Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
'I Just Might'
reaches no.1
Sunday, March 8, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Alongside with the
release of Bruno Mars' new album
'The Romantic' the lead single 'I
Just Might' catapults finally to the
top position of our Global Track
Chart in its eighth week on the
tally with 268,000 points, a 21%
increase compared to the previous
week. Broken down by sectors 'I Just
Might' gets 127,000 points by
streaming (up 47%), 27,000 points by
sales (up 87%), and 114,000 points
by airplay (up 2%). The song started
at no.5 in the calendar week 4,
2026, with 214,000 points and peaked
one week later at no.4 with 226,000
points. Another track from Bruno
Mars' new set, the ballad 'Risk It
All', is the highest debut of the
week at no.5 with 216,000 points
(182,000 points by streaming, 30,000
points by sales, and 4,000 points by
airplay). Number one of the last
three weeks throws down at no.4 this
week: Bad Bunny's title track from
his last album 'Debí´Tirar Más
Fotos' placed now there with 223,000
points (down 13% with 182,000 points
by streaming,
30,000 points by
sales, and 11,000 points by
airplay). Sandwiched between 'I Just
Might' and 'DtMF' reamins Taylor Swift's 'The
Fate Of Ophelia' at the runner-up
slot with 246,000 points
(down 3% with 138,000 points by
streaming, 29,000 points by sales,
and 79,000 points by airplay). Also
'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 number three with 225,000
points (down 4% with 134,000 points
by streaming, 26,000 points by
sales, and 65,000 points by
airplay). It's the 19th time that
'The Fate Of Ophelia' and 'Golden'
are together in the top three, the
first time in the calendar week 42,
2025.
Outside
our Top 40 waiting among
other 'ILoveItILoveItILoveIt' by
Bella Kay at no.42, 'Gone Gone Gone' by David
Guetta | Teddy Swims | Tones And I
at no.49, 'Cha Cha Cha' by Bruno
Mars at no.52, 'No Batidâo' by Zxkai &
Slxughter at no.53, and 'La Villa'
by Ryan Castro | Kapo | Gangsta at
no.59 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. With strong sales in
their native country and good
placements on the international
hitlists, 'Deadline' by South Korean
girl outfit Blackpink shoots easily
atop the Global Album Chart with
394,000 equivalent sales (16,000
points by streaming + 378,000 points
by sales). Their former release
'Born Pink' started also no.1 in the
calendar week 39, 2022, with 635,000
sales. Bruno Mars' fourth studio
album 'The Romantic' lands shy
behind at the runner-up spot with
244,000 consumption units (104,000
points by streaming + 140,000 points
by sales). It's his first solo album
since more than nine years (!!), the
last one '24k Magic' arrived at no.2
in the calendar week 48, 2016, with
368,000 sales and generated a total
of nearly 6,5 million to date.
'Runway', the second studio effort
by Japanese boy idol band Ae! Group,
rounds out this week's top three
with 160,000 equivalent sales (all
points are by 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
17,000 / 17,330,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 12,000 /
7,480,000, '21' by Adele 12,000 /
34,345,000, '25' by Adele 11,000 /
26,083,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,211,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 23,000 / 12,008,000,
'Borondo' by Beéle 29,000 /
1,739,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
19,000 / 4,526,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,419,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 19,000 / 22,773,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
26,000 / 5,472,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 9,000 / 7,067,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 19,000 / 4,111,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 22,000 / 13,100,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
17,000 / 10,270,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 20,000 / 4,147,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 18,000 /
5,693,000, 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' by
Billie Eilish 54,000 / 7,801,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 18,000 / 2,814,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 24,000 / 4,294,000,
'Lux' by Rosalíá 20,000 /
768,000, 'Man's Best Friend' by
Sabrina Carpenter 53,000 /
2,628,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
30,000 / 3,097,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 15,000 / 13,375,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 27,000 / 10,393,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,143,000, 'Rosie' by Rosé
12,000 / 2,490,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie
16,000 / 1,948,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 52,000 /
6,938,000, 'So Close To
What' by Tate McRae 48,000 /
3,194,000, 'Starboy' by The
Weeknd 31,000 / 10,470,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 43,000 /
6,350,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber
25.000 / 1,822,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 24,000 / 10,850,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 23,000 /
4,877,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 23,000 / 4,118,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 34,000 / 11,909,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 21,000 /
1,437,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 13,000 / 13,399,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10
YEARS AGO
...
