Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
Taylor Swift
remains at the top
Sunday, October 19, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
After a sensational
start of Taylor Swift's new album
'The Life Of A Showgirl' last week
and massive 10 songs from the set
inside the Global Track Top 40, she
remains with six tracks this week,
three of it still in the Top 10
(last week there were seven Taylor
Swift songs in the Top 10, an all
time record!). The official single
'The Fate Of Ophelia' leads our
tally for a second week with 475,000
points, that's a 31% loss compared
to its initial week.
It's
Taylor Swift's ninth global number
one smash.
Broken down by sectors the song gets
376,000 points by streaming (down
42%), 54,000 points by sales (last
week no sales) and 45,000 points by
airplay (up 32%). Behind 'Ophelia'
ranks 'Opalite' at no.4 with 250,000
points (down 42%) and 'Elizabeth
Taylor' at no.7 with 172,000 points
(down 56%). According to our
chart-rules only the three most
successful songs from an album
appear with the full points, the
fourth song gets
a 10% deduction, the
fifth 20% the sixth 30%, etc.
'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 - rises back at
no.2 (after eleven weeks at no.1)
with 434,000 points (up 3% with
337,000 points by streaming, 37,000
points by sales, and 60,000 points
by airplay).
Alex Warren's 'Ordinary' catapults
back from no.6 to no.3 with 251,000
points (the same point-level as last
week with 138,000 points by
streaming, 21,000 points by sales,
and 92,000 points by airplay). The
song tops the (non-published) Global
Airplay Chart for a 19th week in a
row.
Outside our
current Top 40 waiting among other
'Yellow' by Coldplay at no.57 and
'Shiny' by Easykid & Dysbit at no.59 for their first appearance
on the hitlist. Taylor Swift's 12th
studio album 'The Life Of A
Showgirl' started last week with
stellar 5,371,000 equivalent sales,
the second highest weekly frame in
history! Only overtaken by Adele's
'25', which launched a little bit
higher, nearly 10 years ago - in the
calendar week 49, 2015 - with first
week global sales of 5,706,000
(pure) sales. This week 'The Life Of
A Showgirl' generates another
481,000 consumption units (down
massive 91% compared to its initial
week with 315,000 points by
streaming + 166,000 points by
sales). With a total of 5,85 million
sales it's easily the most
successful set of the year 2025. So
it's the fourth time (!!) in a row
that Taylor Swift leads a Global
Album Year-End Chart. By the way,
Adele's '25' got 2,34 million sales
in its second week at retail. Back
to this week's hitlist: The
soundtrack to 'K-pop Demon Hunters'
sails back to no.2 with 141,000
comsumption units (up 6,5% with
110,000 points by streaming + 31,000
points by sales). Rounds out the top
three is currently Sabrina
Carpenter's 'Man's Best Friend' with
84,000 equivalent sales (down 12,5%
with 68,000 points by streaming +
16,000 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 13,000 / 17,054,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 17,000 / 7,215,000, '21' by
Adele 13,000 / 34,085,000, '25' by
Adele 10,000 / 25,883,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 7,034,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 31,000 /
11,435,000, 'Borondo' by Beéle
44,000 / 1,075,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
37,000 /
4,120,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 12,000 / 2,404,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 11,000 / 2,218,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 22,000 / 22,392,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,877,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 30,000
/ 3,639,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor
Swift 38,000 / 12,538,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 15,000 / 1,773,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 /
9,926,000, 'GNX' by Kendrick Lamar
23,000 / 3,687,000, 'Guts' by Olivia
Rodrigo 23,000 / 5,274,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 5,106,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 32,000 /
2,316,000, 'I've Tried Everything
But Therapy' by Teddy Swims 37,000 /
3,712,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 20,000 /
2,569,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
46,000 / 2,310,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
23,000 / 1,545,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 25,000 /
13,001,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 26,000 /
2,499,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 25,000 / 9,919,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 13,000 / 6,940,000, 'Rosie' by
Rosé 16,000 / 2,174,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 23,000 / 1,539,000, 'So Close
To What' by Tate McRae 47,000 /
2,010,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 35,000 / 9,802,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 35,000
/ 5,529,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 23,000 / 10,380,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 33,000 / 4,362,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
34,000 / 3,526,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
46,000 / 11,199,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 12,000 / 5,716,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 16,000 /
13,089,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 60
YEARS AGO
... "Yesterday" is often interpreted as a melancholic ballad about
lost love. Paul McCartney later suggested that the lyric 'I said
something wrong' may have been inspired not by romance but by a childhood
memory of mocking his mother for sounding 'posh'. McCartney's vocal and
acoustic guitar, together with a string quartet, was essentially the
band's first solo performance. It remains popular today and is one of
the most covered songs in history of recorded music. The final recording
was so different from other works by the Beatles that the band members
vetoed the song's release as a single in United Kingdom. But in the rest
of the world is was a big smash, published on September 13, 1965, it
reached the no.1 position in the United States, the Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden,
Norway, and Finland, furthermore the runner-up slot in Australia and New Zealand.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
A week after Taylor
Swift monopolized the top
12 spots on the Billboard
Hot 100 — all from her new
album, The
Life of a Showgirl —
the superstar now scores
eight of the top 10, while
all 12 songs from the set
rank in the chart’s top 14.
