Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Ordinary'
reigns a seventh week
Sunday, July 13, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Alex Warren's
'Ordinary' remains atop the Global
Track Chart for a seventh week with
another 285,000 points, an 1%
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
162,000 points by streaming
this week (down 3%), 29,000 points by sales
(down 3%), and 94,000 points by
airplay (up 3%).
The soundtrack to the American
animated musical fantasy film 'K-pop
Demon Hunters', released by Netflix,
catapultes three songs in the Global
Top 10: Highest is 'Golden' by the
fictional girl group Huntr/x, which
jumps to the runner-up slot with
226,000 points. It's a massive 32%
boost compared to its initial week
with 203,000 points by streaming,
22,000 points by sales, but only
1,000 points by airplay. Huntr/x'
opponent in the film, the fictional
boy group Saja Boys, enters the Top
10 with two songs: 'Soda Pop' rises
from no.18 to no.7 with 161,000
points (up 38%) and 'Your Idol'
sails from no.14 to no.9 with
156,000 points (up 22%). Rounds out
the top three is
'Die With A Smile' by Lady GaGa and
Bruno Mars with 208,000 points
(down 7% with 148,000 points by
streaming, 22,000 points by sales,
and 38,000 points by airplay). The
tune stood 44 weeks in the top
two positions, an unbelievable
historic record!
On our
ALL TIME CHART
it reaches
no.6
with a total of
18,026,000 points. Outside our current Top 40 waiting
among other 'Free' by Rumi | Jinu |
Ejae | Andrew Choi at no.41, 'Vamo A
Bailotear' by Cris MJ at no.49, and
'What It Sounds Like by Huntr/x |
Ejae | Audrey Nuna | Rei Ami at
no.56 for
their first appearance on the
hitlist. The sixth week in a row an
Asian album debuts atop the Global
Album Chart. This week the Japanese
boy group Ini arrives there with
their third studio effort 'The
Origin' and 407,000 equivalent sales
(almost all of it are physical
sales). The bands former set 'Match
Up' started also at no.1 in the
calendar week 9, 2024 with 253,000
sales. Morgan Wallen holds tight at no.2
with his current effort 'I'm The
Problem' and another 148,000
consumption units (136,000 points by
streaming + 12,000 points by sales).
After six weeks on the tally it
generated a total of 1,690,000
sales. New Zealand singer /
songwriter Lorde rounds out this
week's top three with her fourth
studio album 'Virgin' and 115,000
consumption units (54,000 points by
streaming + 61,000 points by sales).
Lorde's biggest success was the
single 'Royals' from 2013, which
peaked at no.2 in November of that
year. 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 14,000 / 16,824,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 16,000 / 6,963,000, '21' by
Adele 14,000 / 33,892,000, '25' by
Adele 11,000 / 25,731,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 6,899,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 24,000 /
11,034,000, 'Alligator Bites Never
Heal' by Doechii 17,000 / 962,000,
'Brat' by Charli XCX 43,000 /
3,670,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 17,000 / 2,188,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 14,000 / 2,029,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 26,000 / 22,033,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 19,000 / 2,493,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 8,000 /
6,472,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,727,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 44,000
/ 3,103,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 26,000 / 1,502,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 18,000 /
9,697,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
23,000 / 4,914,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,589,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,920,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 40,000 /
1,778,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 29,000 /
2,233,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 31,000 / 12,246,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
44,000 / 1,037,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 22,000 /
12,641,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 18,000 /
2,189,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 34,000 / 9,467,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 14,000 / 6,723,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 24,000 / 1,863,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 30,000 / 1,134,000, 'So Close
To What' by Tate McRae 43,000 /
1,404,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 34,000 / 9,291,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 32,000
/ 5,063,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 28,000 / 10,013,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 41,000 / 3,806,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
40,000 / 2,962,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
40,000 / 10,512,000, 'Un Verano Sin
Ti' by Bad Bunny 48,000 / 9,337,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 18,000 / 5,516,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 20,000 /
12,835,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10
YEARS AGO
...
Omar
Samuel Pasley, a.k.a. OMI began developing
"Cheerleader" in
2008, when he
created its melody. It was refined over several years alongside famed
Jamaican producer Clifton Dillon. It was first recorded with veteran
session musicians Sly and Robbie and Dean Fraser. Released as a single
on independent label Oufah, the song saw success in Jamaica, where it
topped the charts, and also attracted airplay in Hawaii and Dubai. The
song's lyrics depict a romantic companion as a support system.
Hoping to connect the song to a wider audience, OMI signed to U.S. dance
label Ultra
Records
in 2013. Ultra contacted
the young German DJ Felix Jaehn
to produce
a
remix version.
