Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
'Fate Of
Ophelia' tops a 9th week
Sunday, February 1, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
No change in the
upper region of the Global Track
Chart: Taylor Swift's 'The Fate Of
Ophelia' remains at number one for
a ninth non-consecutive week with
309,000 points, a 4,5% decline
compared to the previous week.
Broken down by sectors the song gets
178,000 points by streaming (down
5%), 38,000 points by sales (down
8%), and 93,000 points by airplay
(down 1%). 'Golden' by the fictional
girl group Huntr/x - leading track
from the soundtrack to the American
animated musical fantasy film 'K-pop
Demon Hunters', released by Netflix
- holds tight at the runner-up slot
with 295,000 points (down 2% with
187,000 points by streaming, 30,000
points by sales, and 78,000 points
by airplay). Djo's 'End Of
Beginning', follows still at no.3
with 257,000 points (down 1% with
213,000 points by streaming, 27,000
points by sales, and 17,000 points
by airplay). Highest debut of the
week comes from Harry Styles:
'Aperture', the first sign of his
upcoming
fourth studio album Kiss All The
Time. Disco, Occasionally. The song
bows at no.4 globally with 232,000
points (174,000 points by streaming,
30,000 points by sales, and 28,000
points by airplay). Styles wrote
'Aperture' with Kid Harpoon, who
also produced the track. The latter
co-produced also Harry Styles' 'As
Is Was' and Miley Cyrus' 'Flowers',
the greatest hits of the year 2022,
respectively 2023. Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'La Villa' by Ryan Castro |
Kapo | Gangsta at no.49, '4 Raws' by EsDeeKid at
no.57, and 'Daño'
by Peso Pluma & Tito Double P at
no.59 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. 'The Sin: Vanish', the
seventh extended play by South
Korean boy group Enhypen, defends
the top slot of the Global Album
Chart for a second week with another
healthy 406,000 equivalent sales
(18,000 points by streaming +
388,000 points by sales). After two
weeks at retail the set generates at
total of 905,000 sales, so it's the
most successful album of the year so
far! Japanese idol group SixTones
brings the highest new-entry of the
week: The compilation 'MileSixTones'
arrives at the runner-up slot with
289,000 consumption units (all of
these are physical sales). Rounds
out the top three is 'Reverxe', the
eighth studio album by South Korean
/ Chinese boy band Exo. It bows
there with 186,000 equivalent sales
(almost all physical sales as well). And now, as every week, additional
stats from outside the current
Global Album Top 20 in alphabetic
order. The first figure means last
week's sales, the second figure the
total sales: '1989' by Taylor Swift
16,000 / 17,249,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 12,000 /
7,420,000, '21' by Adele 12,000 /
34,285,000, '25' by Adele 10,000 /
26,033,000, '30' by Adele 9,000 /
7,169,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 27,000 / 11,886,000,
'Borondo' by Beéle 33,000 /
1,599,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
14,000 / 4,439,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 10,000 / 2,372,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 19,000 / 22,680,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
30,000 / 5,335,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 9,000 / 7,022,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 21,000 / 4,018,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 27,000 / 12,983,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
17,000 / 10,187,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 18,000 / 4,029,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 19,000 /
5,601,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 22,000 / 2,712,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 25,000 / 4,173,000,
'Lux' by Rosalíá 24,000 /
671,000, 'Man's Best Friend' Sabrina
Carpenter 52,000 / 2,336,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
38,000 / 2,931,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 18,000 / 13,293,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 23,000 / 10,267,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
10,000 / 7,098,000, 'Rosie' by Rosé
15,000 / 2,424,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie
21,000 / 1,858,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 46,000 /
6,672,000, 'Starboy' by The
Weeknd 33,000 / 10,314,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 37,000 /
6,109,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber
17,000 / 1,652,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 24,000 / 10,716,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 21,000 /
4,750,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 29,000 / 3,988,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 33,000 / 11,738,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 23,000 /
1,323,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 15,000 / 13,327,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 20
YEARS AGO
...
"Hung
Up", initially used in a number of
television advertisements and
serials, was released on October 17,
2005 as the lead single from
Madonna's tenth studio album
Confessions On A Dance Floor (2005).
