Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Ordinary'
reigns a second week
Sunday, June 8, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Alex Warren's
'Ordinary' remains atop the Global
Track Chart for a second week with
another 287,000 points, a 5%
increase 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
185,000 points by streaming
this week (up 3%), 32,000 points by sales
(up 2%), and 70,000 points by
airplay (up 9%).
'Die With A Smile' holds tight at the
runner-up slot with 253,000 points
(down 4%, with 185,000 points by
streaming, 29,000 points by sales,
and 39,000 points by airplay). The
tune remains a 40th week in the top
two positions, an unbelievable
historic record!
On our
ALL TIME CHART
it reaches
no.7
now
with a total of
16,876,000 points.
'Apt.'
rounds out still the top three with
another 220,000 points (down 9%,
with
141,000 points by streaming, 25,000
points by sales, and 54,000 points
by airplay). Highest debut of the
week comes from Canadian singer Tate
McRae, her 'Just Keep Watching' is a
part of the soundtrack to the
upcoming American sports drama film
'F1'. The song starts at no.20
globally with 112,000 points.
Outside our current Top 40 waiting
among other 'Bloodline' by Alex
Warren feat. Jelly Roll at no.47,
'Party 4 U' by Charli XCX at no.48,
and 'Gnarly' by Katseye at no.53 for
their first appearance on the
hitlist. 'Happy Burstday', the fifth
studio album by South Korean boy
band Seventeen, makes a deep impact
on the Global Album Chart with
massive 1,079,000 equivalent sales
(13,000 points by streaming +
1,066,000 points by sales). It's the
highest weekly points-frame since 18
weeks, when Snow Man's compilation
'The Best Of 2020-2025' started with
1,395,000 sales in the calendar week
6, 2025. Morgan Wallen's former
number one effort 'I'm The Problem'
rises back from no.3 to no.2 in its
third week on the tally with another
healthy 242,000 consumption units
(210,000 points by streaming +
32,000 points by sales). The album
generated a total of 971,000
equivalent sales in only three
weeks. Rounds out this week's top
three is SZA's mega-smash 'SOS',
which placed a 105th week on the
hitlist with another 95,000
consumption units (91,000 points by
streaming + 4,000 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 21,000 / 16,763,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 21,000 / 6,895,000, '21' by
Adele 15,000 / 33,835,000, '25' by
Adele 11,000 / 25,687,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 6,863,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 23,000 /
10,939,000, 'Alligator Bites Never
Heal' by Doechii 21,000 / 890,000,
'Brat' by Charli XCX 41,000 /
3,498,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 20,000 / 2,117,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 15,000 / 1,973,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 26,000 / 21,930,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 25,000 / 2,409,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 9,000 /
6,439,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,687,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 41,000
/ 2,923,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 27,000 / 1,398,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 18,000 /
9,625,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
22,000 / 4,825,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,541,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,868,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 45,000 /
1,610,000, 'I've Tried
Everything But Therapy (Part 1)' by
Teddy Swims 45,000 / 2,923,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 33,000 /
2,111,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 36,000 / 12,119,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 25,000 /
12,550,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 22,000 /
2,115,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 34,000 / 9,325,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 15,000 / 6,666,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 27,000 / 1,764,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 38,000 / 1,003,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 31,000 / 9,155,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 30,000
/ 4,940,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 30,000 / 9,900,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 42,000 / 3,637,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
41,000 / 2,800,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
51,000 / 10,345,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 18,000 / 5,445,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 20,000 /
12,755,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 60 YEARS
AGO
... "Ticket To Ride" was
released on April 9, 1965, as the
first single of the band's fifth
studio album Help! (1965). The track
marked a progression in the Beatles'
work through the incorporation of
drone and harder-sounding
instrumentation relative to their
previous releases. The song's main
guitar riff was played by George
Harrison on his Rickenbacker
12-string guitar. The lyrics
describe a girl "riding out of the
life of the narrator". "Ticket To
Ride" went to the pole position in
the United States, United Kingdom,
Canada, Sweden, Norway, the
Netherlands, and Ireland.
Furthermore it reached no.3 on the
Global Year-End Chart 1965 with a
total of 6,061,000 points.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Morgan Wallen claims third
week atop Billboard 200
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Morgan Wallen's I’m
the Problem is
No. 1 on the Billboard
200 albums chart (dated June
14) for a third consecutive
week, following its debut
atop the list dated May 31.
It earned 246,000
equivalent album units in
the United States in the
week ending June 5 (down
14%), according to Luminate.
