Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
Shakira remains
at the top
Sunday, July 5, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Shakira's 'Dai Dai', the
official song for the 2026 FIFA
World Cup in North America, defends
the summit of the Global Track Chart
for a second week with 261,000
points, a 16% increase compared to
the previous week. Broken down by
sectors 'Dai Dai' gets 196,000
points by streaming (up 10%), 20,000
points by sales (up 16%), and 45,000
points by airplay (up 59%). It's
Shakira's
first no.1 smash after 20 years (!!)
and her third overall, after
'Whenever Wherever' ruled the chart
10 weeks between the calendar weeks
10 and 21, 2002, and 'Hips Don't
Lie' topped the hitlist for 16
weeks, between the weeks 21 and 36,
2006
Shakira's former FIFA World Cup song
'Waka Waka' from 2010, peaked in
July of that year at no.6 and with a
maximum of 229,000 weekly points. Ariana Grande's 'Hate That I
Made You Love Me' holds tight at the
runner-up slot with
206,000 points (down 0,5% with
140,000 points by streaming, 30,000
points by sales,
and 36,000 points
by airplay). Rounds out
this week's top three is 'Dracula'
by Australian music project Tame
Impala. The song holds tight at no.3
with 195,000 points (down 5% with 126,000 points
by streaming, 8,000 points by
sales, and 61,000 points by
airplay). Outside our Top 40
waiting among other 'Jamaican (Bam
Bam)' by Hugel & Solto at no.44,
'Mr.Brightside' by the Killers at
no.49, and 'Be Her' by
Ella Langley at no.58 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. Olivia Rodrigo's third
studio album 'You Seem Pretty Sad
For A Girl So In Love' rockets
straight ahead of the Global Album
Chart with 604,000 equvialent sales
this week (206,000 points by
streaming + 398,000 points by
sales). Olivia's former album 'Guts'
started at no.3 globally with
492,000 sales in the calendar week
38, 2023 and the debut set 'Sour'
bowed in the week 22, 2021 with
411,000 sales - it returns this week
at no.18 with 45,000 units, a total
of 14,15 million so far. Second and
final debut of the week comes from
South Korean group BoyNextDoor,
their first studio effort 'Home'
jumps to the runner-up slot with
236,000 equivalent sales (most of it
are physical sales). BTS' latest set
'Arirang' returns to the top three
with another 108,000 comsumption
units (up 6% with 71,000 points by
streaming + 37,000 points by sales).
With a total of 4,2 million units
it's far and away the best selling
album of the current year. 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 / 17,580,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
7,636,000, '21' by Adele 13,000 /
34,534,000, '25' by Adele 9,000 /
26,224,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,331,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 25,000 / 12,346,000,
'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,554,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 18,000 / 23,045,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
51,000 / 5,879,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 8,000 / 7,192,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 15,000 / 4,339,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 18,000 / 13,378,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
18,000 / 10,503,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 11,000 / 4,345,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 37,000 /
6,098,000, 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' by
Billie Eilish 46,000 / 8,496,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 17,000 / 3,064,000, 'I
Barely Know Her' by Sombr 40,000 /
2,406,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 18,000 / 4,596,000, the
soundtrack to 'K-pop Demon Hunters'
41,000 / 4,993,000, 'Man's Best
Friend' by Sabrina Carpenter 44,000
/ 3,415,000,
'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
21,000 / 3,435,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 13,000 / 13,574,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 31,000 / 10,850,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,278,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 40,000 /
7,642,000, 'So Close To What' by
Tate McRae 24,000 / 3,731,000,
'SOS' by SZA 41,000 / 14,212,000, 'Sour' by Olivia Rodrigo
45,000 /
14,150,000,
'Starboy' by The Weeknd 31,000 /
10,884,000, 'Stick Season' by Noah
Kahan 37,000 / 6,926,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 15,000 / 11,128,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 17,000 /
5,154,000, 'The Romantic' by Bruno
Mars 39,000 / 1,256,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 19,000 / 4,398,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 24,000 / 12,369,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 22,000 /
1,779,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 13,000 / 13,592,000.