"Love
Yourself"
is the third single and the second number one smash from
Justin Bieber's
fourth studio album Purpose
and was released on November9,
2015. For
several weeks all three singles (incl. "What Do You Mean?" and "Sorry")
ranked in the top five of the Global Track Chart simultaneously. "Love
Yourself" is a sparingly instrumented ballad about a broken
relationship. It went to the No.1 position in the United States, United Kingdom,
Australia, Netherlands, Sweden, New Zealand, Ireland, and Denmark. In
Germany the song stranded at no.3, in France at no.4.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Ella Langley's 'Choosin' Texas'
dips to No. 2
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Bruno Mars notches his
second No. 1 album on the
Billboard 200 chart, and
first in more than a decade,
as The
Romantic
debuts atop the tally (dated
March 14). The set launches
with
186,000 equivalent album
units earned in the United
States in the week ending
March 5, according to
Luminate. Mars was last on
top with his second
full-length studio album, Unorthodox
Jukebox,
which climbed to No. 1 in
March 2013 (nearly three
months after it debuted). In
turn, The
Romantic
is also Mars’ first No.
1-debuting album. Mars’ gap
of nearly 13 years between
No. 1s is the longest for
any living solo male artist
since Paul McCartney
returned to the top in 2018
with Egypt
Station,
36 years and three months
after he was last No. 1 with
the third and final week
atop the chart with Tug
of War on
the June 12, 1982-dated
chart. Of The
Romantic’s
186,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, album sales
comprise 93,500 (it debuts
at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
90,500 (equaling 93.95
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s nine
songs, Mars’ best streaming
week for an album; it debuts
at No. 1 on Top Streaming
Albums) and TEA units
comprise 2,000. Three former
No. 1s follow Mars on the
Billboard 200: Bad Bunny’s DeBÍ
TiRAR MáS FOToS holds
at No. 2 with 77,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 10%), Morgan
Wallen’s I’m
the Problem steps
5-3 (75,000, up 7%) and Don
Toliver’s
Octane
pumps 6-4 (66,000, down 3%).
Olivia Dean’s The
Art of Loving rounds
out the top five, climbing
7-5 (60,000, down 2%). Last
week's No. 1, Megan
Moroney’s Cloud
9,
floats down to No. 6 in its
second week (55,000
equivalent album units
earned, down 62%). Gorillaz
achieve their sixth top
10-charting album on the
Billboard 200 with the No. 7
debut of The
Mountain.
The set launches with 53,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 38,000 (it
debuts at No. 3 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
15,000 (equaling 15.86
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs)
and TEA units comprise a
negligible sum. Gorillaz
previously visited the top
10 on the Billboard 200
with Cracker
Island (No.
3, 2023), The
Now Now (No.
4, 2018),
Humanz (No.
2, 2017), Plastic
Beach (No.
2, 2010) and Demon
Days (No.
6, 2005). Blackpink scores
its third top 10 on the
Billboard 200 as Deadline debuts
at No. 8 with 52,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 41,000 (it
debuts at No. 2 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
11,000 (equaling 11.46
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s five
songs) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
Deadline marks
the return of the pop
quartet to the Billboard 200
after more than three years.
The group’s last release
was Born
Pink,
which marked the act’s first
No. 1 (debuting atop the
Oct. 1, 2022-dated chart).
Since then, the four members
(Jennie, Jisoo, Lisa and
Rosé) have all released solo
album projects, all of which
have charted on a Billboard album
ranking. Taylor Swift’s
chart-topping The
Life of a Showgirl is
a non-mover at No. 9 on the
latest Billboard 200 with
just under 43,000 equivalent
album units earned for the
week (down 3%). Closing out
the top 10 of the Billboard
200 is Mitski’s Nothing’s
About To Happento
Me,
debuting at No. 10 with
nearly 43,000 equivalent
album units earned — the
artist’s best week ever by
units. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 31,000 (her
best sales week ever; it
debuts at No. 4 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
12,000 (equaling 12.16
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs)
and TEA units comprise a
negligible sum. Bruno Mars’
“I Just Might” rebounds for
a third week atop the
Billboard Hot 100. The song,
up four spots, spent its
first two weeks on the chart
at No. 1 in January, having
become his 10th career
leader, and his first to
debut at the summit. “I Just
Might” tops the Hot 100 with
18 million official streams
(up 70%) and 72.5 million
radio airplay audience
impressions (up 6%) and
6,000 sold (up 37%) in the
United States Feb. 27-March
5. The single vaults 16-4 on
the Streaming Songs chart,
after it led in its debut
week, rules Radio Songs for
a third frame and is the
top-selling song of the
week. Meanwhile, Mars’ “Risk
It All” bounds onto the Hot
100 at No. 4, led by 23.2
million streams, good for a
No. 1 entrance on Streaming
Songs, where it’s his fifth
leader. PinkPantheress’
“Stateside,” with Zara
Larsson, twirls 13-7 on the
Hot 100, driven most heavily
by its 49% flight to 18.7
million streams. It’s also
up 48% to 2.6 million in
radio audience. The song was
originally released by
PinkPantheress solo on her
album Fancy
That last
April; its remix with
Larsson, among other acts,
arrived on PinkPantheress’ Fancy
Some More? project
in October. She scores her
second Hot 100 top 10, after
“Boy’s a Liar, Pt. 2,” with
Ice Spice, reached No. 3 in
March 2023. Ella Langley’s
“Choosin’ Texas” dips to No.
