Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Die With A
Smile' scores 2025 chart
Sunday, December 21, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
28 years held Elton
John's 'Candle In The Wind 1997' - a
tribute to Diana, Princess Of Wales
who had died in an auto crash on
August 31, 1997 - the top position
of Media Traffic's
ALL TIME CHART.
Four years ago The Weekend's
'Blinding Lights' came very close to
being the new number one. But it
finally worked out three weeks ago: 'Die
With A Smile' by Lady GaGa & Bruno
Mars is the new leader! Released on
August 22, 2024, it generated a
total of 21,749,000 points so far.
On the Countdown Chart 2024 the song
ranked at no.5 with 8,166,000
points. And now on the Year-End
Chart 2025 it's the clear winner
with massive 13,583,000 points (the
final calendar week is still
pending), the
highest level since The Weeknd's
'Blinding Lights' topped the
Countdown Chart 2020 with 15,302,000
points. 'Die With A Smile' was
placed in all 52 calendar weeks of
2025 on our tally, nine of it at
no.1. The other big smash of the
year was 'Apt.' by Rosé & Bruno
Mars, it ranks
at the runner-up slot of the
Year-End Chart with 12,947,000
points. The song was also placed on
last year's hitlist at no.15 with
5,275,000 points. 25 year-old
American singer / songwriter Alex
Warren brings the biggest release of
the year 2025, his chamber-pop smash
'Ordinary' was published on February
7 and became a huge success, lands
at no.3 globally in 2025 with a
total of 10,056,000 points. The
complete Year-End Top 40 will be
published next Sunday, December 28. Now back
to our current weekly tally: The
battle between 'The Fate Of Ophelia'
and 'Golden' goes on, Taylor Swift's
'Ophelia' turns back to the summit
of the Global Track Chart for a
fourth non-consecutive week with
342,000 points, a 2% increase
compared to the previous week.
Broken down by sectors the song gets
210,000 points by streaming, 37,000
points by sales, and 95,000 points
by airplay). '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 -
slips back to the runner-up spot,
after impressive 18th
non-consecutive weeks at no.1, with 319,000 points
(down 5% with
210,000 points by streaming, 31,000 points by sales, and
78,000 points by airplay).
Mariah Carey's eternal carol 'All I
Want For Christmas Is You' rounds
out the top three again. In its
110th week on our tally (a historic
record!) it gets another 296,000 points (up
9% with
218,000 points by streaming, 31,000
points by sales, and 47,000 points
by airplay). There are currently 18
carols in the Top 40, six of it in
the Top 10.
Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'Sedia Aku Sebelum Hujan' by
Idgitaf at no.42 and
'Dhurandhar' by Shashwat Sachdev |
Hanumankind | Jasmine Sandlas |
Sudhir Yaduvanshi at no.59 for
their first appearance on the
hitlist. Taylor Swift's 12th studio
album 'The Life Of A Showgirl'
leads the Global Album Chart 2025
far away from the competition with a
total of 7,387,000 equivalent sales,
the lion's share of it was generated
in its first week at retail with
stellar 5,371,000 consumption week.
It's the fourth year in a row, that
Taylor Swift tops the Year-End
Chart, a new alltime record! The
current album is also on the way to
a 10-million classic, it would be
her seventh (!!) effort which breaks
though this border. Previously the
following albums achieved this:'1989
(incl.Taylor's Version)' with 24,5
million, 'Midnights' (13,2 million),
'Lover' (13,0 million), 'Folklore'
(12,8 million), 'The Tortured Poets
Department' (11,5 million), and
'Reputation' (10,8 million). Back to
our Year-End Chart, where SZA's
'SOS' ranks a third year in a row on
that list with 4,818,000 equivalent
sales at the runner-up slot.
Released three years ago in December
2022, it was placed at no.4 on the
Countdown Chart 2023 with 4,255,000
sales, one year later it ranked at
the same position with 2,931,000
sales. Bad Bunny's 'Debí´Tirar Más
Fotos' rounds out this year's top
three with 4,305,000 consumption
units. He's now the biggest
latin-star of our time and his
legendary 'Un Verano Sin Ti' set
from 2022 gets a total of 10,5
million so far. On the weekly tally
Talyor Swift's 'The Life Of A
Showgirl' defends the pole position of the
Global Album Chart for a sixth
non-consecutive week with another
159.000 equivalent sales (up 6%
with 89,000 points by streaming +
70,000 points by sales). After 11
weeks on the tally the album
generated a total of 7,39 million
consumption units, easily the most
successful effort of the year.