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)
'Choosin' Texas' tallies 12th week at No. 1
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Ella Langley's “Choosin’ Texas” holds for a 12th week at No. 1 on
the Billboard Hot 100. The
song’s latest history: The
hit, which first led the Hot
100 in February, joins an
elite 25 others
over the chart's archives,
which dates to August 1958,
that have reigned for a
dozen weeks or more. Among
songs by women with no
male-billed acts, it’s one
of just five, and the only
one by an act known for
primarily recording country
music. “Choosin’ Texas,” on
Sawgod / Columbia Records,
with Triple Tigers having
promoted it to country
radio, totaled 25.8 million
official streams (up 1% week
over week), 49.7 million
radio airplay audience
impressions (up 3%) and
9,000 sold (up 6%) in the
United States June 26-July
2. The single holds for a
13th week at No. 1 on the
Streaming Songs chart;
keeps at No. 6 after
reaching No. 4 on Radio
Songs; and continues for an
11th week at No. 1 on
Digital Song Sales. Bruno
Mars’ “I Just Might,” which
debuted at No. 1 on the Hot
100 in January and led for
three weeks through March,
rebounds 12-10. It tops
Radio Songs for a 20th week
(64.3 million, essentially
even) — becoming just the
fourth title to reach that
benchmark
since the chart began in
December 1990. Taylor
Swift’s “I Knew It, I Knew
You” has and holds the No. 2
spot on the Hot 100, after
spending its first two weeks
on the chart at No. 1 in
June. Langley claims two
more songs in the Hot 100’s
top 10: “Be Her” is steady
at No. 3 after reaching No.
2 and “I Can’t Love You
Anymore,” with Morgan
Wallen, jumps 9-6 for a new
high. She adds her sixth
week with three simultaneous
top 10s this year — one more
than all other acts
combined. (In that span, Bad
Bunny and Drake each have
two weeks with three or more
concurrent top 10s and
Olivia Rodrigo has one.)
Drake’s “Janice STFU” climbs
6-4 after spending its first
two weeks on the Hot 100 at
No. 1 beginning in late May.
Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need”
pushes 8-5 on the Hot 100
after reaching No. 2. Ariana
Grande’s “Hate That I Made
You Love Me” keeps at No. 7
after it led the Hot 100 in
its debut week in May. Tame
Impala and Jennie’s
“Dracula” rises 10-8 for a
new Hot 100 high. Plus,
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drop Dead”
is down 5-9 after it topped
the Hot 100 in its first
week in early May. Ateez
captures its third No. 1 on
the Billboard 200 albums
chart as Golden Hour: Part.5
arrives atop the tally
(dated July 11). The group
previously hit No. 1 with
Golden Hour: Part.2 in 2024
and The Wolrd EP.Fin : Will
in 2023. Dating to its first
in 2022, the group has
racked up nine top 10 albums
on the Billboard 200 and
stands as the group with the
most top 10s in the 2020s.
The new set launches with
228,000 equivalent album
units earned in the United
States in the week ending
July 3, largely driven by
pure album sales (223,000).
Both figures represent
career-highs for the act. Of
Gölden Hour: Part.5’s
228,000 first-week
equivalent album units,
album sales comprise 223,000
(it debuts at No. 1 on the
Top Album Sales chart), SEA
units comprise 5,000
(equaling 4.96 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. The set is the lone
debut in the top 10 on the
Billboard 200. Olivia
Rodrigo's you seem pretty
sad for a girl so in love
falls to No. 2 after two
weeks in the lead, earning
127,000 equivalent album
units in its third chart
week (down 29%). Five fellow
former No. 1s are next on
the list. Ella Langley’s
Dandelion is a non-mover at
No. 3 (82,000 equivalent
album units, down 3%),
Drake’s Iceman dips 2-4
(80,000, down 11%), Morgan
Wallen’s I’m the Problem
falls 4-5 (79,000, down less
than 1%), Noah Kahan’s The
Great Divide is down 5-6
(64,000, down 4%) and
Michael Jackson’s Thriller
descends 6-7 (48,000, down
10%). His Number Ones falls
7-8 (43,000, down 9%).
Morgan Wallen’s
chart-topping One Thing at a
Time is down 8-9 with 40,000
equivalent album units
earned (up 1%), while Olivia
Dean’s The Art of Loving
rounds out the top 10,
falling 9-10 with 34,000
(down 1%).
Record Of The Month
While on his international
headline tour for his fourth
album,
Oliver Tree and five other
people died in a helicopter
crash in Rio De Janeiro,
Brazil.
Now, some of his songs are
experiencing a resurgence on
the charts, most notably
'Life Goes On'.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Rein In Me' is a 15th time
at the
summit
Monday, July 6, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
When Sam Fender wrote Rein
Me In in 2021, he didn’t
think it had the potential
to be a single. When a duet
between Fender and Olivia
Dean was mooted, his label
submitted a different song
off his People Watching
album for her consideration.
Fender insisted they allow
her to choose from all of
the tracks.
And, of course, she chose Rein Me In, making
some changes, and earning a co-writer’s credit along the way.
