Olivia Rodrigo’s first two studio albums, Sour and Guts, both had very short titles. So, the pop star was due for a more expansive title on her just-released third studio album. She came through with a 10-word doozy: You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love. The album enters the Billboard 200 (dated June 27) at No. 1, just as Rodrigo’s first two albums had.
You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love is one of the longest titles ever on a No. 1 album, but, as you’ll see here, it’s not the record-holder. Two No. 1 albums had even longer titles. One had 11 words; the other, a whopping 16 words.
We’ve had long album titles for years, but they seem to be getting longer. The first album with a seven-word title to make No. 1 after The Billboard 200 originated on a consistent weekly basis in March 1956 was Frank Sinatra’s Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely in 1958. The first album with an eight-word title to reach the top was by a somewhat less legendary Frank, actor and singer Frank Fontaine, who reached No. 1 in 1963 with Songs I Sing on the Jackie Gleason Show.
The first album with a nine-word title to reach No. 1, as you’ll see on the list below, was Donna Summer’s On the Radio: Greatest Hits: Volumes I & II in 1980. The first album with a 10-word title to reach No. 1 was Snoop Dogg’s Da Game Is to Be Sold, Not to Be Told in 1998.
That last factoid requires a little explanation. It’s hard to tell by looking at the album cover if Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band is meant to be part of the title on their 1986 live album Live/1975-85. Most sources say no; that it’s just the artist billing. If you count it as part of the title, that bumps that three-word title up to 10 words.
Let’s take a look all Billboard 200-topping albums with titles of nine words or more. They are listed in ascending order, with the longest titles at the bottom. Ties are listed in chronological order.
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Donna Summer, On the Radio: Greatest Hits: Volumes I & II (nine words)
Date Reached No. 1: Jan. 5, 1980 (one week)
Notes: Casablanca incorporated the title of Summer’s then-current single, the marvelous “On the Radio,” into the title of this double-disk compilation. This was Summer’s third double-disk album to top the Billboard 200 in less than 14 months. Yep, she was that hot. Summer later had an even longer album title (11 words), but that album didn’t come close to No. 1: The Best of Donna Summer: 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection (No. 101 in 2012).
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Rod Stewart, Still the Same … Great Rock Classics of Our Time (nine words)
Date Reached No. 1: Oct. 28, 2006 (one week)
Notes: Clive Davis’ J Records incorporated the title of Stewart’s cover of Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band’s 1978 hit “Still the Same” into the title of this album, which interrupted his long succession of Great American Songbook albums. Three of those albums had even longer album titles, but they didn’t quite make No. 1: As Time Goes By…The Great American Songbook Vol. II (No. 2 in 2003) and Thanks for the Memory…The Great American Songbook Vol. IV (No. 2 in 2005), were both 10 words, and Fly Me to the Moon The Great American Songbook Vol. 5 (No. 4 in 2010), was 11 words. This was Stewart’s fourth No. 1 album; his first collection of contemporary pop/rock songs to top the chart since 1979.
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Coldplay, Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends (nine words)
Date Reached No. 1: July 5, 2008 (two weeks)
Notes: This was Coldplay’s second No. 1 album, following one with a much shorter title, X&Y. The title song was a No. 1 single on the Hot 100, though (mercifully) with a shorter title, “Viva La Vida.” This received a Grammy nod for album of the year.
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Soundtrack, The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 and Beyond (nine words)
Date Reached No. 1: April 7, 2012 (one week)
Notes: This is the soundtrack with the longest title to reach No. 1. The album featured tracks by Arcade Fire, Taylor Swift featuring The Civil Wars and Miranda Lambert featuring Pistol Annies, among others.
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Billie Eilish, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? (nine words)
Date Reached No. 1: April 13, 2019 (three weeks)
Notes: This is the debut album with the longest title to reach No. 1. The blockbuster set won a Grammy for album of the year in 2020.
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Snoop Dogg, Da Game Is to Be Sold, Not to Be Told (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: Aug. 22, 1998 (two weeks)
Notes: This was Snoop’s third and most recent No. 1 album. The first two both had two-word titles: Doggy Style and Tha Doggfather.
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LL Cool J, G.O.A.T. Featuring James T. Smith: The Greatest of All Time (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: Sept. 30, 2000 (one week)
Notes: This is LL’s only No. 1 album. It was his third Billboard 200 album to incorporate his birth name into the album title, following Todd Smith (No. 6 in 1986) and Mr. Smith (No. 20 in 1996).
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Kenny Chesney, Be as You Are: Songs From an Old Blue Chair (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: Feb. 12, 2005 (one week)
Notes: This was Chesney’s third No. 1 album. He had another Billboard 200-charting album with a 10-word title, but it didn’t come close to No. 1: his holiday album All I Want for Christmas Is a Real Good Tan (No. 42 in 2003).
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Garth Brooks, Blame It All on My Roots: Five Decades of Influences (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: Dec. 21, 2013 (one week)
Notes: This was the country titan’s ninth and most recent No. 1 album. He has had one Billboard 200 album with an even longer title (12 words): Garth Brooks & The Magic of Christmas – Songs From Call Me Claus (No. 99 in 2001).
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A Tribe Called Quest, We Got It From Here…Thank You 4 Your Service (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: Dec. 3, 2016 (one week)
Notes: This is the legendary hip-hop collective’s second No. 1 album, following Beats, Rhymes and Life (1996). A 1990 album by the group had an eight-word title: People’s Instinctive Travels & The Paths of Rhythm.
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Olivia Rodrigo, You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love (10 words)
Date Reached No. 1: June 27, 2026 (one week so far)
Notes: This is Rodrigo’s third No. 1 album, following a pair of albums with one-word titles, Sour and Guts.
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Various Artists, P. Diddy & Bad Boy Records Present … We Invented the Remix (11 words)
Date Reached No. 1: June 1, 2002 (one week)
Notes: P. Diddy was the headline artist here, but the album also includes tracks by G. Dep, Ashanti, 112, Mary J. Blige, The Notorious B.I.G., Carl Thomas and Faith Evans.
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The 1975, I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware of It (16 words)
Date Reached No. 1: March 19, 2016 (one week)
Notes: This romantic notion is the longest title of any No. 1 album in Billboard 200 history, as well as the band’s only No. 1 album to date. Two of its other top 10-charting albums had six-word titles: A Brief Inquiry Into Online Relationships (No. 4 in 2018) and Being Funny in a Foreign Language (No. 7 in 2022).
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