The soundtrack to
'K-pop Demon Hunters' climbs back to
no.2 with 109,000 consumption
units (up 7% with 71,000 points by
streaming + 38,000 points by sales).
With a total of 3,27 million so far
it holds no.7 on the
year-to-date list. Michael Bublé's
fantastic 'Christmas' effort enters
the top three globally again.
Released 2011, it topped the hitlist
with a top value of 1,16 million
sales in the calendar week 1, 2012.
Since then, it has returned to the
international charts every year,
currently with 103,000 equivalent
sales (90,000 points by streaming +
13,000 points by sales), a total of
17,18 million 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 12,000 / 17,162,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 13,000 / 7,338,000, '21' by
Adele 14,000 / 34,209,000, '25' by
Adele 10,000 / 25,973,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 7,115,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 27,000 /
11,711,000, 'Borondo' by Beéle
32,000 / 1,399,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
20,000 /
4,335,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 23,000 / 2,638,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 10,000 / 2,312,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 14,000 / 22,571,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
35,000 / 5,134,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 9,000 /
6,962,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 25,000
/ 3,880,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor
Swift 31,000 / 12,811,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 14,000 / 1,906,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 17,000 /
10,081,000, 'GNX' by Kendrick Lamar
25,000 / 3,898,000, 'Guts' by Olivia
Rodrigo 22,000 / 5,480,000,
'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 24,000 /
2,570,000, 'I've Tried Everything
But Therapy' by Teddy Swims 25,000 /
4,013,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 18,000 /
2,737,000, 'Lux' by Rosalíá 48,000 /
459,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
37,000 / 2,707,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
16,000 / 1,719,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 17,000 /
13,171,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 13,000 /
2,644,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 22,000 / 10,127,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 10,000 / 7,038,000, 'Rosie' by
Rosé 17,000 / 2,321,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 19,000 / 1,718,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 32,000 / 10,115,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 38,000
/ 5,891,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber
30,000 / 1,517,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 21,000 / 10,575,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 24,000 / 4,595,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
25,000 / 3,803,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
40,000 / 11,500,000, 'Tropicoqueta'
by Karol G 26,000 / 1,170,000, 'Un
Verano Sin Ti' by Bad Bunny 52,000 /
10,463,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 12,000 / 5,824,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 16,000 /
13,238,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 20
YEARS AGO
...
"Hung Up", initially used in a number of television
advertisements and serials, was released on October 17, 2005 as the lead
single from Madonna's tenth studio album Confessions On A Dance Floor
(2005). The song prominently features a sample from the instrumental
introduction to Abba's hit single "Gimme, Gimme, Gimme (A Man After
Midnight)", for which Madonna personally sought permission from Abba's
songwriters Benny Andersson and Björn Ulaeus. Musically the song
influenced by pop from the 1980s, with a chugging groove and chorus and
a background element of a ticking clock that suggests the fear of
wasting time. Lyrically the song is written as a traditional dance
number about a strong, independent woman who has relationship troubles.
"Hung Up" reached only the no.7 position in the United States, but in
almost all other countries it went to number one. With a total of
8,698,000 points it was the second most successful single release of
2005, after James Blunt's 'You're Beautiful' with 9,527,000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Mariah Carey's carol notches
21st week at no.1
Tuesday, December 23, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Mariah Carey's
“All I Want for Christmas Is
You”
adds a record-extending 21st
week at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100. Carey
claims her unprecedented and
milestone 100th career week
at
No. 1 on the Hot 100, having
accumulated her haul over 19
leaders, dating to her
first, “Vision of Love,” in
1990. “All I Want for
Christmas Is You,” on
Columbia Records, drew 43.6
million streams (up 10%) and
28 million radio airplay
audience impressions (up
24%) and sold 3,000
downloads (up 1%) in the
U.S. Dec. 12-18, according
to Luminate. The single
holds for a record-extending
25th week atop the Streaming
Songs chart;
dashes 23-15 on Radio Song,
where it has hit a No. 7
best; and stays at No. 5 on
Digital Song Sales,
following six weeks on top.