He
eschewed much of the song's original instrumentation for a
tropical-flavored deep house rendition, prominently featuring a trumpet,
a conga beat, and piano.
This
remix was released
on
May
19,
2014
and
became a massive global success,
reached number one in
many
countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Australia,
France, and Germany.
On the year-end chart 2015 "Cheerleader" ranked at no.3
with 8.214.000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'I'm The Problem' spends
first two months at No.1
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Morgan Wallen's I’m
the Problem has
spent its first two months
on the Billboard 200 at No.
1 as the set holds atop the
chart dated July 19, earning
151,000 equivalent album
units in the
United States in the week
ending July 10 (down 12%).
The album opened at No. 1 on
the May 31 chart. Of I’m
the Problem’s
151,000 equivalent album
units earned in the week
ending July 10, SEA units
comprise 143,500 (down 12%,
equaling 188.69 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
leads Top Streaming Albums
for an eighth week), album
sales comprise 6,500 (down
12% — it rises 11-5 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,000 (down 23%).
The KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack
climbs 3-2 — a new peak — in
its third week, earning
75,000 equivalent album
units (up 21%). It’s the
first soundtrack to debut in
the top 10 on the Billboard
200 and then see unit
increases in its second and
third weeks since the Guardians
of the Galaxy, Vol. 2:
Awesome Mix Vol. 2 album
in 2017. In the 2020s, only
four soundtracks have
reached the top two on the
Billboard 200: KPop
Demon Hunters, Wicked (which
debuted and
peaked at No. 2 in 2024), Barbie (also
No. 2 debut and peak, in
2023) and Encanto (nine
weeks at No. 1 in 2022). Of
the KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack’s
75,000 units earned in its
third week, SEA units
comprise 70,000 (up 24%,
equaling 96.33 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
holds at No. 2 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 4,000 (down
6% — it rises 21-9 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,000 (up 6%). As
the KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack
racked up 96.33 million
streams for its songs in its
third week, it scores the
biggest streaming week for a
soundtrack in more three
years. The last soundtrack
to post a bigger streaming
figure was Encanto,
on the March 12, 2022-dated
chart, when it rang up
101.16 million streams for
its songs in its eighth week
at No. 1 on the Billboard
200.
KPop Demon Hunters
premiered on June 20 in a
limited theatrical release
in the U.S., and on Netflix,
alongside its soundtrack. In
the tracking week ending
July 6, KPop
Demon Hunters held
at No. 2 in its third week
on Netflix’s Top 10 Movies
in United States chart.
Wallen’s former leader One
Thing at a Time
climbs 6-3 on the latest
Billboard 200 (with 39,000
equivalent album units
earned; down 2%); SZA’s
chart-topping SOS rises
7-4 (36,000; down 7%);
Sabrina Carpenter’s former
No. 1 Short
n’ Sweet
bumps 9-5 (35,000; up 6%);
Wallen’s chart-topping Dangerous:
The Double Album ascends
11-6 (29,000; down 4%); Bad
Bunny’s former No. 1 Debí
Tirar Más Fotos jumps
16-7 (nearly 29,000; up 3%);
and Karol G’s Tropicoqueta falls
5-8 (just under 29,000; down
29%). Toby Keith’s
35 Biggest Hits returns
to the top 10, rallying 43-9
with 26,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 56%)
following streaming gains
generated by Independence
Day celebrations. The album,
released in 2008, hit No. 1
on the Feb. 17, 2024-dated
chart in the wake of Keith’s
death that Feb. 5. Of 35
Biggest Hits’
26,000 units earned, SEA
units comprise 24,000 (up
59%, equaling 32.93 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
jumps 43-11 on Top Streaming
Albums). The rest of the
album’s 2,000 units were
generated by album sales and
TEA units. About one-third
of the album’s streams for
the week were generated by
Keith’s 2002 No. 1 Hot
Country Songs hit “Courtesy
of the Red, White and Blue
(The Angry American),” which
was also his most-streamed
song of the week. Closing
out the top 10 of the latest
Billboard 200 is
PartyNextDoor and Drake’s
former No. 1 $ome
$exy $ongs 4 U,
rising 17-10 with 26,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 5%). Alex
Warren’s “Ordinary” adds a
sixth week atop the
Billboard Hot 100. The song
has linked its lead
consecutively, having become
the singer-songwriter’s
first No. 1 on the chart.
“Ordinary,” on Atlantic
Records, tallied 19.1
million official streams
(down 5% week-over-week), 73
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up 5%)
and 6,000 sold (down 9%) in
the United States July 4-10.
