Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
Taylor Swift's
tenth number one
Sunday, June 14, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Taylor Swift's 'I
Knew It, I Knew You', lead single
from the soundtrack to Walt Disney's
animated film Toy Story 5, sprints
straight ahead to the summit of the
Global Track Chart with 261,000
points. Swift wrote and produced the
song with Jack Antonoff after
viewing an early screening of the
film, taking inspiration from the
story of the character Jessie in the
Toy Story franchise. Broken down by
sectors 'I Knew It, I Knew You' gets
151,000 points by streaming, 76,000
points by sales, and 34,000 points
by airplay. It's Taylor Swift's 10th
global number one smash, first was
'We Are Never Ever Getting Back
Together', which was four weeks at
the pole position in September 2012.
And it's her 44th global Top 10 hit,
so she's currently the act with the
second most Top 10 songs in history,
at no.3 Elvis Presley and AKB 48,
each with 43 hits and at no.1
Madonna with 47 hits. Last week's
number one, 'Hate That I Made You
Love Me', lead single from Ariana
Grande's upcoming
eighth studio album
'Petal' (it's set to be released on
July 31), sails to the runner-up
slot with 248,000 points (down 11%
with 189,000 points by streaming,
41,000 points by sales, and 18,000
points by airplay). 'Dracula'
by Australian psychedelic music
project Tame Impala rounds out this
week's
top three for a fourth time with 207,000 points (down
1,5% with 143,000 points by
streaming, 10,000 points by sales,
and 54,000 points by airplay).
Outside our Top 40
waiting among other 'Mr.Brightside'
by the Killers at no.52, 'Jamaican
(Bam Bam)' by Hugel & Solto at
no.57, and
'Rein Me In' by Sam Fender & Olivia
Dean at no.59 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. South Korean boy group
Treasure occupies this week's first
place of the Global Album Chart with
their fifth extended play 'New Wav'
and 147,000 equivalent sales (almost
all of it are physical sales). The
band's former release, 'Love Pulse',
started and peaked at no.3 in the
calendar week 38, 2025, with 282,000
sales. Drake's 'Iceman' holds tight
at no.2 with 127,000 comsumption
units (124,000 points by streaming +
3,000 points by sales). After four
weeks on the hitlist the set
generated a total of 930,000 sales.
Former One Direction member Niall
Horan rounds out the current top
three with his fourth studio album
'Dinner Party' and 108,000
equivalent sales (9,000 points by
streaming + 99,000 points by 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
17,000 / 17,516,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
7,596,000, '21' by Adele 14,000 /
34,479,000, '25' by Adele 9,000 /
26,188,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,299,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 24,000 / 12,255,000,
'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,518,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 19,000 / 22,973,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
21,000 / 5,743,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 8,000 / 7,160,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 14,000 / 4,282,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 18,000 / 13,309,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
17,000 / 10,437,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 12,000 / 4,301,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 26,000 /
5,975,000, 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' by
Billie Eilish 49,000 / 8,318,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 17,000 / 2,999,000, 'I
Barely Know Her' by Sombr 40,000 /
2,240,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 20,000 / 4,521,000, the
soundtrack to 'K-pop Demon Hunters'
47,000 / 4,818,000,
'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
22,000 / 3,354,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 13,000 / 13,522,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 32,000 / 10,723,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,242,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 43,000 /
7,478,000, 'So Close To What' by
Tate McRae 30,000 / 3,626,000,
'Sour' by Olivia Rodrigo 38,000 /
13,988,000, 'SOS' by SZA 50,000 / 14,041,000,
'Starboy' by The Weeknd 28,000 /
10,775,000, 'Stick Season' by Noah
Kahan 35,000 / 6,790,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 16,000 / 11,068,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 16,000 /
5,089,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 18,000 / 4,328,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 29,000 / 12,264,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 23,000 /
1,688,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 14,000 / 13,541,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 50
YEARS AGO
... Originally
"Fernando" was written for group member Anni-Frid Lyngstad and was
included on her 1975 album Frida Ensam. The following year, the song was
re-recorded by Abba. The new version, with completely different lyrics
by Björn Ulvaeus, presents a vision of nostalgia for two veterans
reminiscing in old age about a long-ago battle in which they
participated. "Fernando" climbed atop the hitlists in United Kingdom,
Germany, Australia, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland,
Portugal, and Ireland. On the Countdown Chart 1976 "Fernando" ranked at
no.2 with a total of 7,517,000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Drake's 'Iceman' remains a
fourth week at no.1
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Drake's
Iceman chills for a fourth
week at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
(dated June 20), earning
133,000 equivalent album
units in the United States
in the week ending June 11
(down 22%), according to
Luminate. Iceman is the
first album to spend its
first four weeks at No. 1
since Taylor Swift’s The
Life of a Showgirl spend its
first seven weeks atop the
list (Oct. 18-Nov. 29,
2025-dated charts) of its
total 12 weeks at No. 1.