Bobby Helms’ 1957 release
“Jingle Bell Rock” giddyaps
4-2 on the Hot 100, besting
its prior No. 3 peak. Helms,
who died in 1997, has a new
highest career Hot 100 rank,
with “Jingle Bell Rock”
matching Wham!’s “Last
Christmas” — which reached a
new No. 2 high two
weeks ago — as one of only
five holiday songs ever to
have made the chart’s top
two. The other three have
hit No. 1: “All I Want for
Christmas Is You”; “The
Chipmunk Song,” by the
Chipmunks with David Seville
(for four weeks, beginning
in December 1958); and
Brenda Lee’s fellow 1958
classic “Rockin’ Around the
Christmas Tree” (three weeks
in the 2023 holiday season).
Lee’s “Rockin’ Around the
Christmas Tree” dips 2-3 on
the Hot 100; Wham!’s “Last
Christmas,” from 1984,
descends 3-4; and Ariana
Grande’s 2014 single “Santa
Tell Me” keeps at its No. 5
high. Nat “King” Cole’s “The
Christmas Song (Merry
Christmas to You)” ascends
8-6 on the Hot 100, marking
a new high for the track
that he first recorded in
1946. It’s the late legend’s
highest placement since the
chart dated June 29, 1963,
when the opposite-themed
“Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days
of Summer” climbed to its
No. 6 peak. Kelly Clarkson’s
“Underneath the Tree” rises
9-7 for a new Hot 100 best.
The 2013 release is her
highest charting song since
“Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill
You),” which ruled for three
weeks in winter 2012. The
late Dean Martin’s “Let It
Snow! Let It Snow! Let It
Snow!,” from 1959, reenters
the Hot 100’s top 10 (11-8),
after reaching No. 7, and
the late Andy Williams’
“It’s the Most Wonderful
Time of the Year,” released
in 1963, lifts 10-9, after
hitting No. 5. Taylor
Swift’s nonseasonal “The
Fate of Ophelia” falls 7-10
on the Hot 100 after
spending its first eight
weeks at No. 1 beginning in
October, having tied
“Anti-Hero” as her
longest-leading career hit.
Her The
Life of a Showgirl hits
double-digit weeks at No. 1
on the Billboard Top
200 albums chart, as the set
collects a 10th
nonconsecutive week atop the
list (dated Dec. 27). It
earned 104,000 equivalent
album units in the United
States in the week ending
Dec. 18 (up 18%), according
to Luminate. The album got a
boost thanks to sales
generated from new color
vinyl variants of the album,
exclusively sold via Swift’s
webstore, that began
shipping out to customers.
As The
Life of a Showgirl notches
a 10th week at No. 1, Swift
becomes the first woman, and
third act overall, to have
at least four albums with at
least 10 weeks at No. 1 on
the Billboard 200 since the
chart began publishing on a
regular weekly basis in
March of 1956. She
previously nabbed
10-week-or-more No. 1s with
her previous release, The
Tortured Poets Department (17
weeks in 2024), along with 1989 (11
weeks in 2014-15) and Fearless (11
weeks in 2008-09). Of The
Life of a Showgirl’s
104,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, album sales
comprise 55,000 (up 43% —
it’s steady at No. 1 on Top
Album Sales), SEA units
comprise 48,000 (down 4%,
equaling 63.06 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
moves 4-6 on Top Streaming
Albums) and TEA units
comprise 1,000 (down 3%).
Morgan Wallen’s
chart-topping I’m
the Problem is
a non-mover at No. 2 with
just more than 73,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 1%). 21
Savage’s What Happened To
The Streets? debuts at No. 3
on the Billboard 200 with
73,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
SEA units comprise 48,000
(equaling 65.83 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it
debuts at No. 5 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 25,000 (it
debuts at No. 5 on Top Album
Sales) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
The former No. 1 KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack
goes 3-4 with 71,000
equivalent album units
earned (up 6%). It spends
its 26th week (all
consecutive from its debut)
in the top 10. The last
soundtrack to tally at least
26 weeks , or half a year,
in the top 10 was Lady Gaga
and Bradley Cooper’s A
Star Is Born,
which also spent its first
26 weeks on the chart in the
top 10 (including one week
at No. 1), in 2018-19.
Michael Bublé's former No.