2 on the Hot 100 after two
nonconsecutive weeks at No.
1 since Valentine’s Day.
Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need”
recedes a spot from its No.
2 Hot 100 high and Alex
Warren’s “Ordinary” falls
3-5 after 10 weeks at No. 1
last June-August. Taylor
Swift’s “Opalite” descends
4-6 on the Hot 100, two
weeks after it hit No. 1,
and her “The Fate of
Ophelia” slides 7-9, after
it began her career-best 10
weeks atop the chart upon
its debut in October and
extended its No. 1 run
through January. Huntr/x’s
“Golden” drops 6-8 on the
Hot 100 following eight
weeks at No. 1 last
August-October and sombr’s
“Back to Friends” falls
9-10, after reaching No. 7.
Record Of The Month
'Fever Dream' by Alex Warren
is his new smash and the first
sign of a new album?
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
The collab 'Rein Me In'
holds number one
Monday, March 9, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
Supercharged by its election
as Song Of The Year at the
BRIT Awards last Saturday,
and by its release in a new
7-inch variant, Rein Me In
spends its third consecutive
week at No.1 for Sam Fender
& Olivia Dean. Increasing
consumption for the fifth
week in a row, to 62,104
units – 34.22% up over its
last
frame – Rein Me In reached its highest tally since its release 54
weeks ago, with 3,599 7-inch singles 1,233 digital downloads and
sales-equivalent consumption of 57,272, contributing to its total. All but 14 of
those 7-inch sales were for the new clear vinyl, ‘North Shields’ pressing of the
single, so-called because it was manufactured in Fender’s hometown of North
Shields.
Overall consumption of Rein Me In now stands at 1,049,144 units, making it the
fourth track by Fender and third by Dean to secure a seven-figure tally. Of 782
tracks to achieve consumption of a million units in the 2020s alone (in other
words, counting their consumption only from January 2020 to yesterday), Ed
Sheeran has the most – 17, followed by Taylor Swift (16), Coldplay (11), Arctic
Monkeys, Adele and Billie Eilish (10 apiece).
Olivia Dean, of course, picked up three more BRIT Awards, and achieved increased
consumption across her catalogue, including her other current
Top 10 hits, So
Easy (To Fall In Love), which falls 2-5 despite increasing consumption 12.80%
week-on-week to 38,485 units, and her earlier No.1 Man I Need, which moves 7-8
with ACR-adjusted consumption up 13.66% to 31,704 units. Man I Need remains at
No.1 on the Top 200 Combined Tracks chart – where ACR and primary artist rules
don’t exist – topping the list for the 12th time, on unadjusted consumption of
62,226 units. That is its highest level for 19 weeks, and just 122 more than
Rein Me In.
Alex Warren spent 13 weeks at No.1 last year with Ordinary, and performed it at
the BRIT Awards. It somehow failed to take away the prize for Best International
Song but enjoys a pleasing rebound (19-16, 18,944 sales), although it is
comprehensively overshadowed by his new song, Fever Dream, which is his seventh
hit, fifth Top 10 entry and the highest of 10 songs debuting in the Top 75 this
week, opening at No.3 (44,840 sales).
Iloveitiloveitiloveit rocketed 26-4 last week to become American
singer/songwriter Bella Kay’s first Top 10 hit. Its consumption surges a further
52.55% week-on-week to 45,126 units, as it jumps to No.3. Her first hit, the
Sick, which reached No.72 last August, re-emerged at No.53 last week, and also
hits a new peak, climbing to No.41 (10,206 sales), while a third Kay song,
Steady, debuts at No.63 (7,388 sales).
I Just Might – the introductory single from his new album The Romantic –
rebounds 8-6 (34,253 sales) for Bruno Mars on its eighth week in the Top 10,
while two more songs from the set debut lower down. Risk It All (No.15, 19,231
sales) and Cha Cha Cha (No.47, 9,139 sales) increase Mars’ tally of hits to 32.
