
The oldest singles chart list in Iceland is compiled by state broadcaster RÚV’s radio station Rás 2 each week. Here is last week’s Top 10, February 9 to 16:

1. (1)* ‘Where Are We Now?’ by David Bowie
2. (3) ‘We No Who U R’ by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
3. (8) ‘Yfir borgina’ by Valdimar
4. (-) ‘Ég á líf’ by Eyþór Ingi
5. (4) ‘Þannig týnist tíminn’ by Raggi Bjarna og Lay Low
6. (9) ‘Nýfallið regn’ by Ásgeir Trausti
7. (2) ‘Fortíðarþrá’ by Jónas Sigurðsson & Lúðrasveit Þorlákshafnar
8. (10) ‘Young Boys’ by Sin Fang
9. (-) ‘Sister’ by The Black Keys
10. (13) ‘Julia’ by Retro Stefson
*(The songs’ position in the previous week’s charts).
ZR
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Icelandic Minister for Foreign Affairs Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson attended an annual consultative meeting last weekend with colleagues from the Nordic and several African countries, as announced in a press release from the Minstry of Foreign Affairs.
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The Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature has approved new names for nine craters on Mercury including one for Icelandic littereture Nobel Prize winner Halldór Laxness.
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The 2013 June-July issue of Iceland Review is out. Themed ‘We Are Young’ the magazine celebrates the arrival of summer by interviewing young energetic Icelanders who excel in art, sports, business and politics—and Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, the youngest PM in the republic’s history and the world’s youngest ruling state leader. Click here to take a look at a selection of the current issue and here to subscribe to the magazine.
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The road to Höfn, a 1,690-person harbor town by the fjord Hornafjörður, is lined with reindeer. Whole herds of the wild horned animals rest peacefully on withered pastures, grace next to sheep and horses and bounce along the road. Soon, Vatnajökull, Europe’s largest glacier and the region’s biggest attraction, comes into view. Looming over Höfn, its outlet glaciers flow down from the mountains on which the bright white icecap rests.
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