Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Ordinary'
reigns a sixth week
Sunday, July 6, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Alex Warren's
'Ordinary' remains atop the Global
Track Chart for a sixth week with
another 288,000 points, a 2,5%
increase compared to the previous
week. It's the first new number one
of the current year. Before was Mariah Carey's 1994
carol 'All I Want For Christmas Is
You' in the first week of 2025 at
no.1. A week later 'Apt' by
South Korean singer,
songwriter Rosé in collaboration
with Bruno Mars returned to the
summit for another 12 weeks, after
it was already 9 weeks at no.1 in
November and December 2024. Then
'Die With A Smile' by
Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars succeeded a
spectacular return at no.1 for
another 9 weeks, after it was 7
weeks at the pole position in
September and October 2024.
'Ordinary' was released on February
7 this year and included on the
digital reissue of his debut studio
album You'll Be Alright, Kid
(Chapter 1). The baroque pop song
talks about the feeling of loving
somebody, who makes life
extraordinary. Broken down by
sectors
'Ordinary' gets
167,000 points by streaming
this week (up 0,5%), 30,000 points by sales
(down 1%), and 91,000 points by
airplay (up 6%).
'Die With A Smile' holds tight at the
runner-up slot with 223,000 points
(down 5,5%, with 158,000 points by
streaming, 24,000 points by sales,
and 41,000 points by airplay). The
tune remains a 44th week in the top
two positions, an unbelievable
historic record!
On our
ALL TIME CHART
it stays at
no.7
with a total of
17,818,000 points. And on the
year-to-date list it overtakes the
lead with a total 9,652,000 points
in 2025. 'Die With A Smile' ends the
previous dominance of 'Apt.' by Rosé &
Bruno Mars, which sails to no.2
there with a total of 9,634,000
points in 2025. On our weekly tally
'Apt.' hangs still at the no.3
position with 194,000 points (down
4%, with 131,000 points by
streaming, 21,000 points by sales,
and 42,000 points by airplay). The
soundtrack to the American animated
musical fantasy film 'K-pop Demon
Hunters', released by Netflix,
brings four new-entries on this
week's Top 40. Highest is 'Golden'
by the fictional girl group Huntr/x
and it bows at no.5 globally with
171,000 points (155,000 points by
streaming, 15,000 points by sales,
but only 1,000 points by airplay). Outside our current Top 40 waiting
among other 'Survive' by Lewis
Capaldi at no.44, 'Free' by Rumi |
Jinu | Ejae | Andrew Choi at no.48,
and 'Shaky' by Sanju Rathod
& G-Spark at no.58 for
their first appearance on the
hitlist. The sixth week in a row an
Asian album debuts atop the Global
Album Chart. This week the Japanese
boy group Ini arrives there with
their third studio effort 'The
Origin' and 407,000 equivalent sales
(almost all of it are physical
sales). The bands former set 'Match
Up' started also at no.1 in the
calendar week 9, 2024 with 253,000
sales. Morgan Wallen holds tight at no.2
with his current effort 'I'm The
Problem' and another 148,000
consumption units (136,000 points by
streaming + 12,000 points by sales).
After six weeks on the tally it
generated a total of 1,690,000
sales. New Zealand singer /
songwriter Lorde rounds out this
week's top three with her fourth
studio album 'Virgin' and 115,000
consumption units (54,000 points by
streaming + 61,000 points by sales).