The rest of the Top 10: Stateside (3-4, 41,851 sales) by PinkPantheress,
Homewrecker (5-7, 33,741 sales) by Sombr, Lush Life (6-9, 30,155 sales) by Zara
Larsson and, surging 44.01% after opening the BRIT Awards, Aperture (16-10,
25,043 sales) by Harry Styles. Every track in the Top 10 increased consumption
week-on-week.
Overall singles consumption is up 2.23% week-on-week to 31,723,880 units, 4.07%
above same week 2025 sales of 30,482,342 units. Paid-for sales are up 5.85%
week-on-week at 269,620, 6.59% above same week 2025 sales of 252,960.
Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett’s virtual band Gorillaz are kings of the
chart jungle for the third time, with The Mountain making a suitably
lofty debut at the chart summit.
Their ninth studio set, The Mountain was released via their own label
Kong in 25 physical variants (13 CD, eight vinyl, four cassette),
helping it to achieve consumption of 29,982 units – 12,698 CDs, 11,061
12-inch vinyl albums, 888 cassettes, 1,270 digital downloads and 4,065
sales-equivalent streams. It is Gorillaz’s highest opening since fifth
studio set Humanz debuted at No.2 in 2017 on consumption of 44,465
units.
The Mountain’s coronation comes 25 years to the month since Gorillaz’s
eponymous debut reached No.3, nearly 21 years since second album Demon
Days became their first No.1, and three years to the week since their
last album, Cracker Island became their second No.1
Demon Days holds the record for the band’s highest first week sales
(105,320), their highest weekly sale (176,006) and their highest
cumulative sale, which currently stands at 2,053,211 units. That is far
in excess of any album by Albarn’s other band, Blur, either studio or
compilation, with the top titles in these categories being Parklife
(1,175,394 sales) and Greatest Hits (1,597,285 sales).
More than nine years after his last solo album, 24K Magic, and four
years after he teamed with Anderson Paak as Silk Sonic for An Evening
With…, Bruno Mars is back with The Romantic. Home to I Just Might, which
has been in the Top 10 for eight weeks, and new hits Risk It All and Cha
Cha Cha, the succinct (nine tracks, 31 minutes) album debuts at No.3 on
consumption of 18,547 units. That’s well down on the aforementioned 24K
Magic, which opened and peaked at No.3 n consumption of 52,334 units –
but above the 12,484 units An Evening With moved on its No.9 debut.
Born in Japan but resident in the USA, and with dual heritage,
35-year-old indie/pop singer/songwriter Mitski scores her third
consecutive Top 10 album, her fourth career Top 75 entry and her equal
highest chart placing with eighth studio album, Nothing’s About To
Happen To Me (No.4, 13,832 sales) on which she singlehandedly wrote all
11 tracks. Her fifth studio album, Be The Cowboy, earned Mitski a first
UK chart toehold in 2018, peaking at No.64, and is by some distance her
most popular release, with to-date consumption of 140,278 units.
A meagre 20 minutes long with nine tracks when it debuted and peaked at
No.3 last May, PinkPantheress’ mixtape Fancy That returns to the Top 75
following the release of a massively engorged Fancy Some More? edition
on CD, vinyl and digitally, extending to as many as 31 tracks and 91
minutes with the addition of remixes featuring the likes of Zara
Larsson, Kylie Minogue, Sugababes, Jade and Basement Jaxx. It catapults
back onto the Top 75 after an absence of 20 weeks, and into the Top 10
for the first time since its debut, soaring 178-5 (8,857 sales).
The British Album Of The Year by the British Artist Of The Year at last
Saturday’s BRIT Awards, The Art Of Loving increases consumption 20.08%
to an 11-week high of 19,415, as it holds at No.2 for Olivia Dean.
Alex Warren came away empty handed but impressed many with his
performance of Ordinary, which helped to power a 25.33% increase in
consumption of his album, You’ll Be Alright Kid, to its highest tally
for 21 weeks (7,226 units) as it jumps 11-7.
The rest of the Top 10: 50 Years: Don’t Stop (6-6, 8,464 sales) by
Fleetwood Mac, The Essential (7-8, 7,188 sales) by Michael Jackson, The
Highlights (9-9, 6,720 sales) by The Weeknd and +-=÷× Tour Collection
(10-10, 6,410 sales) by Ed Sheeran.
Overall album sales are up 3.02% week-on-week at 2,587,736 units, 0.52%
above same week 2025 sales of 2,574,421. Physical product accounts for
338,209 sales, 13.07% of the total.