Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
Shakira remains
at the top
Sunday, July 12, 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 third week with 294,000
points, a 13% increase compared to
the previous week. Broken down by
sectors 'Dai Dai' gets 217,000
points by streaming (up 11%), 21,000
points by sales (up 4%), and 56,000
points by airplay (up 15%). 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
205,000 points (down 0,5% with
133,000 points by streaming, 29,000
points by sales, and 43,000 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 186,000 points (down 5% with 118,000 points
by streaming, 7,000 points by
sales, and 61,000 points by
airplay). Outside our Top 40
waiting among other
'Mr.Brightside' by the Killers at
no.43 and 'Rein Me In' by
Sam Fender & Olivia Dean for their first appearance on
the hitlist. 'Golden Hour: 5', the
new extended play by South Korean
boy group Ateez, rules this week's
Global Album Chart with 348,000
equivalent sales (7,000 points by
streaming + 341,000 points by
sales). Second highest debut of the
week comes from British rock band
Muse. Their 10th studio album 'The
Wow! Signal' lands at no.3 globally
with 102,000 consumption units
(5,000 points by streaming + 97,000
points by sales). Sandwiched between
Ateez and Muse ranks Olivia
Rodrigo's third studio album 'You
Seem Pretty Sad For A Girl So In
Love' at the runner-up slot with
167,000 equivalent sales (121,000
points by streaming + 46,000 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
16,000 / 17,612,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
7,656,000, '21' by Adele 13,000 /
34,560,000, '25' by Adele 9,000 /
26,242,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,347,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 25,000 / 12,396,000,
'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,572,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 18,000 / 23,081,000,
'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 8,000 / 7,208,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 15,000 / 4,369,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 18,000 / 13,414,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
18,000 / 10,539,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 11,000 / 4,367,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 32,000 /
6,164,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 17,000 / 3,098,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 18,000 / 4,632,000, the
soundtrack to 'K-pop Demon Hunters'
43,000 / 5,081,000, 'Man's Best
Friend' by Sabrina Carpenter 41,000
/ 3,500,000,
'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
21,000 / 3,477,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 13,000 / 13,600,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 31,000 / 10,912,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,296,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 39,000 /
7,721,000, 'So Close To What' by
Tate McRae 23,000 / 3,778,000,
'SOS' by SZA 41,000 / 14,294,000, 'Sour' by Olivia Rodrigo
41,000 /
14,234,000,
'Starboy' by The Weeknd 31,000 /
10,946,000, 'Stick Season' by Noah
Kahan 37,000 / 7,000,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 15,000 / 11,158,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 17,000 /
5,188,000, 'The Romantic' by Bruno
Mars 41,000 / 1,336,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 19,000 / 4,436,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 22,000 / 12,414,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 22,000 /
1,823,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 12,000 / 13,616,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 40
YEARS AGO
... The furious dance / funk / soul
/ rock tune "Sledgehammer" was
released on April 14, 1986, as the
lead single from Peter Gabriel's fifth studio album, So
(1986). The success of the song was driven by the spectacular video
clip, which won a record nine Awards at the 1987 MTV Video Music Awards.
The video was commissioned by Tessa Watts at Virgin Records, directed by
Stephen R. Johnson and produced by Adam Whittaker. Aardman Animations
and the Brothers Quay provided claymation, pixilation, and stop motion
animation that gave life to images in the song. "Sledgehammer" went atop
the hitlists in the United States and Canada, furthermore it peaked in
the top five in United Kingdom, Australia, Italy, Norway, Finland,
Switzerland, Austria, New Zealand, and Ireland.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Choosin' Texas' tallies 13th week at No. 1
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Listeners continue to be
choosin’ “Choosin’ Texas,”
as Ella Langley’s smash
holds for a 13th week at No.