Lorde's biggest success was the
single 'Royals' from 2013, which
peaked at no.2 in November of that
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 14,000 / 16,824,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 16,000 / 6,963,000, '21' by
Adele 14,000 / 33,892,000, '25' by
Adele 11,000 / 25,731,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 6,899,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 24,000 /
11,034,000, 'Alligator Bites Never
Heal' by Doechii 17,000 / 962,000,
'Brat' by Charli XCX 43,000 /
3,670,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 17,000 / 2,188,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 14,000 / 2,029,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 26,000 / 22,033,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 19,000 / 2,493,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 8,000 /
6,472,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,727,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 44,000
/ 3,103,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 26,000 / 1,502,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 18,000 /
9,697,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
23,000 / 4,914,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,589,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,920,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 40,000 /
1,778,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 29,000 /
2,233,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 31,000 / 12,246,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
44,000 / 1,037,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 22,000 /
12,641,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 18,000 /
2,189,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 34,000 / 9,467,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 14,000 / 6,723,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 24,000 / 1,863,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 30,000 / 1,134,000, 'So Close
To What' by Tate McRae 43,000 /
1,404,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 34,000 / 9,291,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 32,000
/ 5,063,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 28,000 / 10,013,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 41,000 / 3,806,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
40,000 / 2,962,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
40,000 / 10,512,000, 'Un Verano Sin
Ti' by Bad Bunny 48,000 / 9,337,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 18,000 / 5,516,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 20,000 /
12,835,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10
YEARS AGO
...
Omar
Samuel Pasley, a.k.a. OMI began developing
"Cheerleader" in
2008, when he
created its melody. It was refined over several years alongside famed
Jamaican producer Clifton Dillon. It was first recorded with veteran
session musicians Sly and Robbie and Dean Fraser. Released as a single
on independent label Oufah, the song saw success in Jamaica, where it
topped the charts, and also attracted airplay in Hawaii and Dubai. The
song's lyrics depict a romantic companion as a support system.
Hoping to connect the song to a wider audience, OMI signed to U.S. dance
label Ultra
Records
in 2013. Ultra contacted
the young German DJ Felix Jaehn
to produce
a
remix version.
He
eschewed much of the song's original instrumentation for a
tropical-flavored deep house rendition, prominently featuring a trumpet,
a conga beat, and piano.
This
remix was released
on
May
19,
2014
and
became a massive global success,
reached number one in
many
countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Australia,
France, and Germany.
On the year-end chart 2015 "Cheerleader" ranked at no.3
with 8.214.000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'I'm The Problem' rules
Billboard 200 for seventh week
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Morgan Wallen's I’m
the Problem rules
the Billboard 200 albums
chart (dated July 12) for a
seventh consecutive, and
total, week. The set earned
173,000 equivalent album
units in the United
States in the week ending
July 3 — down a scant 3%
compared to the previous
week. The album opened at
No. 1 on the May 31 chart.
With 173,000 units earned, Problem lands
the largest total for an
album in its seventh week on
the chart since Adele’s 25 earned
194,000 in its seventh week
nearly a decade ago (on the
Jan. 23, 2016-dated chart).
Of I’m
the Problem’s
173,000 equivalent album
units earned in the week
ending July 3, SEA units
comprise 164,000 (down 3%,
equaling 215 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
leads Top Streaming Albums
for a seventh week), album
sales comprise 7,500 (up 2%
— it falls 7-11 on Top Album
Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,500 (up 6%).
Lorde achieves her fourth
top 10 album on the
Billboard 200 as her latest
studio project, Virgin,
debuts at No. 2. All four of
her top 10s have also
debuted inside the top five
(as Virgin follows Solar
Power,
with a No. 5 debut and peak,
2021; Melodrama,
No. 1, 2017,
and Pure
Heroine,
No. 3, 2013). Virgin bows
with 71,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
album sales comprise 42,000
(it debuts at No. 1 on Top
Album Sales), SEA units
comprise 29,000 (equaling
37.07 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s songs — it debuts at
No. 6 on Top Streaming
Albums) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
Virgin’s
first-week sales were aided
by its availability across
eight vinyl variants
(including two signed
editions), a standard CD and
a digital download. All
versions contained the same
tracklist. Lorde’s vinyl
sales added up to 31,000 —
her best week ever on vinyl.
The KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack
surges 8-3 on the Billboard
200 in its second week on
the chart — earning 62,000
equivalent album units (up
97%). Of that sum, SEA units
comprise 56,000 (up 108%,
equaling 77.42 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
jumps 10-2 on Top Streaming
Albums), album sales
comprise 4,500 (up 31%, it’s
pushed down 18-22 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,500 (up 24%). The
set’s haul of 77.42 million
streams for its songs is the
largest streaming week for a
soundtrack in nearly two
years, since the Barbie soundtrack
claimed 79.32 million on the
Aug. 19, 2023-dated chart
(its third week on the
chart). With KPop
Demon Hunters’
8-3 climb on the Billboard
200, it becomes the
highest-charting soundtrack
of 2025, and the
highest-charting soundtrack
to an animated film since Encanto spent
nine weeks at No. 1 in 2022.
(Previously among
soundtracks in 2025, Wicked reached
a No. 4 high in January,
after debuting and peaking
at No. 2 in December 2024.)
Katseye claims its first top
10 album on the Billboard
200 with the No. 4 debut of
its second project, Beautiful
Chaos.
The pop group’s five-song
set opens with 44,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 30,000 (it
debuts at No. 2 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
14,000 (equaling 21.36
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs;
it bows at No. 47 on Top
Streaming Albums) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. Karol G’s Tropicoqueta falls
3-5 on the Billboard 200 in
its second week (40,000
equivalent album units
earned; down 29%), Wallen’s
chart-topping One
Thing at a Time is
pushed down 5-6 (nearly
40,000; up 7%) and SZA’s
former No. 1 SOS descends
4-7 (39,000; down 17%).
Playboi Carti’s former
leader MUSIC jumps
28-8 with 35,000 (up 83%),
following its release on
vinyl (pressed on two
variants). The album sold
16,500 copies in the
tracking week (up 12,593%),
largely from vinyl
purchases. Sabrina
Carpenter’s chart-topping Short
n’ Sweet slides
6-9 on the Billboard 200
with 33,000 equivalent album
units earned (down 5%). Russ
closes out the top 10 with
the No. 10 debut of his
latest album, W!LD,
entering at No. 10 with
32,000 equivalent album
units earned. The set marks
his fourth top 10-charted
effort. Of the new album’s
32,000 units, album sales
comprise 25,000 (it debuts
at No. 3 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
7,000 (equaling 9.15 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. Alex Warren’s
“Ordinary” rolls on atop the
Billboard Hot 100, as his
first leader on the chart
notches a fifth week at No.
1. “Ordinary,” on Atlantic
Records, tallied 20.2
million official streams (up
2% week-over-week), 69.7
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up 9%)
and 7,000 sold (up 3%) in
the United States June
27-July 3. “Ordinary” holds
at No. 2 on the Streaming
Songs chart, following four
weeks at the summit; adds a
third week at No. 1 on Radio
Songs; and rebounds 2-1 for
an eighth week atop Digital
Song Sales. Morgan Wallen’s
“What I Want,” featuring
Tate McRae, is steady at No.
2 on the Hot 100, after it
debuted in May as Wallen’s
fourth No. 1 and McRae’s
first. It claims a sixth
week atop Streaming Songs
(22.8 million, up 2%).
Wallen follows on the Hot
100 with two No. 2-peaking
hits: “Just in Case,” which
lifts 4-3, and “I’m the
Problem,” which holds at No.
