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Global Chart Report
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'Golden' reigns a 12th week
Sunday, November 2, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden

 

'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 - remains a 12th non-consecutive week atop the Global Track Chart with 424,000 points, an 1% decrease compared to the previous week. Broken down by sectors the song gets 315,000 points by streaming (down 3%), 38,000 points by sales (down 1%), and 71,000 points by airplay (up 6%). After 18 weeks on the tally 'Golden' generates a total of 6,887,000 points and climbs at no.5 on the year-to-date list. Taylor Swift's 'The Fate Of Ophelia', holds tight at the runner-up slot with 377,000 points, (down 6% with 261,000 points by streaming, 43,000 points by sales, and 73,000 points by airplay). Three weeks ago the track started with massive 689,000 points and Taylor Swift set an all-time record with seven simultaneous songs Top 10 songs. What is left of are two songs this week, behind

'Ophelia' ranks 'Opalite' still at no.4 with 195,000 points (up 1% with 148,000 points by streaming, 34,000 points by sales, and 13,000 points by airplay). Sandwiched between 'Ophelia' and 'Opalite' ranks Alex Warren's 'Ordinary' still at no.3 with 245,000 points (down 1% with 133,000 points by streaming, 24,000 points by sales, and 88,000 points by airplay). The song tops the (non-published) Global Airplay Chart for a 21th week in a row. 'Die With A Smile' by Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars sails back to no.9 currently with 150,000 points (up 1%). With a total of 20,819,000 points it holds no.3 on the ALL TIME CHART. Perhaps before the end of this year the song could be the most successful smash of all time, there's only a gap of 495,000 points to the current leader. Let's take a short excursion through the history of the most successful tracks on our hitlist. In the initial year 1955 led Cuban mambo king Perez Prado with 'Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White' with a total 8,021,000 points, overtaken nearly two years later by Doris Day's 'Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)' from the Alfred Hitchcock film 'The Man Who Knew Too Much' with 11,073,000 points. Seven years later in 1964 the Beatles' 'I Want To Hold Your Hand' set a new record with a total of 14,435,000 points. Another 21 years later the benefit single 'We Are The World' by USA For Africa generated a little bit more with 14,665,000 points. 1991 Bryan Adams' '(Everything I Do) I Do It For You' took over the lead of the ALL TIME CHART with 15,694,000 points. Only 16 months later Whitney Houston's 'I Will Always Love You' set another new record with 16,547,000 points. Finally four and a half years afterwards Elton John's tribute single 'Candle In The Wind 1997' took the crown with spectacular worldwide sales and a total of 21,314,000 points. This record has stood for 28 years now! With Police's 'Every Breath You Take' a 42 year-old classic turns back to the Global Top 40. The song topped our tally for five weeks in August 1983 and landed at no.4 on the Countdown-Chart in that year. Outside our current Top 40 waiting among other 'Dracula' by Tame Impala at no.52, 'Creep' by Radiohead at no.54, and 'Berghain' by Rosalía | Björk | Yves Tumor at no.59 for their first appearance on the hitlist. The South Korean boy group BoyNextDoor is the new leader on our Global Album Chart with their fifth extended play 'The Action'. The set bows with 303,000 equivalent sales worldwide (nearly all points were generated by physical sales). The former effort 'No Genre' started at no.2 in the calendar week 22 this year with 457,000 sales, shy behind Morgan Wallen's 'I'm The Problem', which was also new in that week with 461,000 consumption units. Taylor Swift's 12th studio album 'The Life Of A Showgirl' exploded with stellar 5,371,000 equivalent sales three weeks ago, the second highest weekly frame in history! Only overtaken by Adele's '25', which launched a little bit higher, nearly 10 years ago - in the calendar week 49, 2015 - with first week global sales of 5,706,000 (pure) sales. This week 'The Life Of A Showgirl' is leaving the global top position with another 201,000 equivalent sales (down 30% compared to the previous week with 162,000 points by streaming + 39,000 points by sales). With a total of 6,34 million sales it's easily the most successful set of the year 2025. So it's the fourth time (!!) in a row that Taylor Swift leads a Global Album Year-End Chart. 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 / 17,078,000, '1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift 15,000 / 7,245,000, '21' by Adele 13,000 / 34,111,000, '25' by Adele 10,000 / 25,903,000, '30' by Adele 9,000 / 7,052,000, 'After Hours' by The Weeknd 31,000 / 11,497,000, 'Borondo' by Beéle 40,000 / 1,157,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX 28,000 / 4,179,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler, The Creator 12,000 / 2,428,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by Beyoncé 11,000 / 2,240,000, 'Divide' by Ed Sheeran 21,000 / 22,435,000, 'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande 43,000 / 4,851,000, 'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 / 6,897,000, 'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 28,000 / 3,696,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor Swift 30,000 / 12,603,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin Park 15,000 / 1,803,000, 'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 / 9,954,000, 'GNX' by Kendrick Lamar 22,000 / 3,731,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 23,000 / 5,320,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 31,000 / 2,379,000, 'I've Tried Everything But Therapy' by Teddy Swims 35,000 / 3,783,000, 'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 19,000 / 2,608,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa 44,000 / 2,396,000, 'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega 22,000 / 1,589,000, 'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 21,000 / 13,046,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 22,000 / 2,544,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan Wallen 24,000 / 9,968,000, 'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift 13,000 / 6,966,000, 'Rosie' by Rosé 16,000 / 2,206,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie 19,000 / 1,581,000, 'So Close To What' by Tate McRae 43,000 / 2,099,000, 'Starboy' by The Weeknd 35,000 / 9,872,000, 'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 39,000 / 5,608,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber 41,000 / 1,284,000, 'The Highlights' by The Weeknd 23,000 / 10,426,000, 'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by Chappell Roan 27,000 / 4,419,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams 30,000 / 3,589,000, 'The Tortured Poets Department' by Taylor Swift 35,000 / 11,275,000, 'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 39,000 / 951,000, 'Utopia' by Travis Scott 12,000 / 5,740,000, and 'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie Eilish 16,000 / 13,121,000.