1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The song’s newest
historic levels: The hit,
which first
led the Hot 100 in February,
is one of just five, and the
only one by an act known for
primarily recording country
music, to have dominated for
13 weeks or more among
titles by women with no
male-billed acts. Meanwhile,
Langley boasts three songs
in the Hot 100’s top four
spots, with “Choosin’ Texas”
joined by “Be Her,” steady
at its No. 3 high, and “I
Can’t Love You Anymore,”
with Morgan Wallen, new to
the top five with a 6-4
jump. How rare is that kind
of a triple-up? “Choosin’
Texas,” on Sawgod / Columbia
Records, with Triple Tigers
having overseen promotion of
the song to country radio,
totaled 25.1 million
official streams (down 3%
week over week), 50.8
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up 2%)
and 7,000 sold (down 14%) in
the United States July 3-9.
The single is stationary
atop the Streaming Songs chart,
leading for a 14th week; at
No. 6, after reaching No. 4,
on Radio Songs; and at No. 1
on Digital Song Sales,
where it’s on top for a 12th
week. On Streaming Songs, it
ties for the fifth-longest
rule in the chart’s history.
On Digital Song Sales, it
becomes of only 10 titles to
have led for at least a
dozen weeks. Langley has two
more songs in the top four
of the Hot 100: “Be Her”
keeps at No. 3 after
reaching No. 2 and “I Can’t
Love You Anymore,” with
Morgan Wallen, pushes 6-4
for its first week in the
top five (up 5% to 29.2
million in airplay
audience). Also in the Hot
100’s top five for the first
time, Tame Impala and
Jennie’s “Dracula” surges
8-5 (gaining 3% to 59.6
million in radio reach).
Already each act’s first top
10 on the chart.
Taylor Swift’s “I Knew It, I
Knew You” ranks at No. 2 on
the Hot 100 for a third
consecutive week, after it
spent its first two weeks on
the chart at No. 1 in June.
Ariana Grande’s “Hate That I
Made You Love Me” lifts 7-6
after it led the Hot 100 in
its debut week in May. Bruno
Mars’ “I Just Might,” which
debuted at No. 1 on the Hot
100 in January and led for
three weeks through March,
pushes 10-7. It tops Radio
Songs for a 21st week (63.3
million, down 2%). Drake’s
“Janice STFU” drops 4-8
after logging its first two
weeks on the Hot 100 at No.
1 beginning in late May.
Olivia Dean rounds out the
Hot 100’s top 10 with two
songs: “So Easy (To Fall in
Love)” returns to the tier,
up 12-9, after reaching No.
5, and “Man I Need” falls
5-10 after hitting No. 2.
Madonna earns her 10th No. 1
album on the Billboard 200
chart as her new studio
album, Confessions II,
debuts atop the list dated
July 18. With the arrival,
the Queen of Pop gets her
first No. 1 album of the
2020s and becomes the first
act with a No. 1 album in
the 2020s to have also
topped the chart in three
other decades. Further,
Madonna becomes only the
fourth act to have achieved
at least 10 No. 1s each on
the Billboard 200 albums
chart and the Billboard Hot
100 songs chart. On the
latter, she has 12 leaders.
Confessions II launches with
134,000 equivalent album
units earned in the United
States in the week ending
July 9, according to
Luminate. That marks the
largest week for a dance
album this year. It also
scores Madonna her best
week, by units, since the
Billboard 200 transitioned
to an equivalent album
units-ranked list in
December 2014. Confessions
II additionally yields
Madonna’s biggest streaming
week ever for an album, and
her largest pure album sales
week in more than a decade.
