Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Die With A
Smile' reigns a 12th week
Sunday, April 27, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Where are the big new hits? A
third of the year is over, but only
15 songs from this week's Top 40
were released this year. The most
successful hit of these is 'DtMF' by
Bad Bunny, which peaked at no.3 in
the calendar week 4 and generated a
total of 3,396,000 points so far. In the current
Top 10 are only three songs, which
were released this year, led by Alex
Warren's 'Ordinary' at no.3 with
223,000 points. 19 songs of the Top
40 ranking since 26 weeks or more on
the hitlist, that's a new record and
a very unusual situation!
The average length of stay of all
Top 40 hits this week amounts 24,5
weeks, also a historic record! In the calendar week 37, 2024 (dated
to September 14),
'Die With A Smile' by
Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars ruled the
Global Track Chart for the first
time. Now the song
tops the tally for a 12th
week with 310,000
points, a 6% decline compared to the
previous week. The Grammy-decorated 'Die
With A Smile' breaks more and more
records... never
before a hit was
such a long time at no.1 on
Spotify's streaming chart and also
on YouTube's hitlist. On our
ALL TIME CHART
it ranks currently at no.11
with a total of
15,192,000 points and it has a big
potential to come dangerously close to the top
spots there,
where Elton John's 'Candle In The
Wind 1997' leads since 27 years with
a total of 21,314,000 points. The
Weeknd's 'Blinding Lights' from 2019
ranks at the runner-up slot on that
list with 21,290,000 points and
Mariah Carey's eternal carol 'All I
Want For Christmas Is You' from 1994
holds no.3 with 19,433,000 points.
Broken down by
sectors 'Die With A Smile' gets
225,000 points by streaming
(down 7%), 36,000 points by sales
(down 1%), and 49,000 points by
airplay (down 6%).
'Apt.' by
South Korean singer,
songwriter Rosé in collaboration
with Bruno Mars ranks still at the
runner-up slot, after 21 weeks at
number one, with 292,000 points
(down 6%, with 187,000 points by
streaming, 32,000 points by sales,
and 73,000 points by airplay).
By the way, without 'Apt.', 'Die
With A Smile' would have been
number one now for an unbelievable
33rd week!
Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'Multo' by Cup Of Joe at
no.41, 'Morena' by Neton Vega & Peso
Pluma at no.47, 'Vitamina' by
Jombriel | DFZM | Jotta at no.55,
and 'No One Noticed' by The Marias
at no.59 for their first appearance on the
hitlist. NCT Wish, the sixth and
final sub-unit of the South Korean
boy band NCT, shoots atop this
week's Global Album Chart with their
second extended play 'Poppop'. The
set gets 278,000 equivalent sales
(almost all of these are physical
sales). The second and final
new-entry on this week's Top 20 list
comes from Ryôsuke Yamada, Japanese
singer, actor and member of Hey!
Say! Jump. 'Red' is his first solo
effort, which starts at no.2
globally with 118,000 consumption
units (only 2,000 points by
streaming + 116,000 points by
sales). SZA's 'SOS' it's gradually becoming
a classic. Placed for the first time
in December 2022, rounds out still the
top three with another 107,000 equivalent
sales (up 4%, with 103,000 points by streaming +
4,000 points by sales). It's the
99th week for the set on our tally
with a total of 10,19 million sales
so far. 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 10,000 / 16,698,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 22,000 / 6,770,000, '21' by
Adele 16,000 / 33,743,000, '25' by
Adele 13,000 / 25,617,000, '30' by
Adele 10,000 / 6,807,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 25,000 /
10,794,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 26,000 / 1,964,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 14,000 / 1,880,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 22,000 / 21,784,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 22,000 / 2,269,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 9,000 /
6,388,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 12,000 /
6,623,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 45,000
/ 2,664,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 24,000 / 1,222,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 /
9,530,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
29,000 / 4,676,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 11,000 / 7,471,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,787,000, 'I've Tried
Everything But Therapy (Part 1)' by
Teddy Swims 47,000 / 2,647,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 43,000 /
1,891,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 31,000 / 11,926,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 24,000 /
12,414,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 20,000 /
1,995,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 46,000 / 9,078,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 14,000 / 6,581,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 40,000 / 1,568,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 31,000 / 8,967,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 39,000
/ 4,731,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 31,000 / 9,718,000, 'Un Verano Sin Ti' by Bad Bunny
46,000 / 8,822,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 22,000 / 5,325,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 24,000 /
12,630,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 30 YEARS
AGO
... "Back For Good" was released on March 27, 1995,
as the second single from the band's third studio effort Nobody Else
(1994). The fantastic blue-eyed soul ballad won British Single Of The
Year at the 1996 Brit Awards. Gary Barlow claimed he wrote the song in
only fifteen minutes. However, "Back For Good" catapulted atop the
hitlist in United Kingdom with nearly 350,000 single sales in its
initial week, so this made it one of the fastest selling singles of the
year there. Furthermore the song went to the summit in Germany, Canada,
Australia, Spain, Norway, Ireland, and reached the Top 10 in many other
countries, even in the United States.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Luther' leads Hot 100
for a ninth week
Tuesday, April 22, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Kendrick
Lamar and SZA’s “Luther”
rules the Billboard Hot
100 songs chart for a ninth
total
and consecutive week. The
single, whose title honors
late R&B legend Luther
Vandross,
who is sampled on the track,
became Lamar’s
sixth No. 1 and SZA’s third.
