Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Ordinary'
reigns a fourth week
Sunday, June 22, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Alex Warren's
'Ordinary' remains atop the Global
Track Chart for a fourth week with
another 288,000 points, a little 0,5%
decrease 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
176,000 points by streaming
this week (down 3,5%), 31,000 points by sales
(down 3%), and 81,000 points by
airplay (up 8%).
'Die With A Smile' holds tight at the
runner-up slot with 239,000 points
(down 2%, with 171,000 points by
streaming, 28,000 points by sales,
and 40,000 points by airplay). The
tune remains a 42nd week in the top
two positions, an unbelievable
historic record!
On our
ALL TIME CHART
it stays at
no.7
with a total of
17,359,000 points. Ten spots lower
on that list climbs 'Apt.' by Rosé &
Bruno Mars at no.17 with a total of
14,513,000 points. On our weekly
tally the smash turns back at no.3
with another 206,000 points (down
3,5%, with 136,000 points by
streaming, 23,000 points by sales,
and 47,000 points by airplay).
Outside our current Top 40 waiting
among other 'Party 4 U' by Charli
XCX at no.55 and 'Gnarly' by Katseye at
no.60 for
their first appearance on the
hitlist and 'Rock That Body' a 2010
hitsingle by the Black Eyed Peas,
shoots back at no.43 - becomes it a
second chart-life in the Top 40?. The South Korean boy group
Enhypen is the clear winner on this
week's Global Album Chart. Their
sixth extended play 'Desire:
Unleash' exploded at the top
position with massive 854,000
equivalent sales (16,000 points by
streaming + 838,000 points by
sales). The set consists of eight
tracks, including the singles
'Loose' and 'Bad Desire (With Or
Without You)'. Morgan Wallen's new
effort 'I'm The Problem' remains at
the runner-up slot with another
healthy 217,000 consumption units
(199,000 points by streaming +
18,000 points by sales). After four
weeks on the tally it generated a
total of 1,19 million sales.
American rapper Lil Wayne rounds out
this week's top three with his
fourteenth studio album 'Tha Carter
VI' and 99,000 equivalent sales
(62,000 points by streaming + 37,000
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 18,000 / 16,781,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 20,000 / 6,915,000, '21' by
Adele 15,000 / 33,850,000, '25' by
Adele 11,000 / 25,698,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 6,872,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 23,000 /
10,962,000, 'Alligator Bites Never
Heal' by Doechii 20,000 / 910,000,
'Brat' by Charli XCX 41,000 /
3,539,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 20,000 / 2,137,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 14,000 / 1,987,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 25,000 / 21,955,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 27,000 / 2,436,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 9,000 /
6,448,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,697,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 45,000
/ 2,968,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 26,000 / 1,424,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 18,000 /
9,643,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
22,000 / 4,847,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,553,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,881,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 45,000 /
1,655,000, 'I've Tried
Everything But Therapy (Part 1)' by
Teddy Swims 49,000 / 2,972,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 32,000 /
2,143,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 31,000 / 12,150,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 24,000 /
12,574,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 20,000 /
2,135,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 34,000 / 9,359,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 15,000 / 6,681,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 25,000 / 1,789,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 35,000 / 1,038,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 33,000 / 9,188,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 30,000
/ 4,970,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 29,000 / 9,929,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 42,000 / 3,679,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
41,000 / 2,841,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
44,000 / 10,389,000, 'Un Verano Sin
Ti' by Bad Bunny 48,000 / 9,190,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 17,000 / 5,462,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 20,000 /
12,775,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 60
YEARS AGO
... "Ticket To Ride" was released on
April 9, 1965, as the first single
of the band's fifth studio album
Help! (1965). The track marked a
progression in the Beatles' work
through the incorporation of drone
and harder-sounding instrumentation
relative to their previous releases.
The song's main guitar riff was
played by George Harrison on his
Rickenbacker 12-string guitar. The
lyrics describe a girl "riding out
of the life of the narrator".
"Ticket To Ride" went to the pole
position in the United States,
United Kingdom, Canada, Sweden,
Norway, the Netherlands, and
Ireland. Furthermore it reached no.3
on the Global Year-End Chart 1965
with a total of 6,061,000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Morgan Wallen claims fourth
week atop Billboard 200
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Morgan Wallen's I’m
the Problem spends
a month at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
(dated June 21), as the set
earned 209,000 equivalent
album units in the United
States in
the tracking week, ending
June 12 (down 15%),
according to Luminate. The
album debuted at No. 1 on
the chart dated May 31. With
209,000 units earned, Problem lands
the largest fourth week for
an album since Taylor Swift’s The
Tortured Poets Department earned
260,000 in its fourth week
(May 25, 2024-dated chart).
