Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
Justin Bieber
defends no.1
Sunday, May 3, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Justin
Bieber was a headliner for the
famous Coachella-festival 2026. Now
five of his former hits are back on
the Top 40, led by 'Beauty And A
Beat', a collaboration with Nicky
Minaj, which remains at the pole position of
this week's Global Track Chart with
301,000 points, a 13% decline
compared to the previous week.
Broken down by sectors the song gets
258,000 points by streaming (down
13%), 40,000
points by sales (down 9%), but only
3,000
points by airplay (up 5%). 'Beauty And A
Beat' was originally released in
October 2012, and peaked at no.8 in
the calendar week 2, 2013. It's
Justin Bieber's first no.1 since
'Stay', his collab with Kid Laroi,
which was 10 weeks at the summit
between August and October 2021.
After their 18 months of mandatory
South Korean military service, the
members of the legendary boy group
BTS (Bangtan Boys) celebrating a
sensational comeback on the
worldwide hitlists. Five weeks ago
seven tracks from their new set
'Arirang' stormed in
the Global Top 40, this week are
still three songs on the tally and
'Swim' remains as the band's most
successful tune at no.2 (after four
weeks at the top) with 268,000
points, a 10% decline with 197,000
points by streaming, 27,000 points
by sales, and 44,000 points by
airplay. The musical biographical
film 'Michael' ensures that two of
Michael Jackson's biggest hits
returns to the Top 40: 'Billie Jean'
shoots back at no.8 with 167,000
points and 'Beat It' returns at
no.23 with 121,000 points. 'Billie
Jean' was seven weeks at number one
in March / April 1983 and reached
no.2 on the Year-End Chart 1983.
'Beat It' peaked at the runner-up
slot in June of the same year and
placed at no.9 of the Year-End
Chart.
Outside our Top 40
waiting among other
'Rein Me In' by Sam Fender & Olivia
Dean at no.53, 'Earrings' by Malcolm
Todd at no.56, and
'(When You Gonna) Give It Up To Me'
by Sean Paul & Keyshia Cole at no.58
for their first appearance on
the hitlist. 'We On Fire', the
fourth extended play by Japanese boy
group &Team, storms atop the Global
Album Chart with 520,000 equivalent
sales, most of it consists of
physical sales. It's the third
number one set for the band
globally. Noah Kahan's fourth studio
effort 'The Great Divide' jumps to
the runner-up slot with 443,000
consumption units (199,000 points by
streaming + 244,000 points by
sales). His former album 'Stick
Season' was and is a huge seller
with 6,68 million so far (no.7 on
the Year-End Chart 2024), driven by
the single with the same title
(no.23 on the Year-End Chart 2024).
Rounds out this week's top three is
another boy band from Asia: 'Ode To
Love', the second studio album by
NCT Wish, bows with 380,000
equivalent sales (here, too, almost
all sales are physical). 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 / 17,467,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
7,566,000, '21' by Adele 12,000 /
34,441,000, '25' by Adele 9,000 /
26,161,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,275,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 22,000 / 12,187,000,
'Borondo' by Beéle 17,000 /
1,916,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
12,000 / 4,655,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,491,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 18,000 / 22,919,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
24,000 / 5,676,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 8,000 / 7,136,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 15,000 / 4,241,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 17,000 / 13,257,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
13,000 / 10,392,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 12,000 / 4,265,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 28,000 /
5,891,000, 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' by
Billie Eilish 40,000 / 8,164,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 17,000 / 2,949,000, 'I
Barely Know Her' by Sombr 41,000 /
2,121,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 20,000 / 4,463,000,
'Lux' by Rosalíá 18,000 /
903,000, the soundtrack to 'K-pop
Demon Hunters' 48,000 / 4,677,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
21,000 / 3,290,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 12,000 / 13,485,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 30,000 / 10,630,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,215,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie
15,000 / 2,112,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 46,000 /
7,347,000, 'So Close To What' by
Tate McRae 32,000 / 3,536,000, 'SOS'
by SZA 50,000 / 13,894,000, 'Starboy' by The
Weeknd 25,000 / 10,698,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 43,000 /
6,682,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 17,000 / 11,020,000,
'The Life Of A Showgirl' by Taylor
Swift 50,000 / 9,003,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 17,000 /
5,040,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 16,000 / 4,277,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 29,000 / 12,177,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 30,000 /
1,612,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 12,000 / 13,498,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 40
YEARS AGO
... "Kiss" was released on February
5, 1986, as the lead single from
Prince's eighth studio album, Parade
(1986). The song started as a rough
acoustic demo, with a verse and
chorus written by Prince. He gave
his demo to the funk band Mazarati.
