In 2016, an English band known for ambitious pop-rock experimentation achieved a rare Billboard milestone that still hasn’t been matched.

When The 1975 released I Like It When You Sleep, for You Are So Beautiful yet So Unaware of It on Feb. 26, 2016, the album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. In the process, it set a record that remains intact today: the longest-titled No. 1 album in Billboard chart history.

The record was highlighted again this week when Billboard examined the wordiest titles ever to top the Billboard 200. According to the publication, The 1975’s second studio album remains the longest title ever attached to a chart-topping album, containing 16 words and 71 characters.

The album arrived at a pivotal moment for the band. Formed in England in the early 2000s, The 1975 had already built a devoted following with songs such as “Chocolate,” “Sex” and “Robbers.” Their self-titled debut album reached No. 1 in the United Kingdom, but their second release pushed them to a new level of international success.

Frontman Matty Healy first teased the unusually long album title through a series of cryptic social media posts before the group officially announced the project in 2015. The rollout included a dramatic rebranding that saw the band’s social media accounts briefly disappear before returning with a new pink-and-white visual aesthetic that became closely associated with the album era.

Musically, the album was even more ambitious than its title. Drawing inspiration from pop, rock, R&B, synth-pop and electronic music, the 17-track collection featured fan favorites including “Love Me,” “The Sound,” “A Change of Heart” and “Somebody Else.” The latter has become one of the band’s most enduring songs and continues to attract millions of streams years after its release.

Critics embraced the record’s scope and willingness to take risks. Publications including Rolling Stone, NME, Pitchfork and The Guardian ranked it among the notable albums of 2016, while NME later named it its Album of the Year. The album would eventually appear on numerous best-of-the-decade lists as well, including being named No. 6 Album of the 2010s by NME.

Commercially, the project was just as successful. It debuted at No. 1 in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, becoming the band’s first chart-topper on the Billboard 200.

More than a decade later, plenty of albums have challenged listeners with lengthy titles, but none has surpassed The 1975’s chart-topping mouthful. The record for the longest-titled No. 1 album in Billboard history remains exactly where it landed in 2016.

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