Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
These Flowers
don't wither
Wednesday, June 7, 2023
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
A very quiet week on the Global
Track Chart and... ta-dah...
Miley Cyrus'
'Flowers' remains at the top
position for an incredible 20th
week! The track got another 287,000 points, an
1,5% decline compared to the
previous week. Broken down by
segments the song generated 151,000
points by streaming in the current
week (down 2%), 31,000 points by
sales (down 1%), and 105,000 points
by airplay (down 1%). With a total of
8,630,000 points 'Flowers' is still the biggest hit
of the year 2023 (far away from the
competition) and climbs to
no.149 on the
ALL TIME CHART.
Furthermore 'Flowers' is now the
smash with the second longest
staying power at the Global No.1 in
history, only Harry Styles' 'As It
Was' can top that with a total of 22
weeks last year. By the way, the
latter turns back to the Top 10 this
week with 152,000 points (down 1%).
Fifty Fifty's 'Cupid' holds tight at
the runner-up slot for a 4th
consecutive week with 244,000 points
(down 9%), and Eslabon
Armado & Peso Pluma's
'Ella Baila Sola' follows still at
no.3 with 238,000 points (down
0,5%). Taylor Swift is the most
successful artist at the moment,
eight of her albums each got more
than 25,000 equivalent sales in the
last tracking week and three songs
are inside the current Top 40:
'Anti-Hero' climbs back at no.14 in
its 32nd week on the tally, a
brandnew remix of 'Karma' (featuring
Ice Spice) catapults the song back
at no.18, and 'Hits Different' from
the deluxe edition of the album
'Midnights' debuts at no.32. Highest
debut this week comes from
British-Albanian star Dua Lipa, her
new smash 'Dance The Night' bows at
no.29 globally. It's the lead single
from the soundtrack to the upcoming
film 'Barbie'. Outside our
weekly Top 40 waiting among other
'Angels Like You' by Miley Cyrus at
no.44, 'Queencard' by (G)I-dle at
no.49, and 'I Wanna
Be Yours' by Arctic Monkeys at no.57 for their
first appearance on the big list.
Two albums from Japan, one each from
South Korea, United Kingdom, and
Sweden debuting on this week's
Global Album Top 10. New number one
comes from Japanese nine-member boy
group Snow Man. Their third studio
album 'I Do Me' bows with massive
1,061,000 equivalent sales. Shy
behind follows 'I Feel', the eighth
extended play by South Korean girl
group (G)I-dle, with 617,000 sales.
Rounds out the top three is Lewis
Capaldi's second album 'Broken By
Desire To Be Heavenly Sent'. It
arrives with 178,000 sales.
Capaldi's debut album 'Divinely
Uninspired To A Hellish Extent'
started exactly four years ago in
the calendar week 22, 2019 at no.4
globally with 129,000 sales and
generated a total of 6,31 million
sales so far. And
now, as every week, additional stats from outside
the current Global Album Top 10 in alphabetic
order, the first figure means last week's sales,
the second figure the total sales: '1989' by
Taylor Swift 47,000 / 14,439,000, '21' by Adele
13,000 / 32,044,000, '25' by Adele
10,000 /
24,406,000, '30' by Adele 12,000 / 5,917,000,
'After Hours' by The Weeknd 30,000 /
7,927,000,
'Astroworld' by Travis Scott
16,000
/ 7,645,000, 'Beerbongs & Bentleys' by Post
Malone 16,000 / 9,353,000, 'Certified Lover
Boy' by Drake 25,000 / 5,531,000, 'Dangerous:
The Double Album' by Morgan Wallen 54,000 /
7,389,000, 'D-Day' by Agust D 25,000
/ 1,134,000, 'Dawn FM' by The Weeknd
7,000 /
2,727,000, 'Divide' by Ed Sheeran
22.000 / 19,832,000,
'Divinely Uninspired To A Hellish Extent' by
Lewis Capaldi 21,000 / 6,313,000, the 'Encanto' soundtrack