The single’s airplay
performance is especially
noteworthy, as it becomes
the first song this year to
reach 70 million in weekly
airplay audience, and the
first since Shaboozey’s “A
Bar Song (Tipsy)” last
November. “Ordinary” tops
the Adult Pop Airplay chart
for a seventh week and Pop
Airplay for a fifth week.
“Ordinary” slips 2-4 on the
Streaming Songs chart,
following four weeks at the
summit; claims a fourth week
at No. 1 on Radio Songs; and
drops to No. 2 after eight
weeks atop Digital Song
Sales. Drake’s “What Did I
Miss?” bounds onto the Hot
100 at No. 2 with 22.6
million streams, 3.6 million
in airplay audience and
6,000 sold through July 10
following its July 5
release. Drake pushes his
career total to 81 Hot 100
top 10s, extending his
record for the most in the
chart’s nearly 67-year
history. The track
concurrently launches at No.
1 on Streaming Songs — where
it’s Drake’s
record-extending 21st leader
— and Digital Song Sales,
where it’s his 15th
chart-topper, the most among
male artists; overall, only
Taylor Swift (29 No. 1s) and
Nicki Minaj (17) have more.
Huntr/x’s “Golden” blasts
23-6 on the Hot 100 with
18.8 million streams — up
39% — 950,000 in airplay
audience and 3,000 sold. The
song is from the KPop
Demon Hunters soundtrack,
which shoots 3-2 on the
Billboard 200, having become
the highest-charting
soundtrack of 2025. Morgan
Wallen’s “What I Want,”
featuring Tate McRae,
retreats 2-3 on the Hot 100,
after it debuted in May as
Wallen’s fourth No. 1 and
McRae’s first. Wallen
follows on the Hot 100 with
the No. 2-peaking “Just in
Case,” which slides 3-4, and
“I’m the Problem,” which
falls 5-8. He posts his 10th
career week with at least
three simultaneous top 10s
and his eighth this year, as
he continues scaling both
leaderboards. Shaboozey’s “A
Bar Song (Tipsy)” staggers
4-5 on the Hot 100,
following its record-tying
19 weeks at No. 1 beginning
last July. Kendrick Lamar
and SZA’s “Luther” drops 6-7
after 13 weeks atop the Hot
100 beginning in March.
Teddy Swims’ “Lose Control,”
which led the Hot 100 for a
week in March 2024, and
became the year’s No. 1
song, backtracks 8-9. It
adds a record-extending 69th
week in the top 10 and —
potentially setting up
another historic milestone
next week — a
record-furthering 99th week
on the chart overall.
Rounding out the Hot 100’s
top 10, Lady Gaga and Bruno
Mars’ “Die With a Smile”
descends 9-10 after five
weeks at No. 1 beginning in
January.
Record Of The Month
'Back To Friends' became the
breakout hit of the
20-year-old American singer
/ songwriter
Shane Michael Boose, known
professionally as Sombr. The
song entered many charts
around the world after going
viral on the video-sharing
app Tik Tok.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
MK feat. Chrystal's 'Dior'
reaches number one
Monday, July 14, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
As if by design, Dior takes
advantage of a weakening
singles sector to advance to
No.1 for MK feat. Chrystal.
In the closest battle for
chart honours for a while,
the track overpowers
Manchild (3-2, 38,478
sales), which threatened to
rise to the top for a third
time for Sabrina Carpenter;
and Love Me Not,
which
rallies 4-3 (36,852 sales) for Ravyn Lenae. Dior’s coronation is despite
a 6.71% dip in its own consumption to 39,701 units (1,126 digital
downloads, 38,575 sales-equivalent streams) – the lowest for a No.1
single for 17 weeks.
Dior is only the second hit for featured vocalist 36-year-old
singer/songwriter Chrystal - originally from Bolton – whose introductory
hit, The Days, peaked at No.4 in January and dips 41-47 (9,101 sales) on
its 39th straight week in the chart.
Chrystal’s partner, MK, is a more experienced chart campaigner, with
Dior being his 15th hit. His most-consumed title is his 2017 No.7 hit,
17, with to-date consumption of 1,724,218 units, while Chrystal’s
(natch) is The Days, with 876,820 units.
Fifty-three next month, MK – a DJ, producer, songwriter and artist from
Detroit – first made the UK chart in February 1995 alongside Alana with
the song Always. His gestation of 30 years and five months between debut
and first No.1 is one of
the longest in chart history, though Michael
Ball, Tony Christie and Ozzy Osbourne all had longer waits.