It’s the largest third week
for an album in over a year,
since Taylor Swift’s The
Tortured Poets Department earned
282,000 in its third frame
(May 18, 2024-dated chart).
Of I’m
the Problem’s
246,000 equivalent album
units earned in the week
ending June 5, SEA units
comprise 229,000 (down 11%,
equaling 298.41 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs — it
leads Top Streaming Albums
for a third week), album
sales comprise 15,500 (down
45% — it falls from No. 1 to
No. 3 on Top Album Sales)
and TEA units comprise 1,500
(down 17%). At No. 2 on the
Billboard 200, Seventeen
scores their seventh top
10-charting album, as Seventeen
5th Album
Happy Burstday debuts.
The set launches with 48,500
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, album
sales comprise 46,000 (it
debuts at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
2,500
(equaling 3.26 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. The set’s album sales
were aided by its
availability across 14 CD
variants, all containing
collectible paper ephemera,
some randomized. SZA’s
chart-topping
SOS
falls 2-3 on the Billboard
200 with 46,000 equivalent
album units earned (down
3%). Miley Cyrus achieves
her 15th top 10-charting set
on the Billboard 200 as Something
Beautiful bows
at No. 4. It starts with
44,000 equivalent album
units earned. Of that sum,
album sales comprise 27,000
(it debuts at No. 2 on Top
Album Sales), SEA units
comprise 17,000 (equaling
22.18 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s songs) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
(Cyrus’ tally of 15 top 10s
is inclusive of her albums
billed to her Disney Channel
character Hannah Montana.)
Something Beautiful’s
first-week sales were
bolstered by its
availability across six
vinyl variants (including
one signed, sold in Cyrus’
webstore), a standard CD, a
signed CD (exclusive to
Cyrus’ webstore) and two
deluxe CD boxed sets (sold
via her webstore, each
containing branded merch and
a copy of the album). Taylor
Swift’s chart-topping reputation rallies
78-5 with 42,000 equivalent
album units earned (up
221%). It’s the album’s
first week in the top 10
since the Aug. 4, 2018-dated
chart (when it ranked at No.
9), the set’s highest rank
since the Jan. 27, 2018,
chart (when it was No. 5)
and its best week by units
earned since the Jan. 13,
2018, chart, when it tallied
48,000 (at No. 3). The album
debuted at No. 1 on the Dec.
2, 2017-dated chart and
spent four nonconsecutive
weeks atop the list. Of reputation’s
42,000 units earned in the
latest tracking week, SEA
units comprise 27,000 (up
125%, equaling 34.75 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it
reenters Top Streaming
Albums at No. 10), album
sales comprise 15,000 (up
1,184%, it reenters Top
Album Sales at No. 4) and
TEA units comprise less than
500 units. The album rallies
up the list following fan
support of the project after
Swift announced that she had
acquired her Big Machine-era
catalog, including reputation.
Rounding out the top 10 of
the Billboard 200 are five
former No. 1s: Wallen’s One
Thing at a Time falls
4-6 (40,000; down 3%);
Kendrick Lamar’s GNX drops
3-7 (39,000; down 7%);
Sabrina Carpenter’s Short
n’ Sweet dips
6-8 (37,000; though up 1%);
PartyNextDoor and Drake’s $ome
$exy $ongs 4 U descends
7-9 (34,000; down 4%); and
Bad Bunny’s Debí
Tirar Más Fotos falls
8-10 (33,000; down 7%). Alex
Warren’s “Ordinary” adds a
second week at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100, a week
after it became the
singer-songwriter’s first
leader on the list.
“Ordinary” tallied 21.5
million official streams (up
3% week-over-week), 48.1
million radio airplay
audience impressions (up
11%) and 7,000 sold (down
12%) in the United States
May 30-June 5. The track
holds for a sixth week atop
the Digital Song Sales chart
and rises 4-3 on Streaming
Songs, after four weeks at
the summit, and 5-4 on Radio
Songs (7-5). Morgan Wallen’s
“What I Want,” featuring
Tate McRae, holds at No. 2
on the Hot 100, two weeks
after it bounded in as
Wallen’s fourth No. 1 and
McRae’s first. It scores a
third week atop both
Streaming Songs (24.1
million, down 4%). Wallen
follows on the Hot 100 with
the No. 2-peaking “Just in
Case,” which keeps at No. 3,
and “I’m the Problem” (4-5),
as I’m
the Problem,
the parent set of all three
songs, posts a third week at
No. 1 on the Billboard 200.
Kendrick Lamar and SZA’s
“Luther” lifts 5-4 after 13
weeks atop the Hot 100
beginning in March.