But in the end, Prince decided to
finish the song and added the
signature guitar and falsetto vocal.
The distinctive "ah-wah-ah" backing
vocals were taken from 60s icon
Brenda Lee. "Kiss" went to the
number one position in the United
States and reached the Top 10 in
United Kingdom, Germany, Canada,
Australia, the Netherlands, Belgium,
Switzerland, Austria, Ireland, and
New Zealand.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Choosin' Texas'
returns to No. 1 for an 8th
week
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Ella Langley's “Choosin’
Texas” rebounds a spot for
an eighth week at No. 1 on
the Billboard Hot 100. The
song became Langley’s first
Hot 100 leader and stakes
its fifth distinct stay
at No. 1, previously leading
on charts dated Feb. 14;
March 7 and 21-28; and April
11-25. It ties for the most
separate No. 1 stays over a
single release cycle,
matching those for Morgan
Wallen’s “Last Night” in
2023 and Harry Styles’ “As
It Was” in 2022. Overall,
Mariah Carey’s “All I Want
for Christmas Is You” leads
with eight ascents to No. 1
in 2019-25. “Choosin’
Texas,” on Sawgod /
Columbia Records, with
Triple Tigers promoting it
to country radio, drew 26.6
million official streams
(down 5% week over week) and
44.7 million radio airplay
audience impressions (up 1%)
and sold 8,000 (down 8%) in
the United States April
24-30. The single rebounds
one place for a ninth week
at No. 1 on the Streaming
Songs chart;
holds at its No. 6 high on
Radio Songs;
and keeps at No. 2 after
five weeks atop Digital Song
Sales. Langley’s “Be Her” is
steady at No. 5 on the Hot
100, after reaching No. 4,
and her “I Can’t Love You
Anymore,” with Morgan
Wallen, debuts
at No. 7. The duet, released
April 24, arrives with 16.7
million streams, 10.8
million in radio reach and
10,000 sold. Langley adds
her third Hot 100 top 10,
and first to debut in the
region. With all three in
the top 10 together, she
becomes the first artist
that has primarily recorded
country music to chart three
initial career top 10s in
the bracket simultaneously.
In part reflecting Langley
and Wallen’s high profiles,
“I Can’t Love You Anymore”
makes a historic start: It’s
the first song by two
core-country acts each with
lead billing to debut in the
Hot 100’s top 10. The last
such top 10 at all
(regardless of debut rank)?
Kenny Rogers and Dolly
Parton’s iconic “Islands in
the Stream.” The Bee
Gees-written duet dominated
for two weeks in 1983. Noah
Kahan’s “Doors” debuts at
No. 9 on the Hot 100, led by
17.8 million first-week
streams. The song is the
singer-songwriter’s third
Hot 100 top 10, after “The
Great Divide” (No. 6 peak in
February) and “Stick Season”
(No. 9, 2024). “Doors” and
the former are from his new
album, The
Great Divide,
which blasts in at No. 1 on
the Billboard 200 with the
biggest week for a rock
album, by equivalent album
units (389,000), since the
chart began measuring by
that metric in 2014. Bruno
Mars’ “I Just Might” rises
3-2 after three weeks atop
the Hot 100 in January to
mid-March. It tops Radio
Songs for an 11th week, with
78.1 million in audience (up
1%). Like Langley, Olivia
Dean charts multiple songs
in the Hot 100’s top 10:
“Man I Need” lifts 4-3, off
its No. 2 peak, and “So Easy
(To Fall in Love)” rebounds
a spot to its No. 6 best.