5. Wallen rings up his fifth
week in 2025 with at least
three songs in the top five
simultaneously — tying
Kendrick Lamar for the most
weeks with three or more
concurrent top five hits in
a single year among
soloists, with Lamar also
having earned three such
weeks this year. Among all
acts, only the Beatles in
1964 achieved more such
frames (eight). Shaboozey’s
“A Bar Song (Tipsy)” buzzes
7-4 on the Hot 100,
following its record-tying
19 weeks at No. 1 beginning
last July. Kendrick Lamar
and SZA’s “Luther” repeats
at No. 6 after 13 weeks atop
the Hot 100 beginning in
March. Sabrina Carpenter’s
“Manchild” drops 3-7 on the
Hot 100, after it debuted as
her second No. 1, and first
chart-topping debut, three
weeks earlier. Teddy Swims’
“Lose Control,” which led
the Hot 100 for a week in
March 2024, and became the
year’s No. 1 song, ascends
9-8. It adds a
record-extending 68th week
in the top 10 and a
record-furthering 98th week
on the chart overall. Lady
Gaga and Bruno Mars’ “Die
With a Smile” slips 8-9 on
the Hot 100 after five weeks
at No. 1 beginning in
January. Already the
longest-charting song in the
top 10 ever by a woman
artist — 45 weeks — it
surpasses The Kid LAROI and
Justin Bieber’s “Stay,” in
2021-22, for the longest
such stay for a
collaboration. Overall, only
“Lose Control,” “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” (60 weeks) and The
Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights”
(57) have spent more time in
the top 10. Rounding out the
Hot 100’s top 10, Chappell
Roan’s “Pink Pony Club”
rides back into the tier
(11-10), after it reached
No. 4. Also notably, while
Alex Warren’s “Ordinary” is
the week’s top-selling
download, Chappell Roan’s
“The Giver” is the week’s
top-selling song overall,
with 57,000 in sales, up
from a negligible sum, after
vinyl copies, which account
for nearly all the song’s
sales in the tracking week,
were shipped to consumers.
Record Of The Month
'Back To Friends' became the
breakout hit of the
20-year-old American singer
/ songwriter
Shane Michael Boose, known
professionally as Sombr. The
song entered many charts
around the world after going
viral on the video-sharing
app Tik Tok.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Lewis Capaldi storms at
number one
Monday, July 7, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
After his surprise set on
Glastonbury’s Pyramid Stage
last Friday (June 27), Lewis
Capaldi makes a similarly
triumphant return to No.1
with comeback single,
Survive. Opening atop the
chart on consumption of
68,414 units – the highest
consumption for a No.1 for
nine weeks - Survive is
28-year-old
Glaswegian Capaldi’s sixth chart-topper –- the most for any Scot apart
from Calvin Harris (11, although only two solo) - and was released
simultaneously in three CD editions, which attracted 25,415 sales, with
the remainder of its tally coming from 7,849 digital downloads and
35,150 sales-equivalent streams.
It is the third single by Capaldi to debut at No.1 – emulating 2022’s
Forget Me and 2023’s Wish You The Best – and provides his 12th week at
No.1 since his chart career began in 2019. It secures the highest first
week sale of any single in 2025, and the highest of Capaldi’s career,
replacing 2022 smash Forget Me (56,882 sales).
Capaldi’s most popular song, Someone You Loved - which spent seven weeks
at No.1 and has staggering to-date consumption of 6,081,852 units making
it the third biggest hit of the 21st century – also returns to the
chart. Ranked 51st (8,745 ACR-adjusted sales, 16,349 unadjusted sales),
it appears in the Top 75 for the
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160th time in total but the first time
for 65 weeks.
Survive shifted more copies on CD than any single in a week since X
Factor 2014 winner Ben Haenow’s coronation single, Something I Need,
sold 47,001 copies (all on CD) as it debuted at No.1 that December, 550
weeks ago.
Capaldi’s coronation is tough on Dior, which holds at No.2 on
consumption of 42,554 units – a 1.71% increase week-on-week – despite
overcoming former incumbent, Manchild, which slips 1-3 (41,256 sales)
for Sabrina Carpenter.
Sapphire returns to the Top 10 for Ed Sheeran, bouncing 12-9 (27,427
sales) to match its original peak.