So here we are, with Rein Me In at No.1 for the second week in a row,
and 15th time in total in a chart run for the ages.
In the Top 10 for the 37th time in total – a mark surpassed by only
Christmas accumulators All I Want For Christmas Is You and Fairytale Of
New York – and the 27th week in a row, a total surpassed only by Frankie
Laine’s 35-week-run with I Believe, it is one of the biggest hits of
all-time
Remaining in the Top 40 for the 54th week in a row – equalling the
all-time record set by Ed Sheeran’s Thinking Out Loud in 2014/2015 – is
has shown remarkable resilience, although its consumption does dip 4.03%
week-on-week to 41,708 units (seven 7-inch singles, 361 digital
downloads and 41,340 sales-equivalent streams). That is its lowest level
for 20 weeks, the lowest of any of its weeks at No.1, and the lowest for
any No.1 since Daisies was
top on consumption of 40,643 units for Justin
Bieber 49 weeks ago.
Rein Me In moves into joint fourth place for most weeks at No.1 in chart
history, alongside Love Is All Around by Wet Wet Wet and One Dance by
Drake feat. Wizkid & Kyla, with only I Believe (18 weeks) by Frankie
Laine and (Everything I Do) I Do It For You (17 weeks) by Bryan Adams
ahead of it. Laine was American, Adams is Canadian, meaning that Rein Me
In shares with the Wet Wet Wet title the honour of being the
longest-running No.1 by a British act.
The fact that Rein Me In has constantly flirted with ACR but always
managed to avoid it (thus far) gives it the appearance of being a bigger
record than Dean’s solo cut Man I Need and Alex Warren’s Ordinary. In
reality, although an early ACR victim that has spent only one week at
No.1 on the main chart, Man I Need has racked up 13 weeks at No.1 on the
Top 200 Combined Tracks chart, returning to the summit last week, but
dipping back to No.2 this week with unadjusted consumption of 41,351
units (357 fewer than Rein Me In), compared to the 20,853 it has under
ACR, which mean it remains at No.11 on the main chart. By the same
token, although Ordinary spent 13 weeks on the main chart, it topped the
Top 200 Combined Tracks chart 18 times. Meanwhile, although Rein Me In
has spent 15 weeks atop the main chart, it has spent only 11 at No.1 on
the Top 200 Combined Tracks list. The to-date consumption of the three
tracks: Ordinary – 3,039,795, Man I Need – 2,485,223 and Rein Me In –
1,951,310.
Despite its own falling consumption, Rein Me In has a considerable lead
at the top of the chart, in an unchanged top three, where Stupid Song
remains at No.2 (27,400 sales) with Michael Jackson’s 1983 chart-topper
Billie Jean static at No.3 (26,564 sales). Stupid Song has the lowest
consumption for a No.2 since Ed Sheeran’s Afterglow tallied 25,725 units
five and a half years (286 weeks) ago.
Having switched directions eight times in a 14-week chart residency,
Free Your Mind (12-10, 21,622 sales) finally makes the Top 10 for Leeds
electronic artists and DJs Prospa (28-year-old Harvey Blumler and
29-year-old Guiorgi Smith) and UK-born, Us-based Cloonee (29-year-old
Dave Bissett).
Harry Styles’ resurgent former No.1 American Girls is the most obvious
beneficiary of his Wembley Arena residency, jumping 8-4 (26,296 sales),
to achieve its highest position for 13 weeks.
The rest of the Top 10: Hate That I Made You Love Me (6-5, 26,205 sales)
by Ariana Grande, The Cure (4-6, 25,734 sales) by Olivia Rodrigo, I Knew
It, I Knew You (7-7, 24,660 sales) by Taylor Swift, Drop Dead (5-8,
24,319 sales) by Olivia Rodrigo and Choosin’ Texas (9-9, 24,284 sales)
by Ella Langley.
Overall singles consumption is down 2.64% week-on-week to 30,736,888
units, their lowest level for 24 weeks, and 0.28% below same week 2025
sales of 30,823,160 units. Paid-for sales are up 9.44% week-on-week at
275,873, 20.24% below same week 2025 sales of 345,874.
Muse become the first group and second act in chart history to debut at
No.1 with eight consecutive albums this week, with their 10th studio
set, The Wow! Signal opening atop the list on consumption of 34,933
units (14,848 CDs, 15,256 vinyl albums, 563 cassettes, 1,756 digital
downloads and 2,510 sales-equivalent streams).