After eight previous weeks in the Top 10 – four of them at No.7, the
rest at No.8 – Blessings climbs to a new peak of No.6 (28,182 sales) for
Calvin Harris feat. Clementine Douglas. Harris has had 23
higher-charting hits, Douglas none. Although Blessings’ consumption in
the latest frame is up 1.32% week-on-week, making it the only track in
the Top 10 not to suffer a decline, it is only its fourth best tally to
date.
Its CD sales plunging from 25,415 to 61 as stock is exhausted, Survive
falls 1-4 (34,183 sales) for Lewis Capaldi.
It is a good week for Olivia Dean, whose Rein Me In collaboration with
Sam Fender returns to the Top 10 (12-10, 24,154 sales) a fortnight after
debuting at No.6 - replacing Skye Newman’s Family Matters (10-11, 23,939
sales) - while her solo tracks Nice To Each Other (15-14, 22,537 sales)
and Dive (74-63, 7,496 sales) both reach new peaks.
The rest of the Top 10: Pink Pony Club (5-5, 29,938 sales) by Chappell
Roan, Victory Lap (6-7, 26,933 sales) by Fred Again, Skepta &
PlaqueBoyMax, Ordinary (8-8, 26,594 sales) by Alex Warren, and Sapphire
(9-9, 24,524 sales) by Ed Sheeran. Love Me Not and Pink Pony Club will
be on ACR next week, joining Ordinary which incidentally, returns to
No.1 on the Top 200 Combined Tracks chart, with unadjusted consumption
of 52,191 units.
Overall singles consumption is down 1.75% week-on-week at 30,284,451
units, 9.01% above same week 2024 consumption of 27,780,426 units.
Paid-for sales are down 19.24% week-on-week at 279,341, 4.91% above same
week 2024 sales of 266,266.
Set to perform to 320,000 fans in five concerts in their home
city of Manchester over the next nine days as part of their Live
’25 Reunion Tour, Oasis continue to enjoy spectacular growth
week-on-week, and occupy three of the top four positions in the
album chart for only the second time in their career.
Returning to No.1 for the first time since it debuted there 786
weeks ago – a little over 15 years – the band’s
career-encompassing compilation Time Flies: 1994-2009 sees a
184.72% surge in consumption to 21,015 units (406 CDs, 285 vinyl
albums, 262 digital downloads and 20,062 sales-equivalent
streams).
Their second and most successful studio album, 1995’s (What’s
The Story) Morning Glory – which spent 10 weeks at No.1 in
1995/1996 – achieves its highest chart placing in more than 29
years, exploding 14-2, with consumption up 197.47% at 15,733
units; while 1994 debut album, Definitely Maybe, catapults 26-4
(11,421 sales) on a gain of 177.95%. Oasis’ 1998 compilation The
Masterplan (No.59, 2,411 sales) re-enters the Top 75 after an
absence of 44 weeks.
Time Flies’ return to the summit earns the Mancunian legends
their 23rd week at No.1 in total, a tally exceeded by 21 other
acts.
Preventing Oasis from becoming the first act to occupy all of
the top three places in the chart simultaneously, Sabrina
Carpenter’ Short n’ Sweet remains at No.3, with consumption up
56.44% week-on-week to 12,842 units, after the judicious release
of a new, double vinyl zoetrope picture disc edition, which
accounted for 3,191 of those sales, and help it extend its
initial sojourn in the top five to 46 weeks in a row – the
highest for any solo album in chart history.
If a top four configuration consisting of the aforementioned
Oasis titles and Short ’N Sweet sound familiar, that’s because
the very same titles – albeit in a different order – occupied
the top four slots on the chart 44 weeks ago. At that time, in
the wake of the announcement of the Oasis tour dates, Definitely
Maybe – further boosted by new 30th anniversary editions – was
No.1, Time Flies… was No.3 and …Morning Glory was No.4, with
Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet, which had debuted at No.1 the
previous week, easing to No.2.
The rest of this week’s Top 10: +-=÷× Tour Collection (4-5,
8,137 sales) by Ed Sheeran, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (7-6, 7,832
sales) by Fleetwood Mac, Stick Season (10-7, 6,076 sales) by
Noah Kahan, The Highlights (12-8, 5,617 sales) by The Weeknd,
Virgin (1-9, 5,309 sales) by Lorde and Brat (9-10, 5,301 sales)
by Charli XCX. It is the fourth week in a row that Stick Season
has climbed, and its highest placing for 46 weeks.
Overall album sales are down 2.49% week-on-week at 2,396,734
units, 7.87% above same week 2024 sales of 2,221,865. Physical
product accounts for 228,043 sales, 9.51% of the total.