The new album is the sequel
to 2005’s chart-topping
Confessions on a Dance
Floor, and reunites Madonna
with her main collaborator
from that project,
DJ/writer/producer Stuart
Price. Confessions II was
announced on April 15,
released on July 3 and marks
Madonna’s first new studio
album since 2019’s No. 1
Madame X. The new set was
preceded by its Hot 100 hit
“Bring Your Love,” with
Sabrina Carpenter. Of
Confessions II’s 134,000
equivalent album units
earned in the tracking week,
album sales comprise 114,000
(Madonna’s best sales week
since 2015 — it debuts at
No. 1 on Top Album Sales),
SEA units comprise 19,000
(equaling 20.1 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks,
Madonna’s largest streaming
week ever for an album; it
debuts at No. 32 on Top
Streaming Albums) and TEA
units comprise 1,000. Olivia
Rodrigo’s chart-topping you
seem pretty sad for a girl
so in love is a non-mover at
No. 2 with 103,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 19%). Four
former leaders follow, as
Ella Langley’s Dandelion is
steady at No. 3 (76,000,
down 8%), Morgan Wallen’s
I’m the Problem climbs 5-4
(75,000, down 5%), Drake’s
ICEMAN dips 4-5 (68,000,
down 15%) and Noah Kahan’s
The Great Divide is
stationary at No. 6 (62,000,
down 3%). Ken Carson
captures his second top
10-charted album as
xperiment debuts at No. 7 on
the Billboard 200, earning
42,000 equivalent album
units. Essentially all of
that sum is driven by SEA
units, equaling 44.89
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs
(it debuts at No. 6 on Top
Streaming Albums). The
rapper previously hit the
top 10 with his
chart-topping More Chaos
release in 2025. With
Michael Jackson’s former No.
1 Thriller falling one spot
to No. 8 on the latest
Billboard 200 (42,000
equivalent album units, down
12%), the King of Pop is
joined by the Queen of Pop,
Madonna, in the top 10.
Jackson and Madonna have
shared space in the top 10
only once previously, on the
Dec. 1, 2001-dated chart.
That week, Jackson’s
chart-topping Invincible
fell 3-4 in its third week
on the list, while Madonna’s
compilation GHV2: Greatest
Hits Volume 2 debuted at No.
7. The two icons almost met
up once in the 1980s in the
top 10, but missed one
another by a single week. On
the Sept. 19, 1987-dated
chart, the Madonna-led Who’s
That Girl film soundtrack
spent its third and final
week in the top 10, at No.
7. The following week (Sept.
26), Who’s That Girl fell to
No. 11, while Jackson’s Bad
debuted at No. 1. Then, on
the Oct. 3-dated chart,
Who’s That Girl remained at
No. 11, while Bad held at
No. 1. Sienna Spiro scores
her first entry on the
Billboard 200 with her debut
full-length studio album,
Visitor, launching at No. 9.
The set bows with 39,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, SEA
units comprise 22,000
(equaling 22.6 million
on-demand official streams;
it debuts at No. 25 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 17,000 (it
debuts at No. 4 on Top Album
Sales) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
First-week sales of the
album were bolstered by its
availability across 10 vinyl
variants (including two
signed editions), six CD
variants (including four
signed editions), one
cassette and two download
editions. Toby Keith’s
chart-topping 35 Biggest
Hits returns to the top 10,
rising 31-10, following the
Independence Day holiday on
July 4 in the United States.
The set earned nearly 39,000
equivalent album units in
the tracking week ending
July 9 (up 82%), largely
from streaming activity
generated by “Courtesy of
the Red, White and Blue (The
Angry American)” during the
Fourth of July holiday
weekend. The anthem topped
the Hot Country Songs chart
in 2002.
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 Me In' is a 16th time
at the
summit
Monday, July 13, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
Sam Fender & Olivia Dean
make chart history as Rein
Me In secures its 16th
(non-consecutive) week at
No.1 to pass Love Is All
Around by Wet Wet Wet – a
15-week topper in 1994 - to
become the longest-running
No.1 ever by a British act.
It thus matches (Everything
I Do) I Do It For You by
Bryan Adams,
16 weeks at No.1 in 1991 – with the only
song in chart history to sustain for longer being American crooner
Frankie Laine’s 1953 behemoth, I Believe, which spent 18 weeks at the
summit.