1 Christmas shifts
4-5 with 69,000 equivalent
album units earned. It leads
the parade of a record-tying
six holiday albums in the
top 10 — a feat that has
happened multiple times,
most recently on the Jan. 4,
2025-dated list. The first
time it occurred was on the
Jan. 5, 1959, chart, when
holiday sets by Mitch
Miller, Bing Crosby, Johnny
Mathis, Tennessee Ernie
Ford, Mantovani and Perry
Como dotted the region. The
rest of the top 10 of the
latest Billboard 200 are all
holiday titles. Crosby’s Ultimate
Christmas dips
5-6 (66,000 equivalent album
units, up 1%); Nat King
Cole’s The
Christmas Song is
pushed down 6-7 (55,000, up
9%); Vince Guaraldi Trio’s A
Charlie Brown Christmas soundtrack
is steady at No. 8 (50,000,
up 3%); the multi-artist A
Christmas Gift for You From
Phil Spector is
stationary at No. 9 (48,000,
up 12%); and Mariah Carey’s Merry
Christmas jingles
back to the top 10, rising
11-10 (46,000, up 11%).
Record Of The Month
As the first salvo from her
new album, Lux, Spanish
reggaeton and flamenco
artist Rosalíá has uncorked
a dazzling opus featuring
Björk, Yves Tumor and a
full-on symphony orchestra.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Last Christmas' returns at
no.1 for a 12th week
Monday, December 29, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
Rudely interrupted last
week, Wham! regain the No.1
spot, with Last Christmas
securing its second week at
the summit this advent and
its 12th week in total.
ACR-adjusted consumption
climbs 98.60% week-on-week
to 92,580 units (76 CDs,
three 7-inch vinyl, 109
12-inch vinyl, 719
digital downloads and
91,673
sales-equivalent streams),
while unadjusted consumption
rises 100.82% to 184,253
units.
With
Kylie Minogue’s XMAS
retreating 1-4 (64,418
sales), Wham!’s biggest
challenge came from Mariah
Carey and her own seasonal
perennial, All I Want For
Christmas Is You, which
rebounds 3-2 (72,898 sales).
It is the eighth time that
Wham! and Carey have shared
the top two places, and the
sixth of those that Carey
has been runner-up. In the
21 years of the digital era
– since November 2004 – Last
Christmas has achieved
unadjusted consumption of
5,369,962 units, against the
5,717,963 reached by All I
Want For Christmas Is You.
However, since George
Michael’s death in 2016, the
impetus has been with Last
Christmas. In the last 100
weeks, for example, Carey’s
track has outperformed Last
Christmas just three times –
most recently seven weeks
ago – when Last Christmas
was No.96 and All I Want For
Christmas Is You was No.82.
Despite missing out on a
return to No.1, it is
nevertheless a big week for
All I Want For Christmas Is
You, with unadjusted
consumption of 145,138
raising its all-time cume to
6,044,082, qualifying as
decuple (10x) platinum.
Incidentally, Ordinary is
chased out of the Top 40
after 45 consecutive weeks
in the list – something
bettered in the whole of
chart history by only eight
songs – by Christmas
perennials. It dips 37-63
(16,116 sales), but is
easily the biggest hit of
2025, ending the year with
cumulative consumption of
2,178,737 units, 51.23% more
than runner-up Lola Young’s
Messy (1,440,652 units).
Ordinary set an all-time
record of 42 consecutive
weeks in the Top 20, though
it should be said that
achieving this task – and
many others achieved by
latter-day hits – is much
easier than it was in the
pure sales era.
Recorded in 1958 when she
was 13 years old, becoming a
hit in 1962 and previously
peaking at No.4 in 2022,
Rockin’ Around The Christmas
Tree has spent the last two
weeks matching its peak for
Brenda Lee. It now reaches a
new high, climbing 4-3
(68,654 sales). A Christmas
staple – penned by Johnny
Marks, who also wrote A
Holly Jolly Christmas, which
jumps 35-25 (36,295 sales)
for Michael Bublé – it thus
matches the peak of the 1987
Mel (Smith) & Kim (Wilde)
version, as well as Lee’s
previous personal peak, set
by Speak To Me Pretty in
1962.
For
the first time in chart
history, the entire top
three is more than 30 years
old.
Another Christmas favourite
reaching a new peak is Step
Into Christmas by Elton
John, which climbs 9-7
(56,182 sales). No.24 when
first released in 1973, it
previously peaked at No.8,
this week in 2019. Its
digital era consumption –
currently standing at
2,591,220 units – surpassed
the quadruple platinum level
of 2.4m earlier this month.
Originally the B-side to an
uncharted 1986 single, Hello
Friend, Driving Home For
Christmas was re-recorded by
Chris Rea for the October
1988 compilation, New Light
Through Old Windows. The
following month, it was the
lead track on his EP,
Christmas, but failed to
progress beyond No.52 on the
chart. It eventually started
to gain traction in the
digital era, returning to
the chart in 2007, when it
reached No.33. Its support
has snowballed ever since,
with 2025 marking the 19th
year in a row that it has
charted. Accelerating 30-13
on the last sales flash
before Rea’s untimely death
on Monday at the age of 74,
it gained further impetus
afterwards, climbing to
No.10 (51,348 sales) to
match the peak it set this
week in 2021, and the 1989
peak of his only other Top
10 hit, The Road To Hell
(Part 2).
