Tame Impala x Jennie remix re-peaks at #7
- Tame Impala and JENNIE’s “Dracula” remix is still climbing months after release, turning a one-off pop crossover into a real multi-chart hit. - The remix dropped on February 6, then pushed the song to No. 15 on the Hot 100 and No. 1 on Hot Rock & Alternative Songs. - That matters because the remix didn’t just spike opening-week streams — it extended the song’s life across U.S. radio, global charts, and TikTok.
A remix is usually supposed to give a song a quick second wind. This one kept going. Tame Impala’s “Dracula” was already a breakout hit for Kevin Parker, but JENNIE’s February 2026 remix turned it into something bigger — a crossover record that kept climbing for weeks instead of fading after the first fan rush. That’s the real story here. Not just one chart peak, but a song that kept finding new lanes. ### What was “Dracula” before JENNIE showed up? “Dracula” started as a Tame Impala single from *Deadbeat*, released in September 2025. It mattered because it was Parker’s first real U.S. Hot 100 breakthrough, debuting in October and eventually peaking at No. 30. So the remix was not rescuing a flop — it was upgrading an existing hit. (billboard.com) ### What did the remix actually change? JENNIE didn’t just add a guest tag and disappear. She reworked verses, joined the chorus, and gave the song a sharper pop-K-pop edge without stripping out Parker’s original mood. Basically, the remix made the track legible to multiple audiences at once — indie-pop listeners, BLACKPINK fans, radio programmers, and short-form video users. The release landed on February 6, 2026, just days after the collaboration was announced. (billboard.com) ### Why did it keep rising instead of peaking fast? Because the song stacked momentum in layers. First came the collaboration novelty. Then came repeat streaming. Then radio started catching up. Then TikTok gave it another life. Billboard even highlighted JENNIE trying the “Dracula” TikTok trend herself, which tells you this was not just passive virality — the campaign kept feeding the song back into the algorithm. (billboard.com) ### How big did it get in the U.S.? Big enough to reset the ceiling for both artists. By late April, the remix had climbed to No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 — the first top-15 hit for both JENNIE and Tame Impala. It also hit No. 7 on Digital Song Sales, No. 8 on Streaming Songs, and No. 24 on Pop Airplay, which matters because that mix shows support from buyers, streamers, and mainstream radio at the same time. (billboard.com) ### Why is the rock-chart angle such a big deal? Because this was not just a pop feature smashing into pop charts. Billboard’s late-April chart story had “Dracula” reaching No. 1 on Hot Rock & Alternative Songs for the May 2-dated chart. That means the remix expanded the song without fully changing its identity. It stayed credible inside Tame Impala’s lane while becoming much bigger outside it. That’s the hard version of crossover. (soompi.com) ### What does the streaming data tell us? The clearest signal is durability. Kworb’s Spotify chart history shows the remix accumulating more than 217 million global Spotify streams and reaching a weekly global peak at No. 8. That doesn’t prove every viral stat floating around social media, but it does show a song with real staying power across markets, not just a one-country fan push. (billboard.com) ### So why does this story matter beyond one song? Because it shows what a modern remix is for now. Not a bonus version. Not a club edit. More like a software update for a song that already works — one that opens new audiences, new playlists, and new chart pathways without forcing a total reboot. “Dracula” became a test case for that. (kworb.net) ### Bottom line? JENNIE didn’t just hop on a Tame Impala song. She helped turn “Dracula” from a breakthrough hit into a longer, broader, more durable one. And that’s why the chart run kept getting weirder — and bigger. (billboard.com)