8,000 / 3,382,000, 'Endless Summer
Vacation' by Miley Cyrus 38,000 /
741,000, 'Equals' by Ed Sheeran
25,000
/ 5,073,000, 'Evermore' by Taylor Swift
25,000
/ 4,242,000, 'Face' by Jimin 14,000 /
1,624,000, 'Fine Line' by Harry Styles
22,000 / 8,720,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor Swift
43,000 / 7,148,000, 'Future Nostalgia' by Dua
Lipa 20,000 / 7,698,000, 'Goodbye & Good Riddance'
by Juice WRLD 29,000 / 7,073,000, 'Happier
Than Ever' by Billie Eilish 12,000 / 4,098,000,
'Harry's House' by Harry Styles
51,000 / 4,971,000, 'Her Loss' by
Drake & 21 Savage 36,000 /
2,471,000, 'Hereos & Villains' by
Metro Boomin 53,000 / 2,001,000,
'Hollywood's Bleeding' by Post Malone
26,000
/ 9,236,000, 'Legends Never Die' by Juice WRLD
11,000 / 5,966,000,
'My
Turn' by Lil Baby 23,000 / 5,414,000,
'Planet
Her' by Doja Cat 14,000 / 5,019,000,
'Ready To Be' by Twice 16,000 /
1,392,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
33,000 /
3,921,000, 'Renaissance' by Beyoncé
39,000 / 2,489,000, 'Scorpion' by Drake 17,000 / 8,928,000,
'Shoot
For The Stars, Aim For The Moon' by Pop Smoke
22,000 / 7,932,000, 'Sour' by Olivia
Rodrigo 31,000 / 7,978,000, 'Stoney' by Post Malone
10,000 / 7,474,000, 'The Greatest Showman' soundtrack
6,000 / 9,499,000, 'The Highlights' by The Weeknd
45,000 / 5,344,000, 'The Name
Chapter: Temptation' by Tomorrow X
Together 13,000 / 1,757,000,
'Trustfall' by Pink 14,000 /
564,000,
'Un Verano Sin Ti' by Bad Bunny
45,000 / 5,082,000, 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie Eilish
14,000
/ 10,931,000, and 'X' by Ed Sheeran
6,000 / 13,485,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10 YEARS
AGO
... "Get Lucky" is the lead
single from Daft Punk's fourth
studio album, Random Access Memories
(2013). "Get Lucky" is an ingenious
disco and funk song with lyrics
that, according to Williams, are
about the fortune of connecting with
someone, as well as sexual
chemistry. The song was completed
over the course of approximately 18
months. After it leaked in
mid-April, the single was released
as a digital download on 19 April
2013. It was a huge success and
topped the hitlists in almost all
countries around the world. On the
Global Chart "Get Lucky" achieved
the vice-position of the Year-End
Chart 2013 and after 46 weeks on the
tally it had a total of 10.042.000
points. The song won awards for
Record of the Year and Best Pop Duo
/ Group Performance at the 56th
Annual Grammy Awards, during which
Stevie Wonder joined Daft Punk,
Williams and Rodgers onstage to
perform the song.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift's 'Midnights'
returns to the summit
Tuesday, June 6, 2023
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Taylor Swift’s Midnights jumps
back to No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
(dated June 10), for a sixth
nonconsecutive week atop the
list. The set bumps 3-1
after the May 26 release
of two deluxe editions of the
album, along with a new
color vinyl variant of the
original standard album.
Midnights earned 282,000
equivalent album units in
the United States in the
week ending June 1 (up
389%), according to Luminate
– the second-largest week of
2023 for any album. Only the
debut frame of Morgan
Wallen’s One Thing at a Time
posted a bigger week this
year, when it launched at
No. 1 with 501,000 (chart
dated March 18).
Of Midnights’ 282,000
equivalent album units
earned in the week ending
June 1, album sales comprise
196,000 (up 1,529% — the
largest sales week for any
album in 2023 and the
biggest since Midnights
itself debuted with 1.114
million sold on the Nov.