Of I’m
the Problem’s
209,000 equivalent album
units earned in the week
ending June 12, SEA units
comprise 197,000 (down 14%,
equaling 257.9 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
leads Top Streaming Albums
for a fourth week), album
sales comprise 10,500 (down
34% — it falls 3-9 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,500 (down 15%).
Lil Wayne notches his 13th
top 10-charting effort on
the Billboard 200 as Tha
Carter VI debuts
at No. 2 with 108,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, SEA
units comprise 73,000
(equaling 97.06 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
debuts at No. 2
on Top Streaming Albums),
album sales comprise 34,000
(it debuts at No. 3 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,000. Lil Wayne’s
long-running Tha
Carter series
began in 2004 with the
release of Tha
Carter,
which debuted and peaked at
No. 5 on the July 17,
2004-dated Billboard 200. He
followed it with Tha
Carter II (No.
2, 2005), Tha
Carter III (No.
1 for three weeks, 2008),
Tha Carter IV (No.
1 for two weeks, 2011), Tha
Carter V (No.
1 for one week, 2018) and
now Tha
Carter VI.
Enhypen collects its fifth
consecutive, and total, top
10-charting set on the
Billboard 200 as Desire:
Unleash arrives
at No. 3 with 100,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 95,000 (it
debuts at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
5,000 (equaling 7.29 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. Addison Rae sees her
debut full-length album, Addison,
launch at No. 4 on the
Billboard 200 with 48,500
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, SEA
units comprise 25,500
(equaling 32.84 million
on-demand official streams
of its songs, it debuts at
No. 13 on Top Streaming
Albums), album sales
comprise 23,000 (it debuts
at No. 5 on Top Album Sales)
and TEA units comprise a
negligible sum. The
24-year-old singer-actor got
her start on TikTok in 2019
and made her Billboard Hot
100 chart debut with “Diet
Pepsi” in September 2024;
the song buzzed to No. 9 on
the Pop Airplay chart in
February. She also got a
high-profile collab in 2024
thanks to her guest turn on
the remix of Charli xcx’s Brat track
“Von Dutch.” SZA’s former
No. 1 SOS falls
3-5 on the Billboard 200
with 44,000 equivalent album
units earned (down 5%). My
Chemical Romance’s
Three Cheers for Sweet
Revenge,
released in 2004, reaches
the top 10 of the Billboard
200 for the first time, as
the set reenters at No. 6
following a deluxe reissue.
It previously peaked at No.
28 in 2005. In total, Three
Cheers marks
the fourth top 10-charting
effort for the band, and its
second-highest-charting set
— second only to the No.
2-peaking The
Black Parade in
2006. Three
Cheers also
marks the band’s first top
10 since April 2014, when
the compilation May
Death Never Stop You: The
Greatest Hits 2001-2013 reached
No. 9. A sweet album of a
different kind, Sabrina
Carpenter’s chart-topping Short
n’ Sweet,
rises one spot to No. 7 on
the latest Billboard 200. It
earned 41,000 equivalent
album units in the latest
tracking week (up 11%).
Morgan Wallen’s former
leader One
Thing at a Time dips
6-8 with 39,000 (down 4%).
Rock band Turnstile nets its
second chart entry, and
first top 10, with the No. 9
debut of Never
Enough.
It earned 38,000 equivalent
album units — of which album
sales comprise 27,500 (it
debuts at No. 4 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise a
little more than 10,000
(equaling 12.8 million
on-demand streams of the
set’s songs) and TEA units
comprise less than 500. The
set’s first-week units and
album sales mark career-high
frames for the group.
Rounding out the top 10 on
the latest Billboard 200 is
Kendrick Lamar’s
chart-topping GNX,
which falls 7-10 with 36,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 7%). Sabrina
Carpenter’s
“Manchild” soars onto the
Billboard Hot 100 at No. 1.
The song is her second
leader, and first to debut
on top. Her “Please Please
Please” spent a week atop
the ranking in June 2024,
rising from the runner-up
spot in its second week on
the chart. “Manchild,” on
Island Records and being
promoted to radio by
Republic, is the 1,182nd No.