The song prominently features a
sample from the instrumental
introduction to Abba's hit single
"Gimme, Gimme, Gimme (A Man After
Midnight)", for which Madonna
personally sought permission from
Abba's songwriters Benny Andersson
and Björn Ulaeus. Musically the song
influenced by pop from the 1980s,
with a chugging groove and chorus
and a background element of a
ticking clock that suggests the fear
of wasting time. Lyrically the song
is written as a traditional dance
number about a strong, independent
woman who has relationship troubles.
"Hung Up" reached only the no.7
position in the United States, but
in almost all other countries it
went to number one. With a total of
8,698,000 points it was the second
most successful single release of
2005, after James Blunt's 'You're
Beautiful' with 9,527,000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Ella Langley's 'Choosin'
Texas' rises to No. 2
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Harry Styles earns his third
Hot 100 leader, and second
to debut in the top spot,
after “As It Was” arrived at
No. 1 in April 2022 to begin
a 15-week reign. His first
No. 1, “Watermelon Sugar,”
spent a week atop the chart
in August 2020. Released at
7 p.m. ET Jan. 22, followed
by the premiere of its
official video Jan.
23, “Aperture” arrives on
the Hot 100 with 18.2
million official streams and
27.1 million radio airplay
audience impressions and
sold 4,000 in the United
States in its first full
week of release (ending Jan.
29). The single launches at
No. 1 on the Streaming Songs chart,
where it’s Styles’ second
leader, after “As It Was”;
No. 19 on Radio Songs, tying
“As It Was” for his highest
start; and No. 4 on Digital
Song Sales. “Aperture”
instantly develops as the
1,186th Hot 100 No. 1, and
the 88th to debut in the top
spot. Reflecting warm
welcomes for new music in
2026, Styles’ “Aperture” is
the second Hot 100 No. 1
debut so far this year. It
dethrones Bruno Mars’ “I
Just Might,” which spent its
first two weeks on the chart
at No. 1 the previous two
frames; this week, it drops
to No. 6. This year marks
the earliest that two songs
have debuted at
No.
1 on the Hot 100. It
surpasses 2024 by three
days, as Ariana Grande’s
“Yes, And?” debuted atop the
Jan. 27 chart that year,
followed by Megan Thee
Stallion’s “Hiss” on the
Feb. 10 survey. Ella
Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas”
rises 3-2 for a new Hot 100
high. Notably, Columbia
Records holds the chart’s
top two places, with Styles’
“Aperture” on
Erskine/Columbia and
“Choosin’ Texas” on Sawgod /
Columbia / Triple Tigers.
Columbia is the first label
in 2026 to claim the Hot
100’s top two rungs, after
being the last to do so in
2025, when Mariah Carey’s
“All I Want for Christmas Is
You” and Wham!’s “Last
Christmas,” both on Columbia
/ Legacy, were Nos. 1 and 2,
respectively, on the Dec. 13
chart. As Olivia Dean’s “Man
I Need” slips to No. 3 on
the Hot 100 from its No. 2
best, it becomes the most
prominent song on radio,
rising a spot to No. 1 on
Radio Songs (63.2 million,
up 1%). “Man I Need”
supplants Alex Warren’s
“Ordinary” atop Radio Songs,
after the latter led for a
record-tying 27 weeks.
On the Hot 100, “Ordinary”
backtracks 5-7 after 10
weeks at No. 1 beginning
last June. Elsewhere in the
Hot 100’s top 10, Huntr/x’s
“Golden” holds at No. 4,
after eight weeks at No. 1
beginning last August. It
won at the 68th annual
Grammys ceremony for best
song written for visual
media, marking the first
Grammy victory for a song
associated with Korean pop.
Taylor Swift’s “The Fate of
Ophelia” falls 3-5 on the
Hot 100 after 10 weeks at
No. 1. Rounding out the Hot
100’s top 10, sombr’s “Back
to Friends” descends to No.
8 from its No. 7 high,
Kehlani’s “Folded” slides
8-9 after hitting No. 6; and
Swift’s “Opalite” keeps at
No. 10, after reaching No.
2.
After a nearly 40-year wait,
Megadeth achieves its first
No. 1 album on the Billboard
200 chart. The metal band’s
new self-titled set, which
also marks its expected
final studio album, debuts
atop the list dated Feb. 7.
Megadeth made its Billboard
200 chart debut in 1986 and
has placed 23 albums on the
ranking through its career.