The rest of the Top 10: Love Me Not (3-4, 37,995 sales) by Ravyn Lenae,
Pink Pony Club (5-5, 30,972 sales) by Chappell Roan, Victory Lap (4-6,
30,547 sales) by Fred Again, Skepta & PlaqueBoyMax, Blessings (8-7,
27,814 sales) by Calvin Harris feat. Clementine Douglas, Ordinary (9-8,
27,677 sales) by Alex Warren and Family Matters (10-10, 26,672 sales) by
Skye Douglas.
Overall singles consumption is down 0.26% week-on-week at 30,823,160
units, 7.62% above same week 2024 consumption of 28,641,799 units.
Paid-for sales are up 19.13% week-on-week at 345,874, 6.15% above same
week 2024 sales of 325,826.
Simultaneously surpassing the peaks of her previous long-players
Pure Heroine (No.4, 2013), Melodrama (No.5, 2017) and Solar
Power (No.2, 2021), while maintaining her pace of one release
every four years, singer/songwriter Lorde’s fourth album,
Virgin, debuts atop the chart on consumption of 18,848 units
(3,302 CDs, 8,676 vinyl albums, 433 digital downloads and 6,437
sales-equivalent streams).
Effecting the 29th change of leadership of the chart in as many
weeks, it arrives at the summit more than 11 years after her
debut smash Royals topped the singles chart, and secures her
highest yet first week sale, beating her previous best of
18,294, as set by Pure Heroine, which is, by some distance, her
most-consumed album with a to-date tally of 478,559 units.
For the first time in chart history, there are simultaneous
debuts for three albums by artists over 75-years-old – each very
different.
Leading the way, Tracks II: The Lost Albums (No.2, 9,444 sales)
is the follow-up to the similarly-themed Tracks (No.50, 1998)
and gathers together 83 previously unissued tracks from seven
unissued albums recorded between 1983 and 2018 by Bruce
Springsteen, delivering the 75-year-old’s 42nd Top 75 and 24th
Top 10 album.
Released to coincide with his performance in Glastonbury’s
Legends slot last Sunday (29 June), Rod Stewart’s new
career-encompassing compilation, Ultimate Hits, debuts at No.5
(7,824 sales), becoming his 40th Top 10 and 52nd Top 75 album.
Completing the triumvirate, The Secret Of Life: Partners Volume
2 is a companion release to the 2014 No.2 success Partners by
Barbra Streisand and finds Babs, now 83, accompanied by the
likes of Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Sting and more contemporary
stars like Hozier, Laufey and Sam Smith. Debuting at No.40
(3,124 sales), it is Streisand’s 16th Top 10 and 37th Top 75
album.
Rod Stewart is far from being the only artist to benefit from
the Glastonbury effect, with Guts (24-8, 6,374 sales) and Sour
(25-11, 5,849 sales) by Olivia Rodrigo; Divinely Uninspired To A
Hellish Extent (110-15, 5,166 sales) and Broken By Desire To Be
Heavenly Sent (No.30, 3,793 sales) by Lewis Capaldi; Stick
Season (15-10, 6,054 sales) by Noah Kahan; Jagged Little Pill
(No.39, 3,124 sales) by Alanis Morrissette; and My 21st Century
Blues (No.65, 2,410 sales) by Raye all receiving substantial
uplifts.
Oasis weren’t at Glastonbury but with their Live ’25 reunion
tour starting in Cardiff tonight (4 July), Time Flies: 1994-2009
(9-6, 7,381 sales), What’s The Story, Morning Glory (18-14,
5,289 sales) and Definitely Maybe (37-26, 4,109 sales) also perk
up.
Top 10 titles not mentioned above: Short N’ Sweet (5-3, 8,211
sales) by Sabrina Carpenter, +-=÷× Tour Collection (6-4, 8,109
sales) by Ed Sheeran, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (8-7, 6,817 sales) by
Fleetwood Mac and Brat (10-9, 6,184 sales) by Charli XCX.
Overall album sales are up 0.12% week-on-week at 2,457,919
units, 5.95% above same week 2024 sales of 2,319,946. Physical
product accounts for 256,074 sales, 10.42% of the total.