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” repeats at No. 6 on
the Hot 100, following its
record-tying 19 weeks at No.
1 beginning last July, and
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’
“Die With a Smile” is steady
at No. 7 after five weeks at
No. 1 beginning in January.
Teddy Swims’ “Lose Control,”
which led the Hot 100 for a
week in March 2024, and
became the year’s No. 1
song, is stationary at No.
8. It posts a
record-extending 64th week
in the top 10 and a
record-padding 94th week on
the chart overall. Rounding
out the Hot 100’s top 10,
Benson Boone’s “Beautiful
Things” pushes 10-9,
swapping spots with Drake’s
“Nokia,” with both having
reached No. 2. The former
adds its 71st week on the
chart overall, tying for the
eighth-longest stay in the
list’s history.
Record Of The Month
24 year-old Johannes
Pietsch, better known by his
stage name JJ, from Austria
won this year's Eurovision
Song Contest with 436
points.
The song fusing pop and
lyrical elements in a
crescendo that flows into
techno sounds and was
written by JJ himself
alongside Teodora
Špirić
and Thomas Thurner.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Just Keep Watching' is
the highest new entry
Monday, June 9, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
Becoming more of a
phenomenon and less ordinary
with each passing week,
Ordinary is No.1 for the
12th week in a row for Alex
Warren, simultaneously
becoming the longest-running
No.1 hit of the 2020s – a
title it previously held
jointly with Ed Sheeran’s
Bad Habits – and the seventh
song in chart history
to accumulate a dozen weeks at the apex.
Eclipsing
Slim Whitman’s 1955 leviathan Rose Marie as the No.1 by a male American
soloist to spend most consecutive weeks at the summit, it has now racked
up more consecutive weeks at No.1 than all but four songs: Bryan Adams’
(Everything I Do) I Do It For You (16 weeks, 1991), Wet Wet Wet’s Love
Is All Around (15 weeks, 1994), Drake’s One Dance (feat. WizKid & Kyla,
16 weeks, 2016) and Ed Sheeran’s Shape Of You (13 weeks, 2017).
Its
consumption down for the third week in a row – falling 1.24% to 60,524
units (1,454 digital downloads, 59,070 sales-equivalent streams), its
lowest level for 11 weeks – Ordinary is nevertheless still well clear of
its nearest challengers, Love Me Not (3-2, 35,838 sales) by Ravyn Lenae
and Pink Pony Club (2-3, 34,874 sales) by Chappell Roan.
This
mighty triumvirate has frozen everything else out of the Top 3 for five
weeks in a row, but change is in the air, with four
other songs which
achieve consumption in excess of 30,000 units, and new releases from Ed
Sheeran (Sapphire) and Sabrina Carpenter (Manchild) looking to change
the pecking order a week hence.
Of these,
the leading contender is Undressed, which is at its No.4 peak for the
third week in a row for Sombr, while increasing consumption a further
6.96% to a best-yet 34,236 units. His second hit, Back To Friends, joins
it in the Top 10 for the first time, rising 11-9 (24,483 sales).
Lifted
from the soundtrack to the upcoming Apple movie F1, Just Keep Watching
(No.6, 30,531 sales) is the highest of eight new entries to the Top 75
this week, becoming the 16th chart entry and eighth Top 10 hit for
Canadian singer/songwriter Tate McRae.
Skye
Newman’s first two singles climb in harness, with her introductory Top
10 hit, Family Matters, elevating 6-5 (33,934 sales), while Hairdresser,
which paused at No.16 last week, heads north again, improving to No.15
(19,556 sales).
Blessings
is No.7 for the third week in a row for Calvin Harris & Clementine
Douglas, its consumption rising 7.32% to a new high of 30,273 units, the
highest for a song in that position so far this year.
The rest
of the Top 10: Azizam (8-8,27,560 sales) by Ed Sheeran and Bloodline
(9-10, 23,466 sales) by Alex Warren feat. Jelly Roll.
Overall singles consumption is up 2.03% week-on-week to 30,967,447
units, 3.88% above same week 2024 consumption of 29,810,997 units.
Paid-for sales are down 1.37% week-on-week at 278,433, 2.97% below same
week 2024 sales of 286,959.
Extending to 26 the number of consecutive weeks in which
leadership of the album chart has changed hands – the second
longest string in chart history - +-=÷× Tour Collection by Ed
Sheeran makes an unexpected return to No.1.