Olivia Rodrigo’s “Drop Dead”
falls to No. 4 on the Hot
100 a week after it debuted
at no. 1. Alex Warren’s
“Ordinary” dips 6-8 on the
Hot 100 after 10 weeks at
No. 1 last June-August. It
spends a 52nd week in the
top 10, becoming just the
fourth song to reach the
milestone; Teddy Swims’
“Lose Control” leads with 80
top 10 weeks in 2024-25.
Rounding out the Hot 100’s
top 10, Kehlani’s “Folded”
keeps at No. 10 after
reaching No. 6. For a
seventh consecutive week,
seven songs by women place
in the Hot 100’s top 10.
It’s the longest streak of
seven or more concurrent top
10s by women acts since an
eight-week stretch in
August-October 2014, which
was highlighted by No. 1s
for Taylor Swift (“Shake It
Off”) and Megan Trainor
(“All About That Bass”) and
featured women monopolizing
the top five for a record
five consecutive weeks. Noah
Kahan achieves his first No.
1 album on the Billboard
200 chart as The
Great Divide debuts
atop the list dated May 9.
The set, Kahan’s fourth
full-length studio project,
earned 389,000 equivalent
album units in the United
States in the week ending
April 30, according to
Luminate. That marks Kahan’s
biggest week by units, the
largest week for a rock
album by units since the
chart began measuring by
units at the end of 2014 and
the third-biggest week of
2026 among all albums. Of The
Great Divide’s
389,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, SEA units
comprise 212,000 (equaling
215.37 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s tracks, Kahan’s best
streaming week and the
biggest streaming week of
2026; it debuts at No. 1 on
Top Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 175,000 (his
best sales week; it debuts
at No. 1 on Top Album Sales)
and TEA units comprise
2,000. With 389,000
equivalent album units
earned, The
Great Divide scores
the biggest week for a rock
album since the Billboard
200 began measuring by units
in December 2014. It
surpasses the previous high
by a rock set in that span,
by the No. 1 debut of Dave
Matthews Band’s Come
Tomorrow,
with 292,000 units (June 23,
2018). Plus, with 175,000
copies sold in pure album
sales, the set notches the
largest sales week for a
rock album in nearly seven
years, since Tool’s Fear
Inoculum bowed
at No. 1 with 248,000 (Sept.
14, 2019). Vinyl purchases
comprise 118,000 of The
Great Divide’s
first week, which is both
Kahan’s best week ever on
vinyl and the best sales
week on vinyl for a rock
album in the modern era. A
pair of former No. 1s
follows Kahan on the latest
Billboard 200, as Ella
Langley’s Dandelion drops
a spot to No. 2 (112,000
equivalent album units, up
6%) and Morgan Wallen’s I’m
the Problem dips
2-3 (81,000, down 3%).
Kehlani captures her fourth
top 10-charted album on the
Billboard 200 as her
self-titled set debuts at
No. 4 with 69,000 equivalent
album units earned — the
biggest debut for an R&B
album by a woman in 2026. Of
that sum, SEA units comprise
45,000 (equaling 45.37
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs;
it debuts at No. 5 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 24,000 (it
debuts at No. 2 on Top Album
Sales) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
BTS’ former No. 1 Arirang falls
4-5 on the latest Billboard
200 (56,000 equivalent album
units, down 8%), while
Justin Bieber’s Swag slips
5-6 (47,000, down 22%).
Michael Jackson’s Thriller re-enters
the Billboard 200 at No. 7
with 45,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 425%),
following the April 24
release of the Michael biopic
in movie theaters and its
blockbuster
opening weekend at the U.S.
and Canada box office. Thriller,
which spent 37 weeks at No.