Swift’s Hot 100 haul is led
by “The Fate of Ophelia,” at
No. 1 for a second week.
“The Fate of Ophelia” drew
49.1 million official
streams (down 47%) and 42.2
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up
10%) and sold 11,000 in the
United States Oct. 10-16.
Notably, the song sports an
individual sales total for
the first time, after no
songs were available for
purchase à la carte during The
Life of a Showgirl’s
first week of release; in
its second week, only “The
Fate of Ophelia” was. The
single launches at No. 1 on
the Digital Song Sales chart,
becoming Swift’s
record-extending 30th
leader; adds a second week
atop Streaming Songs;
and climbs 7-5 on Radio
Songs,
becoming just the third
title to reach the top five
in two weeks or fewer since
the ranking began measuring
all-format airplay in
December 1998, joining
Adele’s “Easy on Me” (one
week, 2021) and Lady Gaga’s
“Born This Way” (two, 2011).
A week earlier, “The Fate of
Ophelia” drew 92.5 million
streams — the most for a
song in a single week since
all YouTube user-generated
content (UGC) was
removed from chart
calculations in September
2020. “The Fate of Ophelia”
became Swift’s 13th career
Hot 100 No. 1, tying her for
the fourth-most in the
chart’s archives. Two songs
break up Swift’s 12 in the
Hot 100’s top 14 spots, led
by Huntr/x’s “Golden,” from
Netflix’s
record-slaying animated
movie KPop
Demon Hunters.
It rebounds 13-3, following
eight weeks at No. 1
beginning in August. Plus,
Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,”
which led the Hot 100 for 10
weeks starting in May, jumps
14-4, while ruling Radio
Songs for an 18th week, up
1% to 78.5 million in
audience — a new weekly best
for the track. It also ties
for the third-longest
command in the airplay
chart’s 35-year history,
matching the No. 1 runs of
Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers”
(2023) and Goo Goo Dolls’
“Iris” (1998); only
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” (27 weeks, 2024-25)
and The Weeknd’s “Blinding
Lights” (26 weeks, 2020)
have led longer. Taylor
Swift's The Life of a
Showgirl spends a second
week atop the Billboard 200
albums chart (dated Oct.
25), with 338,000 equivalent
album units earned in the
United States in the week
ending Oct. 16, according to
Luminate. That’s down 92%
compared to the album’s
modern-era-record debut with
4.002 million units a week
ago. Showgirl’s second week
is the fifth-largest week of
2025 for any album. Further,
it’s the largest second week
for an album since Swift’s
last project, The Tortured
Poets Department, earned
439,000 in its sophomore
frame (May 11, 2024, chart).
Of The Life of a Showgirl’s
338,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, SEA units
comprise 236,000 (down 55%,
equaling 307.59 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks — it
holds at No. 1 on Top
Streaming Albums for a
second week), album sales
comprise 101,000 (down 97% —
it’s No. 1 on Top Album
Sales for a second week) and
TEA units comprise 1,000. It
its first week, none of the
album’s tracks were
available to purchase
individually; in its second
week, its promoted single,
and Billboard Hot 100 No. 1,
“The Fate of Ophelia” was.
