Global Chart Report
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'Golden' returns
to the summit
Sunday, October 26, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
'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 - rises back to
the pole position for a 12th
non-consecutive week with another
429,000 points, an 1% decrease
compared to the previous week.
Broken down by sectors the song gets
324,000 points by streaming (down
4%), 38,000
points by sales (up 2%), and 67,000 points
by airplay (up 11%). After 17 weeks
on the tally 'Golden' generates a
total of 6,463,000 points and
reaches no.6 on the year-to-date
list. The big leader of the last two
weeks, Taylor Swift's 'The Fate Of
Ophelia', sails back to the
runner-up slot with exactly 400,000
points, (down 16% with 292,000
points by streaming, 47,000 points
by sales, and 61,000 points by
airplay). A fortnight ago the track
started with massive 689,000 points
and Taylor Swift set an all-time
record with seven simultaneous songs
Top 10 songs. What is left
of are two songs this
week, behind 'Ophelia' ranks
'Opalite' still at no.4 with 193,000
points (down 23% with 182,000 points
by streaming and 11,000 points by
airplay). Sandwiched between
'Ophelia' and 'Opalite' ranks
Alex Warren's 'Ordinary' still at
no.3 with 248,000
points (down 1% with 135,000 points by
streaming, 23,000 points by sales,
and 90,000 points by airplay). The
song tops the (non-published) Global
Airplay Chart for a 20th week in a
row.
'Die With A Smile' by Lady GaGa &
Bruno Mars climbs back to no.8
currently with 149,000 points (down
4%). With a total of 20,669,000
points it holds no.3 on the
ALL TIME CHART.
Perhaps before the end of this year
the song could be the most
successful smash of all time. Let's
take a short excursion through the
history of the most successful
tracks on our hitlist. In the
initial year 1955 led Cuban mambo
king Perez Prado with 'Cherry Pink
And Apple Blossom White' with a
total 8,021,000 points, overtaken
nearly two years later by Doris
Day's 'Whatever Will Be, Will Be
(Que Sera, Sera)' from the Alfred
Hitchcock film 'The Man Who Knew Too
Much' with 11,073,000 points. Seven
years later in 1964 the Beatles' 'I
Want To Hold Your Hand' set a new
record with a total of 14,435,000
points. Another 21 years later the
benefit single 'We Are The World' by
USA For Africa generated a little
bit more with 14,665,000 points.
1991 Bryan Adams' '(Everything I Do)
I Do It For You' took over the lead of the
ALL TIME CHART
with 15,694,000 points. Only 16
months later Whitney Houston's 'I Will Always Love You' set another new record
with 16,547,000 points. Finally four and a half years afterwards Elton John's
tribute single 'Candle In The Wind 1997' took the crown with spectacular
worldwide sales and a total of 21,314,000 points. This record has stood for 28
years now!
Outside our
current Top 40 waiting among other
'Pixelated Kisses' by Joji at no.46,
'Dracula' by Tame Impala at no.48,
and
'Yellow' by Coldplay at no.59 for their first appearance
on the hitlist. Taylor Swift's 12th
studio album 'The Life Of A
Showgirl' started a fortnight ago with
stellar 5,371,000 equivalent sales,
the second highest weekly frame in
history! Only overtaken by Adele's
'25', which launched a little bit
higher, nearly 10 years ago - in the
calendar week 49, 2015 - with first
week global sales of 5,706,000
(pure) sales. This week 'The Life Of
A Showgirl' tops the Global Album
Chart for a third week in a row with another
288,000 consumption units (down
60% compared to its previous
week with 209,000 points by
streaming + 79,000 points by
sales). With a total of 6,14 million
sales it's easily the most
successful set of the year 2025. So
it's the fourth time (!!) in a row
that Taylor Swift leads a Global
Album Year-End Chart. Back
to this week's hitlist: The
soundtrack to 'K-pop Demon Hunters'
remains at the runner-up slot with 138,000
comsumption units (down 3% with
107,000 points by streaming + 31,000
points by sales). Rounds out the top
three is 'Blue Valentine', the first
full-length album by South Korean
girl group Nmixx, which starts as
the highest debut of the week with
129,000 equivalent sales (almost all
points come from physical sales). 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 12,000 / 17,066,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 15,000 / 7,230,000, '21' by
Adele 13,000 / 34,098,000, '25' by
Adele 10,000 / 25,893,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 7,043,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 31,000 /
11,466,000, 'Borondo' by Beéle
42,000 / 1,117,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
31,000 /
4,151,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 12,000 / 2,416,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 11,000 / 2,229,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 22,000 / 22,414,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
44,000 / 4,808,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,887,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 29,000
/ 3,668,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor
Swift 35,000 / 12,573,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 15,000 / 1,788,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 /