1 in the Hot 100’s 66-year
history, and the 85th to
debut at the summit – and
the first No. 1 entrance for
Island. Carpenter
co-produced the song with
Jack Antonoff and co-wrote
it with Antonoff and Amy
Allen. (The trio also
co-wrote “Please Please
Please,” which Antonoff
produced.) Released late on
June 5, “Manchild” tallied
27.1 million official
streams, 14 million radio
airplay audience impressions
and 20,000 sold in the
United States June 6-12. The
track debuts at No. 1 on the
Streaming Songs chart, where
it’s Carpenter’s third
leader, following “Taste”
(three weeks on top) and
“Please Please Please”
(two). It opens at No. 3 on
Digital Song Sales with
6,000 downloads sold; it
also sold 14,000 copies on
7-inch vinyl, on which it
was released with the
exclusive instrumental
B-side, “Inside of Your Head
When You’ve Just Won an
Argument with a Man.”
(“Manchild” is the
top-selling song of the week
overall.) As it bubbles
under the Radio Songs chart,
“Manchild” launches at No.
22 on Pop Airplay and No. 24
on Adult Pop Airplay. Alex
Warren’s “Ordinary” drops to
No. 2 on the Hot 100
following two weeks at No.
1. Still, it adds a seventh
week at No. 1 on Digital
Song Sales (7,000 sold) and
gained by 12% to 54 million
in airplay audience. Morgan
Wallen’s “What I Want,”
featuring Tate McRae, dips
2-3 on the Hot 100, three
weeks after it roared in as
Wallen’s fourth No. 1 and
McRae’s first. Wallen
follows on the Hot 100 with
the No. 2-peaking “Just in
Case” (3-4) and “I’m the
Problem” (5-6). Kendrick
Lamar and SZA’s “Luther”
descends 4-5 after 13 weeks
atop the Hot 100 beginning
in March. Shaboozey’s “A Bar
Song (Tipsy)” wobbles 6-7 on
the Hot 100, following its
record-tying 19 weeks at No.
1 beginning last July, and
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’
“Die With a Smile”
backtracks 7-8 after five
weeks at No. 1 starting in
January. Teddy Swims’ “Lose
Control,” which led the Hot
100 for a week in March
2024, and became the year’s
No. 1 song, falls 8-9. It
logs a record-extending 65th
week in the top 10 and a
record-furthering 95th week
on the chart overall.
Rounding out the Hot 100’s
top 10, Benson Boone’s No.
2-peaking “Beautiful Things”
retreats 9-10.
Record Of The Month
24 year-old Johannes
Pietsch, better known by his
stage name JJ, from Austria
won this year's Eurovision
Song Contest with 436
points.
The song fusing pop and
lyrical elements in a
crescendo that flows into
techno sounds and was
written by JJ himself
alongside Teodora Špirić and
Thomas Thurner.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Sabrina Carpenter's
'Manchild' slides at No. 1
Monday, June 23, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
Out of luck last week when
it was shooting for its 13th
week at No.1 on Friday The
13th, Ordinary returns to
pole position for Alex
Warren on consumption of
59,221 units (1,269 digital
downloads, 57,952
sales-equivalent streams).
Pushing Sabrina Carpenter’s
Manchild – which supplanted
it last week
– down
last weekto No.2 (53,901 sales), Ordinary will
nevertheless fall into ACR next week.
Despite its return to No.1, Ordinary remains
seventh on the all-time list of songs with most weeks at No.1. However,
after achieving consumption in excess of 59,000 units for 13 weeks in a
row, the track – which has been in the Top 10 for all but one its 20
weeks on release – has become the first song by Warren to achieve
consumption of a million units. Already the No.1 song of 2025, it ends
the week on 1,039,519 units, becoming the 540th most-consumed song of
the 2020s and the 1,555th most-consumed of the 21st century.
Catapulting 17-5 (33,488 sales). Dior becomes the
third Top 10 hit for MK and the second for Chrystal. It is now the
highest-charting of 10 hits by MK – 52-year-old DJ, producer and
musician Marc Kinchen, who made his chart debut more than 30 years ago,
with Alana collaboration Always in February 1995.
Its consumption increasing for the third week in a
row – up 7.42% to a personal
best of 40,375 units – Love
Me Not nevertheless remains
rooted at No.3, a place
below its peak, for Ravyn
Lenae. The rest of the Top
10: Pink Pony Club (4-4,
34,732 sales) by Chappell
Roan, Family Matters (6-6,
29,558 sales) by Skye
Newman, Undressed (5-7,
29,553 sales) by Sombr,
Blessings (8-8, 27,586
sales) by Calvin Harris &
Clementine Douglas, Sapphire
(9-9, 27,539 sales) by Ed
Sheeran and Back To Friends
(7-10, 27,337 sales) by
Sombr. Overall singles
consumption is up 1.64%
week-on-week to 31,483,452
units, 8.36% above same week
2024 consumption of
29,055,796 units. Paid-for
sales are down 4.06%
week-on-week at 276,618,
0.38% above same week 2024
sales of 275,583. Eighty-two
weeks after his introductory
full-length album, Are We
There Yet?, debuted and
peaked at No.17, indie/pop
singer/songwriter James
Marriott’s second album,
Don’t Tell The Dog, storms
to a No.1 debut. Dedicated
to his childhood canine,
Jasper, the album’s first
week consumption of 14,528
units (5,357 CDs, 5,140
12-inch vinyl, 316
cassettes, 1,770 digital
downloads and 1,945
sales-equivalent streams) is
185.65% above Are We There
Yet?’s first frame of 5,086
units, and is testament to
how media-savvy Marriott is.