Thirty-five weeks after it debuted at No.5 and 22 weeks after
its only previous week at the summit, +-=÷× Tour Collection
takes advantage of a weak market to secure Sheeran his landmark
50th week at No.1 – only The Beatles (176 weeks), Elvis Presley
(66 weeks) and ABBA (58 weeks) have spent longer in pole
position – on consumption of 9,908 units (1,100 CDs, 151 vinyl
albums, 21 digital downloads and 8,636 sales-equivalent
streams).
That’s 19.35% below its opening week and 36.51% below its
previous week at No.1 but an increase of 15.17% week-on-week.
It
got there the hard way – Miley Cyrus’ new album Something
Beautiful and Sabrina Carpenter’s Short N’ Sweet conspired to
keep it at bay in all of the week’s sales flashes, with Cyrus
ahead until yesterday (June 5), when Carpenter took over, only
for Sheeran’s album to have a late surge to overtake both in the
final analysis. There are no new formats to help boost Sheeran
but fans will be anticipating his three-night residency at his
beloved Ipswich Town’s Portman Road venue next month, and be
further excited by the release of his new song, Sapphire – from
upcoming album, Play – today (May 6).
It's back to bridesmaid duties, therefore, for Carpenter whose
Short n’ Sweet (1-2, 9,265 sales), extending its record-breaking
residency as runner-up to 26 weeks – 63.41% of its to-date chart
run of 41 weeks, all of which have been spent in the top five.
Ed
Sheeran’s takeover notwithstanding, it is the second week in a
row that sales of the No.1 album has been in four figures. In
the 1,636 weeks that have elapsed in the modern (Kantar
[Millward Brown]) chart era, and the 1,327 weeks thus far in the
21st century, it is only the 11th time that the No.1 album has
had consumption of fewer than 10,000 units – and only the second
time that the No.1 has been below 10,000 for two weeks in a row,
matching the Covid-era weeks in May 2020 when Dua Lipa and Lewis
Capaldi topped consecutively on consumption of 7,317 and 8,396
units respectively. That Dua Lipa tally – achieved by Future
Nostalgia on its fourth and final (non-consecutive) week at No.1
is very likely the lowest to earn an album top-billing at any
time since the 1960s.
As
alluded to above, Miley Cyrus’ ninth studio album, Something
Beautiful was on course to become her third No.1 in all and
second in a row but ends up debuting at No.3 (7,661 sales). It
is Cyrus’ seventh Top 10 and 11th Top 75 album, including
releases under her Disney alter ego, Hannah Montana. Cyrus’
second release, 2008’s Breakout, peaked at No.10 but is her only
platinum album, with to-date consumption of 335,528 units. Her
No.1 albums – 2013’s Bangerz and 2023’s Endless Summer Vacation
– have to-date tallies of 275,964 and 127,443, respectively.
The last album to remain at No.1 for more than a week was Taylor
Swift’s latest set, The Tortured Poets Department – No.1 for 11
weeks in all, the last two consecutively in December 2024. That
album rallies 36-29 (3,551 sales) this week following the news
last Friday (May 30) that Swift has finally acquired the rights
to her first six albums. Although her whole catalogue is
energised, those six naturally gain the most, as Swifties feel
empowered to both stream and buy them without being disloyal to
their heroine. The last of the six, 2017’s Reputation soars 70-7
– a position it only surpassed when it debuted at No.1 394 weeks
ago – with consumption up 146.11% week-on-week at 5,898 units.
In the Top 75 for 342 weeks in a row since its 2018 release,
Fleetwood Mac compilation 50 Years: Don’t Stop reached a new
peak of No.4 six weeks ago. It revisited that peak again four
weeks ago, and again this week, rising 6-4 (7,615 sales). The
Anglo-American leviathans’ most successful studio album, Rumours
– a 1977 release and 1978 No.1 – also enjoys an uptick, climbing
21-12 (4,670 sales), to achieve its highest chart placing for 23
weeks.
Meanwhile, ABBA’s chart-topping and indefatigable 1992
compilation Gold: Greatest Hits rebounds 17-9 (4,887 sales),
making its first appearance in the Top 10 for 53 weeks and its
88th in all, even though its consumption falls 1.33%
week-on-week to 4,887 units.
The rest of the Top 10: The Highlights (8-5, 5,989 sales) by The
Weeknd, So Close To What (5-6, 5,905 sales) by Tate McRae,
Diamonds (12-8, 5,067 sales) by Elton John and I’m The Problem
(10-10, 4,771 sales) by Morgan Wallen. Overall album sales are up 0.77% week-on-week at 2,481,764
units, 2.49% above same week 2024 sales of 2,421,521. Physical
product accounts for 233,060 sales, 9.39% of the total.