Until this week, the band
had gone as high as No. 2,
with 1992’s Countdown to
Extinction. The new
self-titled album earned
73,000 equivalent album
units in the United States
in the week ending Jan. 29,
according to Luminate —
marking the act’s best week,
by units earned, since the
chart began ranking by units
in December 2014. The bulk
of that sum was driven by
pure album sales (purchases
of physical and digital
copies of the album),
totaling 69,000. That’s the
biggest sales week for any
Megadeth album since 1999,
when Risk opened with 74,000
sold. The new album was
released on Jan. 23, a day
after the documentary
Megadeth: Behind the Mask
was released in movie
theaters. The band’s
farewell tour kicks off on
Feb. 15 in Victoria, British
Columbia. Of Megadeth’s
73,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, album sales
comprise 69,000 (it debuts
at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
4,000 (equaling 4.23 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. Sales of the album got
a boost from its
availability across more
than a dozen vinyl variants,
a Target-exclusive CD with a
bonus track, and the
mid-week release of deluxe
digital download version of
the album with another bonus
track. Megadeth’s debut of
73,000 units marks the
lowest sum at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 since last
May, when SZA’s SOS returned
to No. 1 on the May 3-dated
chart with 52,000 units.
Dating to Megadeth’s debut
on the Billboard 200, the
band’s 39-year, three-month
and one-week wait for its
first No. 1 is the longest
any act has waited for a
first No. 1 since 2016. That
January, David Bowie hit No.
1 for the first time with
Blackstar (released two days
before he died). Blackstar
debuted at No. 1 on the Jan.
30-dated chart, nearly 43
years and 10 months after
Bowie charted his first
album in April 1972 with
Hunky Dory. Morgan Wallen’s
former No. 1 I’m the Problem
climbs 4-2 on the latest
Billboard 200 with 69,000
equivalent album units
earned (though down 7%).
Olivia Dean's The Art of
Loving bumps 7-3 (51,000,
down 9%), Zach Bryan’s
chart-topping With Heaven on
Top moves 5-4 (49,000, down
30%) and A$AP Rocky’s Don’t
Be Dumb falls to No. 5
(46,000, down 63%) after
debuting at No. 1 last week.
Taylor Swift’s former No. 1
The Life of a Showgirl steps
8-6 (45,000 equivalent album
units earned, down 15%) and
YoungBoy Never Broke Again’s
Slime Cry slips 6-7 in its
second week (41,000, down
42%). Three former No. 1s
round out the rest of the
top 10: the KPop Demon
Hunters soundtrack is up a
spot to No. 8 (40,000, down
14%), Bad Bunny’s DeBÍ TiRAR
MáS FOToS dips 3-9 (36,000,
down 70%) and SZA’s SOS
rises 11-10 (35,000, down
6%).
Record Of The Month
'I Just Might' by Bruno Mars
is the first big global
release of 2026
and also the first sign of
his new album 'The
Romantic', available
February 27.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Raindance'
takes over the crown
Monday, February 2, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
Twelve weeks after debuting
at No.5, Raindance edges 2-1
for Dave & Tems on
consumption of 50,474 units
(318 digital downloads,
50,156 sales-equivalent
streams). Ending the
two-week reign of Djo’s End
Of Beginning – which mirrors
its activity, falling 1-2
(45,325 sales) – Raindance
is the fourth
Aperture is the introductory single from Harry
Styles’ upcoming fourth solo album, Kiss All The Time: Disco
Occasionally, and makes an emphatic debut atop the chart, with first
week consumption of 70,498 units (1,739 digital downloads and 68,759
sales-equivalent streams).
It is the first single to debut at No.1 since The
Fate Of Ophelia opened at the summit for Taylor Swift on consumption of
132,501 units last October.
The third No.1, eighth Top 10 hit and 17th Top 75
entry of the solo career of Styles, who turns 32 on Sunday (February 1),
it is his eighth No.1, 23rd Top 10 and 46th Top 75 hit in all, including
his 2011-2015 output as a member of One Direction.
The release of Aperture triggers increased
consumption of Styles’ entire oeuvre, with his three solo albums
hitherto all reaching their highest chart placing for more than two
years, while his last No.1 single – As It Was, which spent 10 weeks at
the summit in 2022 – enjoys a 50.31% rise in
unadjusted consumption and
escapes ACR to re-enter the chart at No.28 (11,986 sales). It has now
spent 66 weeks in the Top 40, more than all but nine other songs in
chart history, and has accumulated consumption of 3,384,118 units – the
highest of his career, even beating One Direction’s top tune, What Makes
You Beautiful (2,535,868 units).