Although it has only spawned
one minor Top 75 entry to
date – I Don’t Want To Live
Like This reached No.67 in
February – and none of its
tracks have received
significant airplay, Don’t
Tell The Dog was an
immediate success. This is
due in no small part to the
fact that as well as being a
singer/songwriter, Marriott
has carved himself a niche
as a media personality with
2.03 million followers for
his main YouTube channel and
a further 230,000 for his
music channel, one million
TikTok followers, 580,000 X
followers, 496,000 Instagram
followers and 370,000 Twitch
followers. Twenty-eight next
month, Marriott - who
co-wrote and co-produced
every track on Don’t Tell
The Dog – is the first
recording artist born in
Switzerland to have a No.1
album here, although he was
raised in Buckinghamshire
and now lives in Brighton.
Are We There Yet?’s to-date
tally is 24,100 units.
Helped by a blitz of
in-store appearances, Don’t
Tell The Dog prevented
Oasis’ Time Flies 1994-2009
compilation from reclaiming
pole position for the first
time since it debuted at the
summit 783 weeks ago. Time
Flies… catapulted 17-3 nine
weeks ago after the release
of a newly remastered, 15th
anniversary limited
quadruple coloured vinyl
edition – one album apiece
in red, orange, green and
blue. Now available in a
black vinyl version of that
edition, and a new 2 CD
equivalent ahead of the
band’s reunion ‘Live 25’
tour, which starts in
Cardiff two weeks today
(July 4), the album
surpasses that peak,
levitating 14-2 (10,084
sales). Thirty-two weeks
after The Cure returned to
No.1, with their 14th studio
release and first for 16
years, Songs Of A Lost
World, an extensive remix
collection of songs from the
set, Mixes Of A Lost World,
debuts at No.9 (5,414
sales), becoming the band’s
13th Top 10 and 26th Top 75
entry. Short n’ Sweet edges
up 4-3 (9,461 sales),
extending its opening run in
the Top 5 to 43 weeks for
Sabrina Carpenter, eclipsing
the 21st century of 42
weeks, established by Ed
Sheeran’s = in 2021/2022.
Only three artist albums in
all of chart history have
spent more consecutive weeks
in the Top 5 – Simon &
Garfunkel’s Bridge Over
Troubled Water (84 weeks,
1970/1971), The Beatles’
Please Please Me (55 weeks,
1963/1964) and Elvis
Presley’s soundtrack set,
G.I. Blues (44 weeks,
1960/1961). Seven
multi-artist soundtrack/cast
albums have also spent more
consecutive weeks in the Top
5 than Short N’ Sweet, which
indisputably holds the
record for an album by a
female solo artist,
surpassing the 41 weeks in a
row that previous record
holder Shania Twain’s Come
On Over spent in the Top 5
in 1999/2000. After
headlining the Lido Festival
at London’s Victoria Park
last Saturday (June 14) and
Belsonic 25 in Belfast on
Wednesday (18th June),
Charli XCX enjoys a third
straight week of improved
performance for her latest
album, Brat, which increases
consumption 30.11%
week-on-week as it returns
to the Top 10 after a
four-week gap, moving 13-7
(6,303 sales). Meanwhile,
Sam Fender’s recent home
city gigs in Newcastle
continue to pay dividends,
with latest album, People
Watching (12-10, 4,909
sales) returning to the Top
10 after a 13-week absence.
Pulp’s first album of new
material since 2001, More
topped the chart last week,
and has enough clout to
remain in the top tier,
dipping 1-5 (7,227 sales).
The rest of the Top 10:
+-=÷× Tour Collection (5-4,
8,392 sales) by Ed Sheeran,
50 Years: Don’t Stop (6-6,
7,225 sales) by Fleetwood
Mac and The Highlights (8-8,
5,893 sales) by The Weeknd.
Overall album sales are down
0.90% week-on-week at
2,509,996 units, 6.54% above
same week 2024 sales of
2,355,996. Physical product
accounts for 247,040 sales,
9.84% of the total.