Lamar and SZA each extend
their longest career Hot 100
reigns with the song, whose
official video premiered April
11. Meanwhile, “Luther”
passes 24kGoldn’s “Mood”
(featuring iann dior), which
led for eight weeks in
2020-21, for the sole
second-longest Hot 100
command among rap hits this
decade, after only Roddy
Ricch’s “The Box,” which
dominated for 11 weeks in
2020. “Luther” totaled 67.5
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up 7%
week-over-week), 25 million
official streams (up 10%)
and 2,000 sold (up 7%) in
the U.S. April 11-17. It
rebounds two spots for a
seventh week atop the
Streaming Songs chart;
leads Radio Songs for
a third week and rises three
places to No. 20, after
reaching No. 4, on Digital
Song Sales. Chappell Roan’s
“Pink Pony Club” clip-clops
a spot to No. 4 on the Hot
100, led by 2% gain to 45.2
million in audience. It tops
the Pop Airplay chart for a
third
week. The singer-songwriter
matches her best Hot 100
rank, first set by “Good
Luck Babe!,” which hit No. 4
last September. Her three
top 10s have all reached the
top five; “The Giver”
debuted at its No. 5 peak in
March. A week after
“Ordinary” became Alex
Warren’s first Hot 100 top
10, the song becomes his
first top five hit, lifting
7-5. It surged by 60% to
13.2 million in airplay
audience in the tracking
week. The single also lifts
3-1 to become Warren’s first
leader on Digital Song Sales
(6,000 sold, up 3%). Teddy
Swims’ “Lose Control,” which
led the Hot 100 for a week
in March 2024, and became
the year’s No. 1 song,
rebounds 8-7, as it tallies
a record-breaking 58th week
in the top 10, surpassing
the run in the region of The
Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights”
for the most such frames in
the chart’s 66-year history.
“Lose Control” first set up
shop in the top 10 on the
list dated Jan. 20, 2024,
and has been absent from the
tier for only eight weeks
since. “Lose Control”
notches an 87th week on the
Hot 100 overall, tying
Imagine Dragons’
“Radioactive,” in 2012-14,
for the third-longest stay
in the chart’s history. They
trail only “Heat Waves” (91
weeks, in 2021-22) and
“Blinding Lights” (90, in
2019-22). Elsewhere in the
Hot 100’s top 10, Lady Gaga
and Bruno Mars’ “Die With a
Smile” ascends 3-2,
following five
nonconsecutive weeks at No.
1 beginning in January. The
song swaps spots with
Drake’s “Nokia,” down a spot
from its No. 2 high.
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” drops 4-6 on the
Hot 100, following its
record-tying 19 weeks at No.
1 beginning last July.
BigXthaPlug’s “All the Way,”
featuring Bailey Zimmerman,
dips to No. 8 on the Hot
100, a week after it
launched at No. 4; Benson
Boone’s “Beautiful Things”
rises 10-9, after it hit No.
2 in March 2024; and,
rounding out the top 10,
Morgan Wallen “I’m the
Problem” slips 9-10, after
it debuted at its No. 2 high
in February.
Ken Carson lands
his first No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart,
as the rapper’s latest
project, More Chaos, enters
atop the list dated April
26. It's the third charting
set for the rapper, and
first top 10. The set earned
59,500 equivalent album
units in the United States
in the week ending April 18,
according to Luminate. Of
that sum, nearly 82% was
driven by streaming
activity. More Chaos is
Carson’s first top 10 effort
as well and follows two
charted titles: A Great
Chaos (No. 11 peak in 2023)
and X (No. 115 in 2022).