Aperture is the only new arrival in the Top 10,
and bumps former incumbent, Raindance – which finally reached the apex
last week for Dave & Tems – down to No.2 (45,377 sales).
Zara Larsson’s Lush Life continues its viral
re-emergence, holding at No.7, while achieving its highest weekly
consumption (31,140 units) since 2016, when it peaked at No.3. The gap
between it and her new hit – the title track of latest album, Midnight
Sun – continues to shrink, with the latter track jumping 29-26 (12,245
sales).
The rest of the Top 10, all of which suffer
reduced consumption greater than the overall market, are: End Of
Beginning (2-3, 42,164 sales) by Djo, Where Is My Husband! (3-4, 41,156
sales) by Raye, The Fate Of Ophelia (4-5, 36,196 sales) by Taylor Swift,
I Just Might (5-6, 32,317 sales) by Bruno Mars, So Easy (To Fall In
Love) (6-8, 30,745 sales) by Olivia Dean, Rein Me In (8-9, 28,574 sales)
by Sam Fender & Olivia Dean and Die On This Hill (9-10, 27,324 sales) by
Sienna Spiro.
Overall singles consumption is down 0.14% week-on-week to 31,443,504
units, 4.87% above same week 2025 sales of 29,982,061 units. Paid-for
sales are up 9.41% week-on-week at 271,061, 6.76% above same week 2025
sales of 253,900.
Ten years to the month since the band went
on indefinite hiatus, the chart’’s first ever One Direction solo
double sees Louis Tomlinson open atop the album chart with How
Did I Get Here?, while Harry Styles debuts at No.1 on the
singles chart with Aperture.
How Did I Get Here? is Tomlinson’s third
solo studio album, and his second to reach No.1, although its
first week consumption of 28,416 units (15,535 CDs, 6,851 vinyl
albums, 1,208 cassettes, 2,578 digital downloads and 2,244
sales-equivalent streams) is 19.6% below the 35,239 units his
last album, Faith In The Future, achieved on its 2022 No.1
debut. It is, however, 92.93% more than the 14,729 units
Tomlinson’s introductory solo album, Walls, achieved when it
debuted and peaked at No.4 in 2020.
Consisting entirely of new songs co-penned
by Tomlinson, How Did I Get Here? has already spawned three
singles though none of them have made the Top 75, with the
first, Lemonade, proving the most visible, peaking at No.89 last
October.
Going out in style: Megadeth’s self-titled
17th and final studio album debuts at No.3 (14,294 sales). Their
fifth Top 10 and 15th Top 75 entry, it thus matches their
all-time highest-chart position, as set by their most recent
album, 2022’s The Sick, The Dying…And The Dead!, on much lower
first week sales of 5,441 units. It is their highest weekly sale
surpassing the 13,373 tally achieved on debut by their sixth
studio album Youthanasia in 1994. The thrash metal legends’ lead
singer, guitarist and primary songwriter, 64-year-old
Californian Dave Mustaine, is the only member to have been with
the band since its 1983 inception – before current guitarist
Teemu Mäntysaari was even born.
With current single Pins And Needles
receiving considerable support from BBC Radio 2, Scottish
singer/songwriter Callum Beattie’s new album, Indi, secures the
36-year-old from Musselburgh his first Top 10 entry, debuting at
No.4 (9,183 sales). He previously reached No.68 with 2020 album
People Like Us and No.22 with 2023 release Vandals but failed to
make much of an impression with 2012 debut, This Time This
Place, which has to-date consumption of just 238 units. All but
one of the 12 songs on Indi were co-written by Beattie and David
Sneddon, who had a No.1 single in 2003 with Stop Living The Lie,
and also co-wrote four songs on the new No.1 album by Louis
Tomlinson.
The rest of the Top 10: The Art Of Loving
(2-2, 15,994 sales) by Olivia Dean, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (5-5,
8,636 sales) by Fleetwood Mac, The Highlights (7-6, 7,469 sales)
by The Weeknd, +-=÷× Tour Collection (12-7, 6,510 sales) by Ed
Sheeran, Man’s Best Friend (9-8, 6,130 sales) by Sabrina
Carpenter, The Life Of A Showgirl (13-9, 5,888 sales) by Taylor
Swift and The Essential (15-10, 5,818 sales) by Michael Jackson.
Overall album sales are down 1.05% week-on-week at 2,570,936
units, 1.76% above same week 2025 sales of 2,526,353. Physical
product accounts for 305,739 sales, 11.89% of the total.