5-dated chart), SEA units
comprise 80,000 (up 79%,
equaling 107.6 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs), album
sales comprise 6,000 (down
30%) and TEA units comprise
6,000 (up 618%).
Morgan Wallen’s
One Thing at a Time
surrenders the No. 1 slot
after spending its first 12
weeks at No. 1, as the album
dips to No. 2 with 126,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 2%).
Lil Durk notches
his sixth top 10-charting
effort on the Billboard 200
as Almost Heated debuts at
No. 3 with 125,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, SEA
units comprise 122,000
(equaling 167.82 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks), album
sales comprise 2,000 and TEA
units comprise 1,000.
Notably, the 125,000-unit
start marks Durk’s best
week, outside of his
collaborative set with Lil
Baby, which bowed at No. 1
with 150,000 (June 19, 2021,
chart).
A trio of former No. 1s is
next on the Billboard 200:
SZA’s
SOS dips 2-4 (55,000
equivalent album units
earned; down 29%),
Morgan Wallen’s
Dangerous: The Double Album
falls 4-5 (48,000; up 2%)
and
Taylor Swift’s
Lover is a non-mover at No.
6 (38,000; down 1%).
Luke Combs’
Gettin’ Old rises one rung
to No. 7 with 33,000 (down
4%).
Bad Bunny’s
chart-topping Un Verano Sin
Ti climbs one spot to No. 8
(nearly 33,000 equivalent
album units; down 3%),
Zach Bryan’s
American Heartbreak bumps
10-9 (31,000; down 1%) and
Bailey Zimmerman’s
Religiously. The Album.
climbs back to the top 10,
up 11-10 (30,000; down 4%).
Morgan
Wallen’s
“Last Night” leads the Billboard
Hot 100 songs
chart for a ninth week. Released on Big
Loud / Mercury / Republic
Records, drew 66.3 million
radio airplay audience
impressions (up 1%) and 32.8
million streams (essentially
even week-over-week) and
sold 8,000 downloads (down
4%) in the May 26-June 1
tracking week, according to
Luminate.
The song, which initially
led the
Hot 100 in March, becoming
Wallen’s first leader on the
list, notches an 11th week
at No. 1 on the Streaming
Songs chart;
rises 5-4 for a new best on Radio
Songs;
and dips 5-6 on Digital
Song Sales,
following a week on top.
Swift’s “Karma” soars 27-2
on the Hot 100. After it
first logged a week in the
top 10, at No. 9, in its
debut frame last November
(concurrent with the No.
1 Billboard 200 debut of
parent album Midnights),
the song hits a new Hot 100
best following the May 26
release of its remix with
Ice Spice, and the wide
premiere of its official
video May 27 (at midnight
each day). Attendees at
Swift’s May 26 concert — as
part of her The Eras Tour at
MetLife Stadium in East
Rutherford, N.J. — saw
the clip even
earlier at the show, while
Ice Spice joined Swift
on-stage for a live debut of
the remix.
The song drew 38.4 million
in airplay audience (up 15%)
and 22.5 million streams (up
175%) and sold 17,000 (up
744%) May 26-June 1, as it
wins top Streaming and Sales
Gainer honors on the Hot
100. It bounds 50-4 on
Streaming Songs; returns to
Digital Song Sales at No. 2;
and jumps 18-12 on Radio
Songs, hitting new highs on
each survey.
Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers”
descends 2-3 on the Hot 100,
after eight weeks at No. 1,
beginning upon its debut in
January. It posts a 16th
week atop Radio Songs (86.8
million in audience, down
3%).
Lil Durk’s “All My Life,”
featuring J. Cole, rebounds
7-4 on the Hot 100, two
weeks after it launched at
No. 2.
Rema and Selena Gomez’s
“Calm Down” retreats to No.
5 on the Hot 100, from its
No. 4 high.
SZA’s “Kill Bill” drops 3-6
on the Hot 100, after it
became her first No. 1, for
a week in April.