The release of a pink vinyl 7-inch single couldn’t prevent consumption
of Rein Me In from falling 1.66% week-on-week to 41,014 units (174 vinyl
singles, 401 digital downloads and 40,439 sales-equivalent streams), its
own lowest level for 21 weeks, and the lowest for a No.1 for 50 weeks.
Its streaming has underperformed compared to the market for two weeks in
a row, and another negative week would see it enter ACR for the first
time, surely ending its No.1 status – although I suspect that the demand
for its new 7-inch variant was greater than it seems this week, and that
more will be shipped in the coming week.
Rein Me In is in the Top 40 for the 55th week in a row, shattering the
previous record of 54 weeks set by Ed Sheeran’s Thinking Out Loud in
2014/2015.
It also raises its tally of weeks in the Top 10 to 38,
including 28 in a row.
Its overall consumption now stands at 1,992,323 units, comprising 8,315
7-inch singles, 24,514 digital downloads and 1,959,494 sales-equivalent
streams.
Rein Me In’s continued occupation of the top slot is as much due to a
very soft market as anything else. Every record in the Top 10 suffers
reduced consumption in the latest frame, apart from the only song to
reach a new peak, Choosin’ Texas (9-5, 25,038 sales) by Ella Langley and
Free Your Mind (10-10, up 53 to 21,675 sales) by Prospa & Cloonee.
Olivia Rodrigo’s Stupid Song claims a fourth straight week at No.2 – its
entire chart career thus far - with consumption of just 25,954 units.
That is less than half of its first week tally, and the lowest for a
No.2 single since Ed Sheeran’s Afterglow tallied 25,725 units five and a
half years (287 weeks) ago.
The rest of the Top 10: Hate That I Made You Love Me (5-3, 25,706 sales)
by Ariana Grande, Billie Jean (3-4, 25,077 sales) by Michael Jackson,
American Girls (4-6, 24,575 sales) by Harry Styles, I Knew It I Knew You
(7-7, 23,449 sales) by Taylor Swift, The Cure (6-8, 22,860 sales) and
Drop Dead (8-9, 22,784 sales) by Olivia Rodrigo.
Overall singles consumption is up 0.23% week-on-week to 30,807,452
units, 1.73% above same week 2025 sales of 30,284,451 units. Paid-for
sales are down 7.18% week-on-week at 256,055, 8.34% below same week 2025
sales of 279,341.
Confessions, they say, are good for the soul – for Madonna, they’re also
good for the chart résumé: Confessions On A Dance Floor was No.1 in
2005, and sequel Confessions II debuts atop the chart this week.
Madonna’s first No.1 since MDNA in 2012, Confessions II racks up first
week consumption of 48,502 units (13,841 CDs, 20,758 vinyl albums, 846
cassettes, 6,577 digital downloads and 6,480 sales-equivalent streams) –
78.14% above the 27,227 units her last studio album, Madame X, achieved
when it debuted and peaked at No.2 in 2019.
Although well short of Confessions On A Dance Floor’s first week sales
of 217,610, Confessions II makes Madonna’s best start since MDNA
launched in 2012, with 56,335 units. Helped by the fact it was released
in 3 CD and 13 vinyl editions, Confessions II also had £4.99 digital
exclusive variants with a Grindr edition adding seven songs recorded
live in Times Square, and an instrumental edition adding vocal-free
variants of all tracks.
Following the template of Confessions On A Dance Floor, with Madonna and
Stuart Price responsible for writing and producing every track (some in
association with others), Confessions II is Madonna’s 13th No.1 album,
including her 1996 soundtrack set, Evita, which also included
contributions from others.
The only acts to have more are Robbie Williams (16), The Beatles (15)
and Taylor Swift (14). Elvis Presley is alongside Madonna on 13, and if
their new album, Foreign Tongues debuts at No.1 next week, The Rolling
Stones will join them.
