on the Top Rock Albums tally and comes in at No. 21 on the combined Top Rock & Alternative Albums list.
Understandably, Believers Never Die performs best on rankings focused on individual styles, where the competition isn't quite as fierce. The collection has previously peaked at No. 8 on the Top Alternative Albums list and No. 10 on the other two, where it currently resides. On the Billboard 200, however, the hits-packed release has never reached the same heights. Instead, it topped out at No. 77 during the 40 weeks it has spent somewhere on the busy roster.
Fans may be revisiting Believers Never Die for several reasons. The group's breakout album, From Under the Cork Tree — which produced several of the singles featured on the compilation — is turning 20 years old in May 2025. The milestone has prompted many casual listeners and longtime supporters to revisit those tracks on streaming platforms, and all those plays may be funneled toward the compilation instead of From Under the Cork Tree, based on some of Billboard's rules.
Believers Never Die was also recently discounted on vinyl via Amazon. The price cut likely spurred many fans who had always wanted a copy of the compilation on wax, but had never decided to pull the trigger and buy one, to finally make a purchase.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
4 hours ago
- Forbes
Kendrick Lamar Replaces Drake A At No. 1
It's likely that no matter how much time passes since the end of their public feud, Kendrick Lamar and Drake will always be compared to one another and seen as rivals. The rappers spent part of 2024 trading diss tracks in what turned out to be one of the most high-profile beefs in hip-hop history. Lamar came out on top, thanks largely to his tune "Not Like Us," which didn't just reach No. 1 on the Hot 100, it also earned the rapper both Record and Song of the Year at the Grammys. It's been well over a year since "Not Like Us" seemingly finished the war, but Lamar and Drake are still competing against one another directly on the Billboard charts. Kendrick Lamar Replaces Drake at No. 1 Lamar manages to replace Drake at No. 1 on several Billboard tallies in the United States this week, thanks to his recent collaboration with friend and tourmate SZA. "Luther" returns to the summit on both the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs rankings this frame. Last period, the collaboration sat in the runner-up spot on the two consumption-based lists, pushed down by Drake's "What Did I Miss?" The Canadian hip-hop superstar's single begins to decline this frame, making way for "Luther" — one of the most popular tunes in hip-hop of all time, according to the charts — to find its way to the summit once more. Drake's Songs Decline as "Luther" Surges On the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs tally, "What Did I Miss?" drops from No. 1 to No. 3, landing just ahead of Drake's previous smash "Nokia." On the Hot Rap Songs chart, "What Did I Miss?" only steps back one space, while "Nokia" also holds at No. 4 on that ranking. "Luther" Extends Its Historic Reign "Luther" has now ruled both the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs rankings for 29 weeks apiece. The tune long ago became the longest-running leader on both tallies, and with every frame it commands the tallies, it adds to its total and Lamar and SZA further their lead over every other hit in the history of those genres.


Forbes
5 hours ago
- Forbes
Black Sabbath Blocked From No. 1 — By Ozzy Osbourne
Following Ozzy Osbourne's passing, both the rocker and his band Black Sabbath soar onto charts all around the planet, as millions of people buy and stream everything the legendary artist left behind. There's room for both acts on the charts, but in some instances, the two, which are counted separately, compete with one another, as Osbourne and Black Sabbath appear on multiple rock and hard rock rankings published by Billboard. In one instance, the soloist even keeps the group that brought him to fame from reaching No. 1. Ozzy Osbourne's New No. 1 Album This week's Top Hard Rock Albums chart is ruled by The Essential Ozzy Osbourne. That compilation of many of Osbourne's most successful singles surges from No. 9 to the top spot – and it's not the only effort from the late rocker to rise dramatically. Black Sabbath Forced to Settle for No. 2 Black Sabbath's Paranoid advances to the runner-up spot on Billboard's ranking of the most consumed hard rock projects in the United States, jumping from No. 18 to No. 2. Paranoid has always been one of Black Sabbath's most famous releases, but it has never managed to conquer the Top Hard Rock Albums chart. The set enters the top 10 on the tally for the first time this week, and only Osbourne himself keeps the group from scoring a new No. 1 album. Black Sabbath's Sole No. 1 Black Sabbath has only ever ruled the Top Hard Rock Albums list once before. In the summer of 2013, the group's appropriately-titled release 13 debuted in first place. It went on to live there for two frames, and still stands as the group's longest-running success on the Top Hard Rock Albums chart, with 23 frames spent on the roster. Paranoid Reappears on Multiple Charts Paranoid returns to two Billboard lists, reentering both the Billboard 200 and Top Album Sales charts inside the top 40 as it surges to the runner-up space on the Top Hard Rock Albums list. The full-length also opens inside the top 10 on both the Top Rock & Alternative Albums and Top Rock Albums rankings. Black Sabbath's Multiple Wins Black Sabbath only manages to occupy two spaces on a single Billboard tally this week, and it's the Top Hard Rock Albums chart. As Paranoid almost becomes another No. 1, The Ultimate Collection also reappears at No. 23.


Forbes
5 hours ago
- Forbes
Taylor Swift's Album Cut Jumps 6,000% In Sales
Even when Taylor Swift is between album cycles, she finds a way to manage impressive feats on the charts. With no new singles out and fans still speculating about her next move, one of her album cuts has returned to the spotlight, proving once again that even her lesser-known songs can become big wins under the right circumstances. Taylor Swift Syncs With 'And Just Like That' On the July 25 episode of HBO's And Just Like That – which is set to end with its third season, according to a recent announcement – an emotional farewell between Carrie Bradshaw and her beau Aidan was set to the soundtrack of 'How Did It End?' The track, originally released as a bonus cut from The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology Edition, played during the episode's closing moments, and that meaningful sync helped the tune surge on streaming platforms and download stores. A Sky-High Sales Boost Thanks to the high-profile placement, 'How Did It End?' experienced a massive uptick in purchases. According to Billboard, from July 25 to 28, the song sold more than 500 copies in the United States (per Luminate). That's a 6,000% jump from the previous week. Streaming Numbers Rise as Well While the bump in streaming was less dramatic when compared to sales, it was still significant. The track pulled in 391,000 official on-demand streams over that same four-day period, up 22% week-over-week. For a deluxe edition track that debuted more than a year ago and which wasn't pushed as a single, that's a solid showing. A Deluxe Edition Track That's Still Popular 'How Did It End?' made its first chart appearance back in April 2024, when it debuted at No. 35 on the Hot 100 when The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology Edition arrived. It's not common for an album cut from a deluxe reissue to break into the top 40 on the chart, but nothing about Swift's career is common.