9,940,000, 'GNX' by Kendrick Lamar
22,000 / 3,709,000, 'Guts' by Olivia
Rodrigo 23,000 / 5,297,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 5,119,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 32,000 /
2,348,000, 'I've Tried Everything
But Therapy' by Teddy Swims 36,000 /
3,748,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 20,000 /
2,589,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
42,000 / 2,352,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
22,000 / 1,567,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 24,000 /
13,025,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 23,000 /
2,522,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 25,000 / 9,944,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 13,000 / 6,953,000, 'Rosie' by
Rosé 16,000 / 2,190,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 23,000 / 1,562,000, 'So Close
To What' by Tate McRae 46,000 /
2,056,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 35,000 / 9,837,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 40,000
/ 5,569,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 23,000 / 10,403,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 30,000 / 4,392,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
33,000 / 3,559,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
41,000 / 11,240,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 12,000 / 5,728,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 16,000 /
13,105,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 60
YEARS AGO
... "Yesterday" is often interpreted as a melancholic ballad about
lost love. Paul McCartney later suggested that the lyric 'I said
something wrong' may have been inspired not by romance but by a childhood
memory of mocking his mother for sounding 'posh'. McCartney's vocal and
acoustic guitar, together with a string quartet, was essentially the
band's first solo performance. It remains popular today and is one of
the most covered songs in history of recorded music. The final recording
was so different from other works by the Beatles that the band members
vetoed the song's release as a single in United Kingdom. But in the rest
of the world is was a big smash, published on September 13, 1965, it
reached the no.1 position in the United States, the Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden,
Norway, and Finland, furthermore the runner-up slot in Australia and New Zealand.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
The superstar’s new album, The
Life of a Showgirl,
concurrently adds a third
week at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 chart,
following its
modern-era-record debut with
4.002 million equivalent
album
units two weeks earlier.
Thanks to the set and the
song, Swift makes more
history. Two weeks ago, she
logged the 17th instance of
an artist launching atop the
Billboard 200 and Hot 100
simultaneously. It marked
the record seventh time that
she earned the honor (which
she inaugurated in
August 2020 with Folklore and
“Cardigan”). In only two of
the first 16 such double
debuts, an album and song
tallied a second consecutive
week atop the charts — both
by Swift, via Midnights and
“Anti-Hero” in 2022 and The
Tortured Poets Department and
“Fortnight,” featuring Post
Malone, in 2024. Now, The
Life of a Showgirl and
“The Fate of Ophelia” make
for the first occurrence of
an artist debuting atop the
Billboard 200 and Hot 100
side-by-side and both titles
maintaining their respective
commands for their first
three weeks. “The Fate of
Ophelia,” Swift’s
13th
career Hot 100 No. 1, drew
33.6 million official
streams (down 31%) and 49.4
million radio
airplay
audience impressions (up
17%) and sold 6,000 (down
42%) in the United States
Oct. 17-23. The single
secures a third week at No.
1 on the Streaming Songs chart
and a second week atop
Digital Song Sales and
holds at its No. 5 high on
Radio Songs. Swift scores
four songs in the top 10 of
the latest Hot 100, all
from The
Life of a Showgirl,
following her eight top 10s a
week ago and all 10 songs in
the region the week before:
No. 1 this week, “The
Fate of Ophelia” (No. 1 last
week), No. 4, “Opalite” (No.
2 last week/peak), No. 5,
“Elizabeth Taylor” (No. 5
last week/No. 3 peak), No.
6, “Father Figure” (No. 6
last week / No. 4 peak). Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need”
surges 17-8 on the Hot 100
(besting its prior No. 12
peak). The song drew 14.3
million streams (up 1%) and
17 million in airplay
audience (up 36%) in the
tracking week.
Leon Thomas’ “Mutt” sprints
18-10 on the Hot 100 (after
reaching a previous No. 11
high), with 7 million
streams (up 2%) and 59.7
million in radio reach (up
1%).
Elsewhere in the Hot 100’s
top 10, Huntr/x’s “Golden,”
from Netflix’s KPop
Demon Hunters,
rises 3-2, following eight
weeks at No. 1 beginning in
August.
Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,”
which led the Hot 100 for 10
weeks starting in May,
pushes 4-3, while topping
Radio Songs for a 19th week,
up 1% to 79 million in
audience — a new weekly best
for the track.
Plus, Justin Bieber’s
“Daisies” jumps 15-7 on the
Hot 100, after hitting No.