Before Iceman, the last
R&B/hip-hop album to spend
its first four weeks at No.
1 was Travis Scott’s Utopia,
which also logged its first
four weeks (of four total)
at No. 1 (Aug. 12-Sept. 2,
2023). Of Drake’s 15 No. 1
albums, only three have
spent more weeks at No. 1
than Iceman. The Drake album
with the most weeks at No. 1
is Views, with 13 weeks in
2016, while Scorpion (2018)
and Certified Lover Boy
(2021) each had five weeks
at No. 1. Of Iceman’s
133,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, SEA units
comprise 132,000 (down 22%,
equaling 135.82 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
spends a fourth week at No.
1 on Top Streaming Albums),
album sales comprise nearly
500
(down 43%) and TEA units
comprise the remainder (down
27%). A trio of former No.
1s follows ICEMAN, and all
are non-movers: Ella
Langley’s Dandelion (87,000
equivalent album units, down
7%); Morgan Wallen’s I’m the
Problem (79,000, down 4%);
and Noah Kahan’s The Great
Divide (a little more than
67,000, down 14%) are Nos.
2-4, respectively.
Singer-songwriter Malcolm
Todd
lands his third chart entry,
and first top 10, as Do That
Again debuts at No. 5 with
67,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
SEA units comprise 37,000
(equaling 39.49 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it
debuts at No. 8 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 30,000 (it
debuts at No. 2 on Top Album
Sales) and TEA units
comprise the rest. Michael
Jackson’s chart-topping
Thriller is stationary at
No. 6 on the latest
Billboard 200 with a little
more than 55,000 equivalent
album units earned (down
10%). Niall Horan scores his
fourth top 10-charted album
on the Billboard 200 as
Dinner Party begins at No. 7
with 55,000 equivalent album
units. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 48,000 (it
debuts at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
7,000 (equaling 6.97 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise the
remainder. The album’s
first-week sales were aided
by its availability across
more than 15 physical
variants on vinyl, CD and
cassette, including multiple
signed editions. Horan
previously visited the top
10 of the Billboard 200 with
The Show (No. 2 in 2023),
Heartbreak Weather (No. 4,
2020) and Flicker (No. 1,
2017). Horan is also the
fourth member of One
Direction to chart a new
album in 2026, following
Zayn (Konnakol, No. 18 in
May), Harry Styles (Kiss All
the Time. Disco,
Occasionally., No. 1 in
March) and Louis Tomlinson
(How Did I Get Here?, No. 16
in February). Rounding out
the Top 10 on the latest
Billboard 200: Michael
Jackson’s Number Ones falls
7-8 (51,000 equivalent album
units, down 10%), Morgan
Wallen’s former leader One
Thing at a Time dips 8-9
(40,000, down 3%), Olivia
Dean’s The Art of Loving
climbs 14-10 (35,000, down
2%). Taylor Swift's
“I Knew It, I Knew You”
gallops in at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The
single from Toy
Story 5,
inspired by the film’s
cowgirl heroine Jessie, is
Swift’s 15th career leader.
Among highlights of the
song’s instant coronation,
Swift breaks out of a tie
with Drake and Rihanna to
claim sole possession of the
third-most No. 1s in the Hot
100’s history, after only
The Beatles (20) and Mariah
Carey (19). “I Knew It, I
Knew You,” on Pixar/Walt
Disney/Republic Records,
with country radio promotion
by MCA Nashville, opens with
27.2 million official
streams, 46.7 million radio
airplay audience impressions
and 87,000 sold in the U.S.
from its June 5
release through June 11. The
track debuts as Swift’s 11th
No. 1 on the Streaming
Songs chart; at No. 7 on
Radio Songs; and as her
record-extending 32nd No. 1
on Digital Song Sales, with
70,000 of its overall sales
from downloads. It also sold
17,000 via three CD single
options: its original,
acoustic and piano versions
that shipped to customers
during the tracking week. “I
Knew It, I Knew You,” the
1,194th No. 1 in the Hot
100’s history, and the 93rd
single to debut at the
summit, follows Swift’s
triumph with “Opalite” in
February, she’s the first
artist with two new No. 1s
this year.