Eslabon Armado and Peso
Pluma’s “Ella Baila Sola”
slides 6-7 on the Hot 100,
after hitting No. 4 – the
best rank ever for a
regional Mexican song.
Luke Combs’ cover of Tracy
Chapman’s “Fast Car” revs to
a new No. 8 Hot 100 best,
from No. 10, as it claims
the chart’s top Airplay
Gainer award for a second
consecutive week (26.3
million, up 33%).
Rounding out the Hot 100’s
top 10, Toosii’s “Favorite
Song” falls to No. 9 from
its No. 5 high and Metro
Boomin, The Weeknd and 21
Savage’s “Creepin’ ”
backtracks 9-10, after
hitting No. 3.
Record Of The Month
Never before
in history a regional
Mexican song was such a
great success globally:
'Ella Baila Sola' by Eslabon
Armado with guest vocalist
Peso Pluma
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Lewis Capaldi remains at
no.1 on
the album list
Monday, June 5, 2023
by Alan Jones, London
A week after recording the
biggest week’s sales of any
album in 2023, Lewis
Capaldi’s second release,
Broken By Desire To Be
Heavenly Sent, secures a
second week at No.1 on
consumption of 12,187 units.
In the space of seven days,
it has gone from recording
the highest weekly sale of
any No.1 album
for 30 weeks to the lowest
for seven weeks, and the
second lowest for 18 weeks.
Comprising 3,115 CDs, 592
vinyl albums, 123 cassettes,
958 digital sales and 7,399
sales-equivalent streams,
that total is 87.29% down
week-on-week. In percentage
terms, that’s the type of
decline more usually
associated with fanbase
acts, and even exceeds the
85.55% second week dip that
saw Ellie Goulding’s Higher
Than Heaven plummet 1-84
seven weeks ago. Although
Broken By Desire… had a
7.12% bigger first week than
Capaldi’s 2019 debut,
Divinely Uninspired To A
Hellish Extent, its second
week decline is greater and
its second week sale is
lower than its illustrious
predecessor, which followed
up its opening frame of
89,506 with a 55.60% dip to
39,741. Its two-week tally
of 129,263 (including 16
early sales) was thus 19.60%
higher than Broken By
Desire…, which had
pre-release leakage of 12,
and a to-date tally of
108,081. The highest of just
four debuts
this week is by
Sparks. Formed by siblings
Ron & Russell Mael in 1968,
and originally called
Halfnelson, their 25th
studio album, The Girl Is
Crying In Her Latte (No.7,
6,652 sales), is their fifth
Top 10 and 10th Top 75 entry
in a chart career spanning
more than 49 years.
Comprising 14 new songs all
written and produced by the
brothers, it is the
follow-up to A Steady Drip
Drip Drip, which debuted and
peaked at No.7 on sales of
5,151 in 2020. Their only
previous back-to-back Top 10
albums were Kimono My House
and Propaganda, both
released in 1974.
Twenty-two year-old London
singer/songwriter Arlo Parks
debuts at No.9 (5,999 sales)
with her second studio
album, My Soft Machine. It
is the follow-up to her
critically-acclaimed 2021
debut, Collapsed In
Sunbeams, which won the
coveted Mercury Prize that
year and was nominated for a
Grammy. It debuted and
peaked at No.3 on sales of
11,576 units, and has
to-date consumption of
85,901 units.
After falling to its lowest
position to date last week,
Midnights dashes 10-2
(11,085 sales) for Taylor
Swift, securing an 18-week
high in its 32-week chart
career, stimulated by the
release of The Til Dawn
Edition (see also singles
analysis) last Friday.
Harry Styles’ UK tour
continues to boost his chart
fortunes, with a trio of
climbers in both singles and
albums listings. In the
latter, latest album 2022’s
Harry’s House jumps 5-3
(9,791 sales), while 2019
release Fine Line improves
16-13 (5,184 sales) and his
eponymous 2017 solo debut
jumps 89-56 (2,161 sales),
recording their highest
chart placings for 15, 49
and 38 weeks, respectively.