Completing the Top 10 are:
Fairytale Of New York (6-5,
58,457 sales) by The Pogues
& Kirsty MacColl, Underneath
The Tree (8-6, 56,987 sales)
by Kelly Clarkson, Jingle
Bell Rock (10-8, 54,820
sales) by Bobby Helms and
Merry Christmas Everyone
(11-9, 54,565 sales) by
Shakin’ Stevens.
Consumption for every
position in the Top 75 is
lower than it was in the
corresponding week last
year, but overall singles
consumption is up 6.60%
week-on-week to a record
34,498,059 units, 4.47%
above the previous high of
33,020,684 units. Paid-for
sales are down 14.66%
week-on-week at 273,792,
0.67% below the same week in
2024 sales of 275,634.
More than 14 years
after it first topped the
chart and exactly a year
after it last reached the
summit, Michael Bublé’s
evergreen Christmas takes
advantage of a weak market
to return to No.1.
Its
consumption increases 77.72%
week-on-week to 20,818 units
(402 CDs, 313 vinyl albums,
215 digital downloads,
19,888 sales-equivalent
streams), registering its
highest tally since it
achieved a figure of 27,016
when returning to No.1 in
the last week of 2024.
Christmas has spent longer
at No.1 – eight weeks – than
the rest of Bublé’s canon
combined. It has career
consumption of 3,512,418
units, making it Bublé’s
most popular album, ahead of
2009 release Crazy Love
(3,200,265 units).
Christmas fare has seen her
temporarily ousted from the
Top 20 of the singles chart,
but Olivia Dean’s sublime
second album, The Art Of
Loving, is No.2 on the
albums listing for the third
week in a row. It has been
in the Top 5 continuously
since it debuted at No.1, 12
weeks ago. With consumption
easing 12.41% week-on-week
to 19,089, its to-date
consumption of 278,453 units
is considerably more than
the 118,083 units achieved
by her 2023 debut album,
Messy.
Also
despatched from the singles
Top 20 but similarly set for
a new year rebound,
Liverpool rapper EsDeeKid
returns to the Top 10 and
reaches a new peak with his
debut album, Rebel. Moving
13-8 (7,027 sales), the
album – which previously
peaked at No.9 – is on the
rise for the third week in a
row, and increases its
consumption since it was
released in June to 76,521
units.
At its
highest position for nearly
13 years when it climbed
10-7 last week, Fleetwood
Mac’s 1977 classic Rumours –
a chart-topper in 1978 –
further improves its
standing, climbing to No.5
(7,181 sales). That’s a
672-week high, with vinyl
(3,405 sales) again proving
its main driving force. It
ranks No.2 on the vinyl
chart, behind Olivia Dean’s
The Art Of Loving (5,112
sales).
The
rest of the Top 10: The Life
Of A Showgirl (3-3, 10,821
sales) by Taylor Swift,
Man’s Best Friend (5-4,
9,075 sales) by Sabrina
Carpenter, 50 Years – Don’t
Stop (9-6, 7,155 sales) by
Fleetwood Mac, The
Highlights (8-7, 7,140
sales) by The Weeknd, People
Watching (6-9, 6,560 sales)
by Sam Fender and (What’s
The Story) Morning Glory?
(10-10, 6,323 sales) by
Oasis. With the exception of
Michael Bublé’s Christmas
album, week-on-week
consumption is down for the
entire Top 10. The Life Of A
Showgirl achieved the
smallest consumption of its
12-week chart tenure, yet
emerges as the No.1 album of
the year, with to-date
consumption of 642,467
units.
Overall album sales are down
1.99% week-on-week at
2,903,515 units, 7.18% above
same week 2024 sales of
2,708,985. Physical product
accounts for 575,606 sales,
19.82% of the total.
Album
consumption for 2025, at
132,831,412 units, is up
4.91% year-on-year to a new
high. Vinyl sales increase
12.31% year-on-year to
7,532,628 units while CD
sales dip 11.09% to
9,333,052 units – a
21st-century high and low,
respectively – while
cassettes climb 53.03% to
163,996 units, their highest
level since 2003.