Toy Story 5 premieres
wide in theaters June 19,
following its June 9
Hollywood preview, at which
Swift gave “I Knew It, I
Knew You” its first live
performance. Ella Langley
claims three songs in the
Hot 100’s top 10, all of
which hold in place:
“Choosin’ Texas,” at No. 2
following 10 weeks at No. 1
beginning in February; “Be
Her,” at No. 4 after
reaching No. 2; and “I Can’t
Love You Anymore,” with
Morgan Wallen, at No. 9,
after it debuted at its No.
7 high. Drake’s “Janice
STFU” remains at No. 3 after
spending its first two weeks
on the Hot 100 at No. 1
beginning late last month.
Grande’s “Hate That I Made
You Love Me” falls to No. 5
a week after it debuted at
No. 1 on the Hot 100. Bruno
Mars’ “I Just Might” slips
5-6 on the Hot 100 after
three weeks at No. 1 between
January and March. It tops
Radio Songs for a 17th week
(69 million, down 2%).
Olivia Dean charts two songs
in the Hot 100’s top 10:
“Man I Need” (6-7, after
peaking at No. 2) and “So
Easy (To Fall in Love)”
(7-8, after reaching No. 5).
Elsewhere in the Hot 100’s
top 10, Tame Impala and
Jennie’s “Dracula” keeps at
its No. 10 best.
Record Of The Month
'Dai Dai' by Colombian
superstar Shakira and
Nigerian singer Burna Boy
is the official song for the
2026 FIFA World Cup in North
America.
Legends of football were
mentioned during the song,
such as Pelé, Diego
Maradona,
Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel
Messi, and Mohamed Salah.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Rein Me In' remains at
no.2
Monday, June 15, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
Tay story: Taylor Swift
swoops to score the seventh
No.1 single of her career,
and second of the year with
I Knew It, I Knew You. Taken
from the upcoming Toy Story
5 soundtrack, the track
racks up first week
consumption of 52,434 units
(5,084 CDs, 4,372 digital
downloads and 42,978 sales-equivalent
streams), and follows earlier Swift chart-toppers Look What You
Made Me Do (2017), Anti-Hero (2022), Is It Over Now? (Taylor’s Version) (2023),
Fortnight (feat. Post Malone, 2024), The Fate Of Ophelia (2025) and Opalite,
No.1 just 17 weeks ago.
A return to her roots, it is her first No.1 with a song which could be described
as country, and the first in the genre by any artist since February 2024, when
Texas Hold ‘Em topped the chart for Beyoncé.
Swift co-wrote all of her No.1s, five of them with producer Jack Antonoff,
including IKIIKY. It is the sixth of her No.1s to debut at the summit – only
Opalite didn’t. Discounting the Post Malone collaboration, that means she has
had five solo songs debut at No.1, equalling the record for a female artist set
by Madonna in 2006 and equalled last week by Ariana Grande, whose Hate That I
Made You Love Me now slips 1-3 (36,301 sales). All of Swift’s No.1s except the
first have occurred in the 2020s, putting her
equal with Ed
Sheeran
as the
artist with most No.1s so far this decade.
Number two for the second week in a row, and fourth time in total on consumption
of 42,116 units, Rein Me In glides into triple platinum territory (1,823,708
sales) for Sam Fender & Olivia Dean. Its consumption was down 7.33% week-on-week
to its lowest level for 17 weeks, and if its streaming performance is both
negative and worse than the market next week it will finally pass into ACR,
which would definitely stop it from adding to the 13 weeks it has spent at No.1
and likely bring down the curtain on its Top 10 residency.
For the record, it has now spent a total of 34 weeks in the Top 10 and 51
consecutive weeks in the Top 40. There is food for thought in the fact that
although no song has spent longer at No.1 or in the Top 40 in the 2020s, 180
songs have achieved consumption of 1.8m units in the survey period ahead of it,
thanks to the accumulative nature of streaming points over a longer period of
time, with records like The Night We Met, a 2015 song that peaked at No.75 in
2023 for Los Angeles indie group Lord Huron; No Role Modelz, an uncharted J Cole
track; and The Neighbourhood’s Sweater Weather – No.49 in 2014 but uncharted
since – above it in the rankings.