Madonna will be 68 next month, and although several male soloists – Paul
McCartney, Tom Jones, Bob Dylan, Rod Stewart, Paul Simon and Bruce
Springsteen – have had No.1 albums of new material at a greater age,
that is not the case for women.
The oldest living person to have a No.1 was Vera Lynn, whose compilation
We'll Meet Again: The Very Best Of, topped the chart in 2009, when she
was 92, but all the recordings on that were more than 60 years old at
that point. Barbra Streisand was 74 when she topped with new material in
the form of Movie Partners Sing Broadway in 2016, but every song thereon
was a duet, so its status as a ‘solo’ album is questionable.
Confessions II is neither old material nor made up entirely of duets –
though there are several collaborations on it – so it is possible to
make a case that Madonna is the oldest female solo artist to have a No.1
album of new material, replacing Shania Twain, who was 57, when she
topped with Queen Of Me in 2023.
Having previously reached No.1 with Like A Virgin (1984 release, 1985
chart-topper), True Blue (1986), Like A Prayer (1989), The Immaculate
Collection (1990), Evita (1996 release, 1997 chart-topper), Ray Of Light
(1998), Music (2000), American Life (2003), Confessions On A Dance Floor
(2005), Hard Candy (2008), Celebration (2009) and MDNA (2012), Madonna
has had at least one No.1 album for five different (consecutive, in her
case) decades. The only other female solo artist so to do, Kylie
Minogue, topped with only a compilation (Greatest Hits) in the 1990s,
but Madonna has had at least one studio set topping the chart in each
decade, making her achievement superior.
Although a significant proportion of Madonna’s chart career was played
out in the last century, she is no slouch in the 21st century, with her
album consumption from the start of 2000 to midnight yesterday (July 9)
standing at 9,797,653 units. That’s the 19th highest 21st century tally
for any act, and the fourth highest for a female soloist, trailing only
Adele (13,561,909 units), Taylor Swift (13,222,316 units) and Rihanna
(9,956,232 units), none of whom were even born before she became a star.
Over her career as a whole, Madonna’s most-consumed album is 1990
compilation, The Immaculate Collection, with 3,864,009 units, although
it seems to be already certified for 3.9m (13x platinum). Her biggest
selling studio album is her third, True Blue, which dates from 1986, and
has to-date consumption of 2,109,046 units, and her biggest selling 21st
century studio album is 2000 release Music, with to-date consumption of
1,651,282, building on first week sales of 151,891.
Madonna’s latest coronation is tough on Sienna Spiro, the
critically-acclaimed 20-year-old singer/songwriter from London, whose
debut full-length album, Visitor was also released last Friday. Its
deluxe edition housing all six of her hit singles to date, Visitor
racked up first week consumption of 27,614 units, to debut at No.2.
Spiro’s earlier (2025) EP, Sink Now, Swim Later, the original home of
her first hit Maybe, has never charted, but has to-date consumption of
26,709 units. Visitor has the biggest first week sale for a debut album
thus far in 2026, and surpasses the tally required to be No.1 in 10 of
the 28 weeks that have elapsed this year.
The rest of the Top 10: You Seem Pretty Sad For A Girl So In Love (2-3,
19,275 sales), The Essential (3-4, 17,768 sales) by Michael Jackson, The
Art Of Loving (5-5, 8,862 sales) by Olivia Dean, Kiss All The Time:
Disco, Occasionally (4-6, 8,286 sales) by Harry Styles, The Great Divide
(9-7, 7,129 sales) by Noah Kahan 50 Years: Don’t Stop (8-8, 7,117
sales), Thriller (7-9, 6,440 sales) by Michael Jackson and The Ones That
Got The Plays (10-10, 6,412 sales) by Katy Perry.
Overall album sales are up 0.40% week-on-week to 2,420,887 units, 1.01%
above same week 2025 sales of 2,396,734. Physical product accounts for
279,163 sales, 11.53% of the total.