1 in 1983-84 — the most
weeks at No. 1 for an album
by a singular artist — was
last in the top 10 on the
Dec. 3, 2022-dated chart,
when it jumped 115-7 after
its 40th anniversary
reissue. Olivia Dean’s The
Art of Loving falls
6-8 on the latest Billboard
200 (43,000 equivalent album
units, down 7%), Wallen’s
chart-topping One
Thing at a Time drops
10-9 (39,000, down 2%) and
Kahan’s Stick
Season steps
11-10 (38,000, down 2%).
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)
'Rein Me In' rules a ninth
week
Monday, May 4, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
It’s another banner week for
Olivia Dean who topples one
namesake, draws level with a
long-standing record by
another, and racks up
another hit. Not to be
reined in yet, Dean,
alongside Sam Fender,
reclaims the No.1 slot with
Rein Me In. Increasing
consumption 3.40% to 58,189
units (44 7-inch vinyl,
658
digital downloads and 57,487 sales-equivalent streams), the track benefits from
a slump by Drop Dead, which debuted at No.1 last week for Olivia Rodrigo but now
slips to No.2 with a 39.99% dip in consumption to 39,276 units.
On its 28th week in the Top 10 and 45th consecutive week in the Top 40, Rein Me
In secures its ninth week at No.1, equalling the record for a sung male/female
duet, set way back in 1978 by You’re The One That I Want by John Travolta &
Olivia Newton-John. Umbrella by Rihanna feat. Jay-Z spent 10 weeks at No.1 but
Jay-Z, who goes Awol after 33 seconds, only raps, not sings.
Dean’s other former No.1, Man I Need re-enters the Top 10 (11-9, 25,730 sales)
on its 37th straight week in the Top 40, and is the only other track in the top
tier to increase consumption. So Easy (To Fall In Love) also increases
consumption, as it falls (22-24, 15,451 sales). Meanwhile, Baby Steps – which,
under primary artist rules, has been ’starred-out’ in
each of the previous 30
weeks that have elapsed since its release on Dean’s The Art Of Loving album –
finally makes its debut (No.31, 13,527 sales), becoming her 12th hit, after
being released on 7-inch vinyl (525 sales). With to-date consumption of 423,506
units, it is the 10th song by Dean to go gold.
Although the Coachella effect is fading, Justin Bieber continues at No.3 (35,168
sales) with Beauty And A Beat (feat. Nicki Minaj), while there is a dip for
Daisies (5-6, 31,272 sales) and a re-entry, also on falling consumption, for
Yukon (No.27, 14,098 sales) as it eclipses Baby to become Bieber’s third
most-consumed track this frame.
There’s jockeying for positions but no new peaks in the Top 10, the rest of
which reads: Dracula (4-4, 34,831 sales) by Tame Impala, Fever Dream (6-5,
32,545 sales) by Alex Warren, Homewrecker (7-7, 20,689 sales) by Sombr, Lush
Life (9-8, 26,290 sales) by Zara Larsson and Babydoll (10-10, 25,409 sales) by
Dominic Fike, whose other hit, White Keys (8-11, 25,215 sales) is the only track
to lose its Top 10 status this week.
Overall singles consumption is up 3.03% week-on-week to 33,723,786 units, 6.18%
above same week 2025 sales of 31,760,641 units. That’s its highest tally since
it reached the all-time high of 34,498,059 units 18 weeks ago, in the week
ending on Christmas Day last year. Paid-for sales are down 19.20% week-on-week
at 269,905, 3.15% above same week 2025 sales of 261,654.
Bridging the great divide between our two nations, Noah Kahan becomes
the first American to top the UK album chart thus far in 2026, with more
than a third of the year already gone.