The rest of this week’s Top 10: The Cure (3-4, 31,040 sales) by Olivia Rodrigo,
Billie Jean (5-5, 30,374 sales), Janice STFU (4-6, 27,048 sales) by Drake,
Dracula (6-7, 25,551 sales) by Tame Impala, Beat It (9-8, 24,733 sales) by
Michael Jackson, Midnight Sun (8-9, 24,391 sales) by Zara Larsson and Go (7-10,
24,018 sales) by The Chemical Brothers.
Overall singles consumption is down 0.40% week-on-week to 31,531,973 units,
1.79% above same week 2025 sales of 30,976,584 units. Paid-for sales are down
1.17% week-on-week at 278,165, 3.52% below same week 2025 sales of 288,317.
Eleven weeks after the title track peaked at No.72
on the singles chart, Niall Horan’s album, Dinner Party, earns the
32-year-old Irishman from Mullingar his third No.1 long-player, debuting
in pole position on consumption of 28,121 units (11,549 CDs, 8,620 vinyl
albums, 5,464 cassettes, 431 digital downloads and 2,057
sales-equivalent streams).
Horan co-wrote all 12 songs on the 36-minute
album, his fourth solo release, following Flicker (No.3, 2017),
Heartbreak Weather (No.1, 2020) and The Show (No.1, 2023). It secures
the biggest first week tally of Horan’s solo career, surpassing the
26,937 units achieved by The Show on debut three years ago this week.
Despite its fast start, The Show has lower overall consumption than
prior Horan albums, with a to-date tally of 90,148 units, compared to
Heartbreak Weather’s 175,445 and Flicker’s 237,569.
Rising to fame on The X Factor as a member of One
Direction when just 17, Horan had four No.1 albums as part of the boy
band, all of whose surviving members – following the 2024 death of Liam
Payne - have already issued a new album this year, and the second –
matching Styles – to have three solo No.1s.
Dinner Party’s coronation follows How Did We Get
Here?, No.1 in January for Louis Tomlinson on marginally higher first
week consumption of 28,416 units; Kiss All the Time: Disco,
Occasionally, No.1 in March for Harry Styles on first week consumption
of 183,045 units (the most of any album this year); and Konnakol, No.4
in April for Zayn (Malik) on first week consumption of 12,475 units.
Styles’ album is No.2 for the year (312,523 sales), Tomlinson’s is
No.125 (40,811 sales) and Malik’s is No.438 (17,048 sales).
Together since 2019, Birmingham indie/rock quartet
Overpass have been generating rave reviews for some time, so it is no
surprise to find their full-length debut album, Elsewhere Always making
a significant first impression on the chart. Debuting at No.5 (10,060
sales), it’s an incendiary 10-song introduction to the band – singer and
guitarist Max (Newbold (23), bassist India, Armstrong (23), guitarist
Elliot Rawlings (23) and drummer Jake Bishop (24) - all of whom co-wrote
every song on the album.
Veteran actor Jeff Goldblum’s late blossoming
career as a jazz/MOR pianist fronting the fictitious Mildred Snitzer
Orchestra continues to flower, with fourth set, Night Blooms debuting at
No.9 (7,486 sales) to become the 73-year-old's highest charting set. His
first album, The Capitol Studios Sessions, peaked at No.26 in 2018; his
second, I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This, reached No.20 in 2019, and his
third, Still Blooming, reached No.10 last year. As well as new
collaborations with Melody Gardot, Charlie Puth, Cynthia Erivo and
Dodie, Night Blooms includes ‘late night session’ versions of some
tracks from Still Blooming, and consists entirely of covers. None of
Goldblum’s albums have made the Top 200 in his native America, though
the first three, and probably Night Blooms too, have made the top five
of the jazz album chart there.
Just 13 when she and Ben Moody formed the band in
1994 in Arkansas, Amy Lee is still the lead vocalist, lead songwriter
and keyboards player for Evanescence, whose sixth studio album,
Sanctuary, debuts at No.10 (7,334 sales), becoming their fifth Top 10
album.
The rest of the Top 10: The Essential (2-2, 24,279
sales) by Michael Jackson, Iceman (4-3, 10,964 sales) by Drake, The Art
Of Loving (5-4, 10,206 sales) by Olivia Dean, Thriller (6-6, 8,687
sales) by Michael Jackson, The Great Divide (7-7, 8,074 sales) by Noah
Kahan and 50 Years: Don’t Stop (9-8, 7,591 sales) by Fleetwood Mac.
Overall album sales are down 1.52% week-on-week to 2,507,678 units,
0.99% below same week 2025 sales of 2,532,715. Physical product accounts
for 291,042 sales, 11.61% of the total.