The rest of the top five on
the Billboard 200 are all
non-moving former No. 1s:
The Kpop Demon Hunters
soundtrack is No. 2 (104,000
equivalent album units, up
9%); Morgan Wallen’s I’m the
Problem is No. 3 (79,000,
down 4%); Cardi B’s AM I THE
DRAMA? is No. 4 (50,000,
down 21%) and Sabrina
Carpenter’s Man’s Best
Friend is No. 5 (45,000,
down 10%). Olivia Dean’s The
Art of Loving hits a new
high, rising 7-6 in its
third week on the list
(36,000 equivalent album
units earned, up 5%). The
set debuted at No. 8 two
weeks ago. It’s only the
third album to debut in the
top 10 this year and rise to
a new peak in a later week,
following the KPop Demon
Hunters soundtrack (No. 8
debut, ultimately reaching
No. 1 in its 12th week) and
Bad Bunny’s DeBÍ TiRAR MáS
FOToS (No. 2 debut; No. 1 a
week later). Bad Bunny's
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS falls
6-7 on the latest Billboard
200 (33,000 equivalent album
units, down 19%) while SZA’s
former leader SOS rises 9-8
(32,000, up 1%), Alex
Warren’s You’ll Be Alright,
Kid slips 8-9 (nearly
32,000, down 1%), and Morgan
Wallen’s former No. 1 One
Thing at a Time is steady at
No. 10 (31,000, down 1%).
Record Of The Month
'Where Is My Husband?' is
the new smash by British
singer / songwriter
Rachel Agatha Keen, known
professionally as Raye.
The song was billed as the
lead single of her upcoming
second studio album.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Olivia Dean's 'Man I Need'
climbs back at no.2
Monday, October 20, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
A week after making the
biggest debut on any song
for nearly four years, The
Fate Of Ophelia continues at
No.1 for Taylor Swift,
albeit with consumption off
31.93% week-on-week at
90,198 units (2,683 digital
downloads and 87,515
sales-equivalent streams).
The Fate Of Ophelia was
followed by two
more
tracks from Swift’s new album, The Life Of A Showgirl (TLOAS), last week
becoming the first artist in chart history to simultaneously land debuts
in all of the chart’s medal positions.
The others suffer bigger dips in consumption, and
lose their top three perches this week, with Opalite falling 2-4 (54,613
sales) and Elizabeth Taylor descending 3-6 (46,520 sales), losing 41.29%
and 48.67% respectively, week-on-week. The remaining nine songs on TLOAS
continue to be ‘starred-out’ under primary artist rules between No.4 and
No.6. Overall consumption of tracks on TLOAS dips from 915,778 units
(94,384,360 audio streams, 3,745,150 video streams) to 461,053 units
(47,466,076 audio streams, 1,845,680 video streams, 2,683 digital
downloads) – a decline of 49.65%. Swift’s career track consumption now
stands at a staggering 108,760,613 units.
In the whole of chart history, Swift is the only
artist to debut at No.1 on the singles and albums chart
simultaneously
and hang on to both summits the following week, doing so now with The
Fate Of Ophelia and The Life Of A Showgirl, but also in 2022 with
Anti-Hero and Midnights. Everyone else with two consecutive weeks atop
both charts was either No.1 on one or the other already, or debuted
lower on one or both. As the only artist to do it, and now to have done
so twice, Swift has a double double ‘double’.
Taking advantage of Swift’s reduced consumption,
former No.1s Man I Need (4-2, 67,407 sales) by Olivia Dean and Golden
(5-3, 65,795 sales) by Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon
Hunters Cast return to the top three. Dean’s song has suffered a dip in
streams two weeks in a row, and will fall into ACR unless it perks up
next week, whereas Golden, after two weeks of decline, increased streams
in the latest frame, and is safe for at least three more weeks.
Dean also reaches a new peak with So Easy (To Fall
In Love), which improves 12-8 (31,686 sales) a fortnight after debuting
at No.9, and regains lost ground with Nice To Each Other (8-7, 31,694
sales).