Kahan’s fourth studio album, The Great Divide cruises to a No.1 debut
after achieving the second-highest first-week sale of the year, with
consumption of 55,826 units (16,967 CDs, 16,351 vinyl albums, 612
digital downloads and 21,896 sales-equivalent streams). Only Kiss All
The Time: Disco, Occasionally by Harry Styles has done better in 2026,
with an opening frame of 183,045 when it debuted at No.1 seven weeks
ago.
The 29-year-old from Vermont wrote or co-wrote all of the songs on The
Great Divide, which has already spun-off three Top 20 hits – the title
track, Porch Light and Doors, the latter making its debut this week.
Kahan’s breakthrough third album, Stick Season, also reached
No.1…eventually, doing so 69 weeks after its release, and 35 weeks after
it first charted, on the day its title track was No.1 single for the
seventh week in a row, and the day after he completed a UK tour in
February 2024.
Stick Season had first week consumption of 775 units, achieving its
highest weekly tally (21,145 units) as it topped the chart for the first
and only time. Present in the chart for 151 consecutive weeks since its
debut, the album has filled every position in the Top 25, and
accumulated consumption of 818,095 units – the 28th highest of any album
in the 2020s – including 5,327 in the latest frame as it dips 14-20.
Kahan’s 2019 debut album, Busyhead, has never made the Top 200, but has
to-date consumption of 91,746 units, while 2021 follow-up I Was/I Am
made its only Top 200 appearance in the wake of Record Store Day in
2024, reaching No.70 after being issued in a limited coloured vinyl
edition. Its to-date consumption: 35,404 units.
Considerably more popular here than in their US homeland where none of
their studio albums to date has charted higher than here, Foo Fighters
might have hoped for their seventh UK No.1 with 12th studio set, Your
Favorite Toy. It was never really in the race against Kahan but debuts
at No.2 (15,980 sales) nevertheless, earning them a creditable 14th Top
10 and 18th Top 75 entry across studio, live and hits sets.
Topping the box office chart despite a critical drubbing, Michael
Jackson biopic Michael has reignited massive interest in the late ‘king
of pop’, who died nearly 17 years ago. The official soundtrack set,
Michael: Songs From The Motion Picture leads the way, debuting at No.4
(13,244 sales). 2003 compilation Number Ones re-enters at No.5 (9,267
sales), while 1982’s Thriller surges 65-8 (7,251 sales), and 1987’s Bad
rockets 52-13 (6,302 sales).
The only Jackson album in the chart heading the wrong way is 2005
compilation The Essential, which spent six weeks at No.1 following his
death in 2009, but which slides 5-14 (6,268 sales) this week. The cause
of that blip is the complicated relationship between the track listings
of Michael, Number Ones and The Essential, with pure sales order
dictating where the streams from common tracks (both solo and
Jacksons/Jackson 5 material) are directed for chart purposes. In this
particular case, The Essential is the loser. For the record, with pure
sales of 4,124, all of the soundtrack’s 13 tracks contributed to its
streams. With 1,151 pure sales, Number Ones came next but was denied
streaming points from the nine tracks the two albums share. With 388
pure sales, The Essential is the last of the three, and was not
allocated streams from any tracks it shared with either of the other
two.
All former No.1s, Thriller and Number Ones are both at their highest
chart positions since just after Jackson’s death in 2009, while Bad was
last higher in 2012, immediately after the release of a 25th anniversary
edition.
Rounding out the Top 10: The Art Of Loving (3-3, 14,546 sales) by Olivia
Dean, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (7-6, 8,287 sales) by Fleetwood Mac, You’ll
Be Alright, Kid (10-7, 8,204 sales) by Alex Warren, +-=÷× Tour
Collection (11-9, 6,903 sales) by Ed Sheeran and Kiss All The Time:
Disco, Occasionally (9-10, 6,817 sales) by Harry Styles.
Overall album sales are down 1.04% week-on-week to 2,692,340 units,
2.90% above same week 2025 sales of 2,616,587. Physical product accounts
for 314,604 sales, 11.69% of the total.