2, and Morgan Wallen’s “I
Got Better” climbs 16-9,
after reaching No. 7. Taylor
Swift's
The Life of a Showgirl adds
a third week at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
(dated Nov. 1), with 194,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 43%) in the
United States in the week
ending Oct. 23, according to
Luminate.
The Life of a Showgirl is
only the second album in
2025 to spend its first
three weeks at No. 1,
following Morgan Wallen’s
I’m the Problem, which spent
its first eight weeks atop
the list (of its total 12 at
No. 1).
Of The Life of a Showgirl’s
194,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, SEA units
comprise 156,000 (down 34%,
equaling 200.68 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks — it
ranks at No. 1 on Top
Streaming Albums for a third
week), album sales comprise
38,000 (down 63% — it’s No.
1 on Top Album Sales for a
third week) and TEA units
comprise less than 1,000
(down 42%).
The chart-topping KPop Demon
Hunters soundtrack
holds at No. 2 on the latest
Billboard 200 (96,000
equivalent album units, down
8%) and Morgan Wallen’s
I’m the Problem is
stationary at No. 3 (83,000,
up 5%). Tame Impala’s
first full-length studio
album in five years,
Deadbeat, debuts at No. 4
with 70,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
pure album sales comprise
37,000 (it debuts at No. 2
on Top Album Sales), SEA
units comprise 33,000
(equaling 41.72 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
debuts at No. 7 on Top
Streaming Albums) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum.
Deadbeat is the third top
five (and top 10) project
for Tame Impala, following
2020’s The Show Rush (No. 3)
and 2015’s Currents (No. 4).
Sabrina Carpenter's’s
chart-topping Man’s Best
Friend is steady at No. 5 on
the latest Billboard 200
(43,000 equivalent album
units, down 5%) and Cardi
B's
former leader AM I THE
DRAMA? falls 4-6 (40,000,
down 21%). Olivia Dean’s
The Art of Loving is pushed
down 6-7, though it gains 1%
in its fourth week on the
chart (and fourth week
inside the top 10). SZA’s
former No. 1 SOS holds at
No. 8 (31,000 equivalent
album units, down 2%),
Morgan Wallen’s
chart-topping One Thing at a
Time rises 10-9 (30,000,
down 3%) and Alex Warren’s
You’ll Be Alright, Kid dips
9-10 (nearly 30,000, down
7%).
Record Of The Month
'Where Is My Husband?' is
the new smash by British
singer / songwriter
Rachel Agatha Keen, known
professionally as Raye.
The song was billed as the
lead single of her upcoming
second studio album.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Olivia Dean's 'Man I Need'
remains still at no.2
Monday, October 27, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
In a tightly packed Top 3,
Taylor Swift wins out again
with The Fate Of Ophelia
securing its third
consecutive week at the
summit, although with
consumption falling 24.73%
week-on-week to 67,888 units
(1,892 digital downloads,
65,996 sales-equivalent
streams). With parent album
The Life Of A Showgirl
No.1 throughout, Swift is the first
artist to spend three weeks at No.1 on both the singles and albums charts
simultaneously since Ed Sheeran in 2017; the first woman since Adele in 2011;
and the first American since Beyoncé ruled with Crazy In Love and Dangerously In
Love in 2003.
Swift continues to have three songs in the Top 10, with Opalite falling 4-5
(42,743 Sales) and Elizabeth Taylor 6-7 (31,244 sales). The other nine songs on
The Life Of A Showgirl remain ‘starred-out’ between positions eight and 17.
Their consumption falling at a lower rate than The Fate Of Ophelia, former No.1s
Man I Need (2-2, 63,197 sales) by Olivia Dean and Golden (3-3, 62,687 sales) by
Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon Hunters Cast effectively draw
closer. The latter act simultaneously register their second Top 10 hit with How
It’s Done (12-9, 22,718 sales) and their third hit in all with What It Sounds
Like, which debuts at No.13 (19,734 sales).
Thus filling
all three chart slots available to tracks from the Kpop Demon
Hunters soundtrack album under primary artist rules, they are fortunate that
many of the others – including Your Idol – which was No.10 last week for Saja
Boys, Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo, samUIL Lee & Kpop Demon
Hunters Cast – are hampered by ACR. On a level playing field, where ACR and
track limits don’t exist, How It’s Done and What It Sounds Like are the fourth
and fifth most popular tracks from the album, and 17th and 22nd in overall track
popularity for the week. Despite debuting, What It Sounds Like’s consumption is
at an 11-week low.