Meanwhile, Golden’s fellow Kpop Demon Hunters hits
by Saja Boys, Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo, samUIL Lee &
Kpop Demon Hunters Cast have mixed fortunes this week, with Your Idol
slipping 9-10 (27,394 sales) but Soda Pop – last week’s No.7 -
‘starred-out’. The latter’s demise comes after it fell into ACR. That
slashed its consumption from unadjusted 33,968 to 17,260 – less than
Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon Hunters Cast’s How It’s
Done, which peaked 13 weeks ago at No.29, and is now a re-entry as the
album’s third track, at No.12 on consumption of 21,995 units. If ACR and
primary artist rules were scrapped, this week’s Top 40 would include 12
tracks by Swift, six by Dean, six from Kpop Demon Hunters, three by
Sombr, three by Sabrina Carpenter and 10 others.
Where Is My Husband! (6-5, 48,231 sales) by Raye
and 12 To 12 (10-9, 28,248 sales) by Sombr complete the Top 10.
Overall singles consumption is up 0.05% week-on-week to 31,039,026
units, their highest level for 13 weeks, and 4.27% above same week 2024
consumption of 29,767,502 units. Paid-for sales are down 4.95%
week-on-week at 254,358, 9.10% below same week 2024 sales of 279,816.
The Life Of A Showgirl (TLOAS) cruises to an
extremely comfortable second week at No.1 for Taylor Swift, despite
consumption dropping 88.82% week-on-week.
Of course, after shattering her personal best last
week when it sold 423,444 copies, TLOAS was always going to drop this
week. While it posts lower second week consumption than The Tortured
Poets Department, with 5,342 CDs, 2,184 vinyl albums, 41 cassettes,
1,277 digital downloads and 38,512 sales-equivalent streams contributing
to an overall total 47,356 units, the album outpaces its three nearest
challengers combined. TLOAS earns Swift her 34th week at No.1 in total,
including 30 so far in the 2020s.
Swift’s career album consumption has now climbed
to 12,240,125 units, while her eponymous 2006 debut also reaches a new
landmark, joining its 15 successors in achieving platinum status for
passing 300,000 sales. Released in America in October 2006, Taylor Swift
(the album, that is) didn’t register its first sale on the OCC database
for 13 months, and first showed up in the Top 200 in August 2009, when
it debuted at No.138. It reached its peak position – No.81 – a fortnight
later. As Swift’s career has blossomed, it has continued to attract low
level support, with 446 units in the latest frame finally helping it to
go platinum.
Twenty-five years after his debut solo album,
Alone With Everybody topped the chart, singer/songwriter Richard
Ashcroft – who recently supported Oasis on their Live ’25 tour – extends
his unbroken run of consecutive top five albums to seven, with new
album, Lovin’ You, debuting at No.3 (14,307 sales). The 54-year-old
famously fronted The Verve, who also had two No.1 albums. Lovin’ You
replaces TLOAS atop the CD, vinyl and cassette format charts, and
includes adaptations of two familiar hits from the past – Lover nicely
interpolates Joan Armatrading’s 1976 hit Love And Affection, while the
title track takes similarly successful liberties with Mason Williams’
1968 hit Classical Gas. His 2000 debut solo album, Alone With Everybody,
remains Ashcroft’s only No.1 in his own right, and his biggest solo
seller, with to-date consumption of 460,440 units.
The rest of the Top 10: The Art Of Loving (3-2,
19,568 sales) by Olivia Dean, Man’s Best Friend (4-4, 11,916 sales) by
Sabrina Carpenter, The Highlights (7-5, 7,787 sales) by The Weeknd,
+-=÷× Tour Collection (9-6, 7,591 sales) by Ed Sheeran, 50 Years: Don’t
Stop (8-7, 7,495 sales) by Fleetwood Mac, Times Flies 1994-2009 (6-8,
7,078 sales) by Oasis, You’ll Be Alright, Kid (10-9, 7,073 sales) by
Alex Warren, and (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? (2-10, 6,681 sales)
by Oasis.
Overall album sales are down 12.51% week-on-week to 2,573,931 units,
4.73% above same week 2024 sales of 2,457,665. Physical product accounts
for 285,770 sales, 11.10% of the total.