More Chaos, released via
Opium / Interscope Records,
replaces Opium label founder
Playboi Carti atop the
Billboard 200, as the
latter’s Music moves to No.
7 after three nonconsecutive
weeks at No. 1. Carson is
the third act in 2025 to
land their first No. 1 this
year, following Tate McRae
(with So Close To What) and
PartyNextDoor (with the
Drake collaboration set $ome
$exy $ongs 4 U). With More
Chaos earning 59,500 units
in the latest tracking week,
that marks the smallest
weekly sum for a No. 1 album
in nearly three years, since
the May 2, 2022-dated chart,
when Pusha T’s It’s Almost
Dry opened at No. 1 with
just under 55,000 units. Of
More Chaos’ 59,500
first-week equivalent album
units, SEA units comprise
48,500 (equaling 67.3
million on-demand official
streams of the songs on the
streaming editions of the
album; it debuts at No. 3 on
the Top Streaming Albums
chart), album sales comprise
11,000 (it debuts at No. 4
on Top Album Sales) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. The rest of the top 10
on the Billboard 200 is
fairly low-key, as Carson is
the lone debut in the
region. The Nos. 2-10 titles
are also all former No. 1s.
(The top 10 was last
comprised entirely of No. 1s
on the Dec. 9, 2023-dated
list.)
Kendrick Lamar’s
GNX rises 5-2 with nearly
55,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 3%), while
SZA’s
SOS climbs 4-3 with 53,000
(down 2%). The pair kicked
off their co-headlining
Grand National Tour on April
19 at Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank
Stadium.
Sabrina Carpenter’s
Short n’ Sweet is up two
spots to No. 4 (52,000
equivalent album units; up
6%),
PartyNextDoor and Drake's
$ome $exy $ongs 4 U falls
3-5 (nearly 52,000; down 8%
— as the set climbs 2-1 on
Top Streaming Albums for a
fourth nonconsecutive weeks
at No. 1);
Morgan Wallen’s
One Thing at a Time ascends
7-6 (46,000; up 4%);
Playboi Carti’s
MUSIC falls 1-7 (45,500;
down 29%);
Bad Bunny’s
Debí Tirar Más Fotos is
steady at No. 8 (nearly
42,000; down 2%);
Ariana Grande’s
Eternal Sunshine falls 2-9
(40,000; down 29%); and
Lady Gaga’s
Mayhem rises 12-10 (39,500;
up 11%).
Record Of The Month
The song was
originally self-released by
American rapper and
songwriter Doechii to
YouTube
on November 10,
2019. It was re-recorded in
2025 following it gaining
traction on social media
platforms, being released to
streaming platforms on March
4, 2025. 'Anxiety' contains
a prominent sample of the
2011 song 'Somebody That I
Used To Know' by Gotye feat.
Kimbra.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Alex Warren stays at number
one
Monday, April 21, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
Ordinary has another
exceptional week for Easter
bunny Alex Warren, securing
its fifth consecutive week
at No.1, although its
consumption eases 3.91% to
70,615 units (1,794 digital
downloads, 68,821
sales-equivalent streams).
The longest-running No.1 hit
by a male soloist since Noah
Kahan's Stick
Season ruled for seven straight weeks at the
start of 2024, and the longest-running by any act in 2025 – surpassing the
four-week reign of Lola Young’s Messy – Ordinary has also crossed the threshold
from silver to gold, with to-date consumption of 467,646 units.
For the last two weeks, its consumption
has exceeded that of its nearest two challengers together but that is not the
case this week, with Pink Pony Club increasing 6.80% week-on-week to the highest
tally of its 263 week career (39,636 units) to take second place for the fifth
time in total and fourth week running, while Ed Sheeran’s new single, Azizam,
which debuted at No.3 last week, holds that position but suffers a 1.21%
decrease in consumption to 35,559 units.
Increasing consumption for the 20th week
in a row, 26-year-old Chicagoan singer/songwriter Ravyn Lenae’s debut hit, Love
Me Not, climbs for the eighth consecutive week, and reaches the Top 10 for the
first time, moving 14-10 (23,188 sales).
Achieving a new personal best for the
ninth straight week, Show Me Love, by WizTheMC and Bees & Honey, advances 8-6,
upping consumption 6.72% to 28,114 units.
