Wish You Were Here has arrived.

Decades after its original release, Pink Floyd’s 1975 album Wish You Were Here has reclaimed the top one spot on the UK Albums Chart. The newly-released 50th anniversary edition has helped the legendary album break The Beatles’ record for the longest gap between number one albums.

Before this, The Beatles’ Abbey Road held the record, taking just under 50 years between its No. 1 appearances in 1969 and 2019.

The Wish You Were Here reissue is available in various formats including a 3LP set, 2CD, and a Deluxe Box Set. The Deluxe version features the album on exclusive clear vinyl, the Pink Floyd Live At Wembley 1974 performance, and a Blu-ray containing restored concert screen films along with a short film. There is also a poem as well as specially commissioned art included as a tribute to former lead singer Syd Barrett.

The band also released the first-ever video for the title song. The video, directed by Justin Daashuur Hopkins, features footage of the band in the studio, on stage, running through Westminster station and other London location, as well as their trademark odd animation mixed in with scenes of police and rioters. The single for “Wish You Were Here” is also climbing the charts.

Pink Floyd has been charting for decades: The Dark Side of the Moon, featuring hits like “Money” and “The Great Gig in the Sky,” clocked 989 weeks on the Billboard 200 album chart as of this past June. And this is the band’s second number one album of 2025. They scored a number one singe with No. 1 single in 1979 with “Another Brick in the Wall.” Earlier this year, the live recording Pink Floyd at Pompeii – MCMLXXII, a performance from 1971, also reached the top of the British charts.

Pink Floyd included singer/bassist Roger Waters, guitarist David Gilmour, keyboardist Richard Wright and drummer Nick Mason. Gilmour posted his toast to fans on Instagram recently, saying, “Raising a glass to the wonderful news that Wish You Were Here is the UK’s Christmas Number 1 album.”