Touring is also the stimulus
for Beyonce’s Renaissance,
which climbs for the fifth
week in a row, and also
reaches a 38-week high,
improving 7-6 (6,793 sales).
The rest of the Top 10:
Subtract (2-4, 8,183 sales)
by Ed Sheeran, The
Highlights (6-5, 7,500
sales) by The Weeknd and
Diamonds (11-10, 5,987
sales) by Elton John.
Retreating from a 128-week
high of 2,382,921, overall
album sales are down 4.66%
week-on-week at 2,271,992.
That is 4.84% above same
week 2022 sales of
2,167,079. Physical product
accounts for 265,342 sales,
11.68% of the total.
Miracle by Calvin Harris &
Ellie Goulding continues to
defy less blessed chart
campaigners, and racks up
its sixth week in a row at
No.1, with consumption
climbing 2.81% to 45,536
units (1,399 digital
downloads, 44,137
sales-equivalent streams) –
its highest level for four
weeks.
In all, Miracle has spent
eight of its 12 weeks in the
chart thus far at No.1,
accumulating to-date
consumption of 534,234
units, becoming the 24th
track by Harris and the 13th
by Goulding to surpass the
half million mark. Of 51 new
No.1 hits thus far in the
2020s, it has spent longer
at No.1 than any
collaboration, its reign
only being exceeded by solo
singles Bad Habits by Ed
Sheeran (11 weeks), As It
Was by Harry Styles and
Flowers by Miley Cyrus (both
10 weeks), and Drivers
License by Olivia Rodrigo (9
weeks).
Daylight is No.2 for the
fifth time in total, and
second week in a row for
David Kushner, despite its
consumption falling for the
fifth consecutive week to
30,959 units That’s the
lowest tally for a No.2 song
since Kid Laroi’s Without
You (29,309 sales), 122
weeks ago.
On its 22nd consecutive week
in the Top 10 – 24th in
total – and 40th straight
week in the Top 75, Afrobeat
monster Calm Down reaches a
new peak for 23-year-old
Nigerian singer/rapper Rema.
In the whole of chart
history, only six tracks
have had longer Top 10
tenures. Of those, two spent
more consecutive weeks in
the Top 10, the first being
I Believe by Frankie Laine
in 1953 and the second being
Secret Love by Doris Day in
1954, which endured for 35
and 27 weeks in a row,
respectively. Climbing 5-3
in the current frame, with
sales up 3.22% to 28,673
units, Calm Down has had
higher consumption on five
occasions, most recently
four weeks ago. It has been
tremendously stable,
particularly over the last
21 weeks, during which it
has had a median sale of
27,922 and an average sale
of 27,881, never going above
29,872 nor below 26,183.
First released in February
2022, it took 29 weeks to
chart, and has to-date
consumption of 979,743
units.
There are also new peaks for
React (6-5, 27,959 sales) by
Switch Disco & Ella
Henderson and Giving Me
(8-6, 27,780 sales) by
Jazzy.
Currently on the European
leg of his tour – but back
here for gigs at Wembley and
Cardiff’s Principality
Stadium later this month –
Harry Styles continues to
strengthen his grip on the
chart, with April 2022
chart-topper As It Was
surging 10-4 (28,392 sales),
June 2022 No.2 hit Late
Night Talking jumping 37-31
(13,879 sales) and latest
single, Satellite, advancing
49-36 (12,298 sales) to
become his 30th Top 40 hit,
including 19 with One
Direction.
The rest of the Top 10: Wish
You The Best (3-7, 25,734
sales) by Lewis Capaldi,
Eyes Closed (7-8, 24,965
sales) by Ed Sheeran, Cupid
(11-9, 23,767 sales) by
Fifty Fifty and Tattoo
(4-10, 23,111 sales) by
Loreen.
Overall singles sales are
down 0.77% week-on-week from
their all-time peak to
28,093,513 units – 13.32%
above same week 2022
consumption of 24,791,712
units. Paid-for sales are up
2.47% week-on-week at
297,375 – 20.18% below same
week 2022 sales of 372,580.