Stalled at No.6 for three weeks, Sports
Car moves slowly forward again this week, recovering to No.5 for Tate McRae, and
increasing consumption 4.83% to a best-yet 28,503 units, 11 weeks after it
debuted at No.8, and seven weeks after it peaked at No.3.
Entering and departing from the Top 10
multiple times in the last 22 weeks, Teddy Swims’ third hit, Bad Dreams,
continues its erratic behaviour, lurching 13-9 (23,466 sales) to start its sixth
run in the Top 10. Its full chart run during that time:
15-8-6-12-22-22-74-OUT-7-9-9-11-9-11-15-14-16-10-9-11-9-11-13-9. Of its 10 weeks
in the Top 10 so far, it has been No.9 six times, and for all its tenacity it
has climbed no higher than six. In Swims’ native America, the track has never
made the Top 10, with a highest position of No.37.
The rest of the Top 10: Anxiety (4-4,
29,473 sales) by Doechii, Beautiful Things (5-7, 27,592 sales) by Benson Boone
and Busy Woman (7-8, 27,266 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter.
Overall singles consumption is down 2.08% week-on-week to 31,157,282, 6.86%
above same week 2024 consumption of 29,156,712 units. Paid-for sales are up
17.49% week-on-week at 289,614, 9.16% above same week 2024 sales of 265,306.
Record Store Day releases helped boost physical sales 1679.88% to 43,429 units.
On arguably the holiest day of the
Christian year, there’s a God Shaped Hole at the top of the album chart,
courtesy of Those Damn Crows.
The Welsh rock quintet’s first No.1, it
debuts atop the list on consumption of 16,412 units (6,376 CDs, 3,400 vinyl
albums, 184 cassettes, 358 KiTs, 5,895 digital downloads and 199
sales-equivalent streams).
Since first coalescing in Bridgend in
2014, Those Damn Crows have built their popularity steadily – their 2016 debut
album, Murder And The Motive took two years to peak at No.152, while 2020’s
Point Of No Return reached No.14 and God Shaped Hole’s immediate predecessor
Inhale/Exhale debuted and peaked at No.3 on consumption of 10,071 units in 2023.
In the top five for every one of the 34
weeks that have passed since its release, Sabrina Carpenter’s Short N’ Sweet is
No.2 for the third week in a row and 21st week in all, with consumption in the
week slipping just 0.17% to 15,454 units, as it moves into double platinum
territory (615,223 sales).
After a hiatus of nearly six years,
American indie/folk group Bon Iver’s fifth studio album, Sable, Fable debuts at
No.4 (9,116 sales). It is their third Top 10 entry. Their 2008 debut For Emma,
Forever Ago was a slow starter, taking 13 weeks to chart, and peaking at No.42,
but it was a highly-rated slow burner, and remains their biggest seller, with
to-date consumption of 351,175 copies.
Back in the Top 10 for the first time in
28 weeks. Oasis’ No.1 2010 compilation Time Flies: 1994-2009 catapults 17-3
(9,898 sales), ahead of their reunion tour, after being released in a newly
remastered, 15th anniversary limited quadruple vinyl edition, which accounted
for 5,151 of those sales. Released as Oasis’ contribution to Record Store Day,
it has already outsold the original vinyl edition of the album, which was an
even more limited quintuple album set, and sold 1,450 copies. Its latest fillip
carries Time Flies... consumption into septuple platinum territory, with a
to-date tally of 2,109,792 units. Meanwhile, lead singer Liam Gallagher’s
Acoustic Sessions EP – previously available only digitally, in which format it
debuted and peaked at No.24 in 2020 – is available on vinyl for the first time,
and re-enters at No.33 (3,521 sales).
The rest of the Top 10: +-=÷× Tour
Collection (5-5, 8,188 sales) by Ed Sheeran, Eternal Sunshine (4-6, 6,478 sales)
by Ariana Grande, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (6-7, 6,422 sales) by Fleetwood Mac, Who
Believes In Angels? (1-8, 6,387 sales) by Elton John & Brandi Carlile, The
Highlights (7-9, 6,227 sales) by The Weeknd and Mayhem (8-10, 5,895 sales) by
Lady Gaga.
Overall album sales are up 1.93% week-on-week at 2,615,259 units, 9.15% above
same week 2024 sales of 2,396,004. Physical product accounts for 395,748 sales,
15.13% of the total, with Record Store Day helping boost vinyl 108.75%
week-on-week to 232,574 units. Record Store Day fell a week later last year, but
had a bigger effect, with physical product at 558,880 units, of which vinyl
accounted for 269,134 units.