Sam Fender won the Mercury Prize last week for latest album People Watching,
resulting in a resurgence for the album itself – which jumps 75-17 – and also
its constituent tracks. Although not on the album at the moment, his Olivia Dean
collaboration Rein Me In starts its fifth run in the Top 10 since July,
rebounding 13-10 (21,817 sales). It will appear on the deluxe edition of People
Watching, which drops on December 5, and is joined in the chart by another song
from that edition - Elton John duet, Talk To You, which debuts at No.20 (12,887
sales) becoming Fender’s 16th hit, John’s 94th – as well as the title track,
which exits ACR, and returns at No.28 (11,030 sales).
There is also a new peak for Olivia Dean’s So Easy (To Fall In Love) (8-6,
31,577 sales). With the aforementioned Man I Need At No.2, Sam Fender duet Rein
Me In at No.10 and Nice To Each Other easing 7-8 (30,342 sales), Dean has four
songs in the Top 10 – but Man I Need and Nice To Each Other both hit ACR next
week.
Completing the Top 10, Where Is My Husband! climbs for the third week in a row
(5-4, 45,013 sales) but remains below its No.3 peak for Raye.
Overall singles consumption is down 1.85% week-on-week to 30,465,054 units,
2.81% above same week 2024 consumption of 29,633,331 units. Paid-for sales are
down 1.71% week-on-week at 250,017, 11.39% below same week 2024 sales of
282,168.
Trailing by diminishing quantities on sales flashes for most of the
week, The Life Of A Showgirl (TLOAS) ultimately emerged triumphant to
post its third consecutive week at No.1 on consumption of 32,532 units
(5,564 CDs, 1,259 vinyl albums, 21 cassettes, 583 digital downloads and
25,105 sales-equivalent streams).
It is the first album to spend its first three weeks at No.1 since The
Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce) by Eminem in 2024, and the first by
a woman since Swift’s own 1989 (Taylor’s Version) in 2023. Her last
album, The Tortured Poets Department was No.1 for two weeks in its
introductory phase in 2024, but ultimately spent 11 weeks at No.1,
including one run of four weeks in a row.
Swift has now spent 35 weeks at No.1, 31 of them in the 2020s, while
TLOAS is the first album to achieve consumption in excess of 500,000
units this year, with a 21-day tally of 503,336 units.
Swift’s late swoop is bad news for all-female London-based pop/rock
quintet The Last Dinner Party, whose critically-acclaimed second album,
From The Pyre, had previously led the way. Opening at No.2 (26,840
sales) in the final analysis, it is the follow-up to their debut set,
Prelude To Ecstasy, which opened atop the chart on consumption of 32,846
units, in February 2024, a tally that was helped by their coronation as
winners of the BBC’s prestigious annual Sound Of… poll the previous
month, and the fact their single Nothing Matters – still their only hit
– was in the Top 20 at the time.
Tame Impala’s first album in more than five years, fifth studio effort
Deadbeat delivers the act’s fourth Top 20 and third consecutive Top 10
entry, debuting at No.4 (14,917 sales). Home to Dracula, which became
Tame Impala’s first ever Top 40 single last week, and My Old Ways, which
follows it this week, it surprisingly falls short of the No.3 debut, on
consumption of 16,489 copies of the act’s last album, The Slow Rush, in
2020.
A psych-rock act whose only permanent member is 39-year-old Australian
Kevin Parker, Tame Impala’s most successful album is 2015 third set,
Currents, which has to-date consumption of 424,733 units, and is also
home to his/their most popular song, the uncharted The Less I Know, The
Better, which went triple platinum earlier this year and has to-date
consumption of 1,905,643 units.
It is the second most-consumed track of the 21st century not to make the
extended (previously Top 200, currently Top 100) chart, with only You
Make My Dreams by Daryl Hall & John Oates (2,135,438 units) ahead of it.
A No.5 hit in America in 1981, You Make My Dreams subsequently featured
in many films but it was not until adopted by McDonald’s as a commercial
soundbed in 2017 that it started to become very popular in the UK,
eventually emerging as a staple of ‘gold’ radio stations. The Less I
Know The Better is easily the most-consumed uncharted song from the
current century.
The rest of the Top 10: The Art Of Loving (2-3, 17,591 sales) by Olivia
Dean, Man’s Best Friend (4-5, 10,920 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter, The
Highlights (5-6, 8,177 sales) by The Weeknd, +-=÷× Tour Collection (6-7,
7,476 sales) by Ed Sheeran, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (7-8, 7,337 sales) by
Fleetwood Mac, You’ll Be Alright Kid (9-9, 6,684 sales) by Alex Warren
and Times Flies 1994-2009 (8-10, 6,423 sales) by Oasis.
Overall album sales are up 0.21% week-on-week at 2,579,239 units, 4.89%
above same week 2024 sales of 2,459,043. Physical product accounts for
331,197 sales, 12.84% of the total.