Although it is well clear of the rest of the field – its nearest
challenger is former incumbent You Seem Pretty Sad For A Girl So In
Love, which dips to No.2 on consumption of 22,072 units, after a
fortnight at the summit for Olivia Rodrigo – it is their lowest first
week tally since their first album, Showbiz, which ultimately peaked at
No.29, debuted at No.69 on consumption of 2,901 units in 1999.
Their subsequent studio albums, first week tallies, and year of release:
Origin Of Symmetry (45,652 sales, 2001), Absolution (71,597 sales,
2003), Black Holes & Revelations (115,144 sales, 2006), The Resistance
(148,161 sales, 2009), The 2nd Law (108,536 sales, 2012), Drones (72,863
sales, 2015), Simulation Theory (44,320 sales, 2018) and Will Of The
People (51,510 sales, 2022). All debuted at No.1, except Origin Of
Symmetry, which debuted and peaked at No.3.
The band has also charted with compilation Hullabaloo, which debuted and
peaked at No.10, with first week sales of 16,384 in 2002; live album,
HAARP, which opened and peaked at No.2, on sales of 45,276 copies in
2008; Live At Rome Olympic Stadium, which attracted 10,509 sales to open
at No.36 in 2013; and Origin Of Muse, a box set containing remastered
expanded versions of their first two albums, which sold 2,688 copies
debuting and peaking at No.70 in 2019. Overall sales of Muse albums in
the UK now stand at 5,999,273, with top tallies of 1,237,613 for Black
Holes & Revelations, 1,023,122 for Absolution and 832,202 for The
Resistance.
Taylor Swift and Eminem are the only acts to have more consecutive
studio albums debut at No.1 than Muse, with her current unbroken string
standing at 13, and his at nine – but Muse could be sharing top group
honours with Kasabian later this year. Missing out only with their
eponymous debut, which reached No.4, the Leicester band has seven
consecutive No.1 debuts under its belt, and will try for an eighth when
their ninth album, Act III, is released in September.
A trio nominally from Teignmouth in Devon – where they went to school
and met, though none of them were born there – Muse have had the same
line-up since they adopted the name in the late 1990s, and all of their
No.1s have occurred since 2003. The only group with more No.1 albums
this century is Coldplay (10) – Westlife also have eight. In the whole
of chart history, 21 acts have had more No.1 albums than Muse, nine of
them groups.
Fronted by the enigmatic Taylor Momsen, New York rock quartet The Pretty
Reckless land their fourth Top 10 album with their fifth studio set,
Dear God, debuting at No.6 (9,813 sales). It thus equals their highest
ever chart placing, as previously achieved by 2010’s Light Me Up (with
their best ever first week sale of 11,916 units) and most recent album,
Death By Rock And Roll, which had a lesser debut tally of 5,119 units in
2021. The band are considerably more successful here than in their
native America, where they have had only one Top 10 album, with Dear God
on schedule to fall short of the Top 20.
Released last week, Katy Perry’s new single, Watch It Burn falls, well
short of becoming her 36th hit, with first week consumption of 3,756
units. Her back catalogue fares better: her first ever compilation, The
Ones That Got The Plays, which debuted at No.13 seven weeks ago, and has
subsequently spent four weeks at its peak of No.12, becomes her sixth
Top 10 album, climbing to No.10 (6,623 sales).
Meanwhile, her most successful album with greater consumption than the
rest of her catalogue combined, 2010 No.1 Teenage Dream, went septuple
platinum last month. It moves 36-35 on its 331st week in the Top 75 (the
last 26 consecutively), its 439th in the Top 100, and its 696th in the
Top 200, with consumption of 3,361 units raising its all-time tally to
2,113,617. Both The Ones That Got The Plays and Teenage Dream host
Perry’s single The One That Got Away, a 2011 No.18 hit which reverses
28-33 (11,175 sales) on the ninth week of its viral chart resurgence. It
remains Perry’s ninth most-consumed track (1,698,970 units).
The rest of the Top 10: The Essential (3-3, 19,536 sales) by Michael
Jackson, Kiss All The Time: Disco, Occasionally (4-4, 10,346 sales) by
Harry Styles, The Art Of Loving (5-5, 9,873 sales) by Olivia Dean,
Thriller (7-7, 7,072 sales) by Michael Jackson, 50 Years: Don’t Stop
(6-8, 7,059 sales) by Fleetwood Mac and The Great Divide (9-9, also
7,059 sales) by Noah Kahan.
Overall album sales are down 1.26% week-on-week to 2,411,257 units,
their lowest level for 25 weeks, and 1.90% below same week 2025 sales of
2,457,919. Physical product accounts for 280,202 sales, 11.62% of the
total.