GLOBAL NO.1 - 10 YEARS AGO ... "Hello" was released on 23 October 2015 as the lead single from Adele's third studio album, 25. It's a piano ballad with soul influences, and lyrics that discuss themes of nostalgia and regret. "Hello" attained huge international commercial success reaching number one in almost all countries of the world and breaking several records. In the USA for example it becoming the first song with over a million digital sales in a week. On the Global Chart it debuted with sensational 1,531,000 points, the biggest weekly frame since 18 years, when Elton John's 'Candle In The Wind 1997' generated stellar sales over several weeks. The accompanying music video to "Hello" was directed by Xavier Dolan and co-stars Adele and Tristan Wilds.


USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift rules still both major charts
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust, Los Angeles


Helping the song’s continued Hot 100 command, Swift released its *Alone In My Tower Acoustic Version" for digital purchase Oct. 28, just after 4:30 p.m. ET, ahead of the tracking week’s

close at the end of Oct. 30. “The Fate of Ophelia” drew 29.1 million official streams (down 13%) and 54.5 million radio airplay audience impressions (up 10%) and sold 22,000 (up 236%) in the United States Oct. 24-30. The single scores a fourth week at No. 1 on the Streaming Songs chart and a third week atop Digital Song Sales and is steady at its No. 5 high on Radio Songs. “The Fate of Ophelia” became Swift’s 13th career Hot 100 No. 1, tying her for the fourth-most in the chart’s archives. Swift stacks three songs in the top 10 of the latest Hot 100, all from The Life of a Showgirl, following her four top 10s a week ago, eight the week before that and all 10 songs in the region in their debut week: No. 1 this week, “The Fate of Ophelia”, No. 4, “Opalite” and No. 8, “Elizabeth Taylor” Kehlani collects her first Hot 100 top 10 as “Folded” bounds 14-7, with 13 million streams (up 35%), 32.9 million in airplay audience (up 11%) and 3,000 sold (up 74%) in the

tracking week. It also becomes Kehlani’s first top 10 on Streaming Songs (28-10) and Radio Songs (11-8). Helping propel “Folded,” six remixes were released Oct. 24 as an “Homage Pack,” one each with Toni Braxton, Brandy, JoJo, Mario, Ne-Yo and Tank. (All versions except for the one with Tank contribute to the song’s singular chart listing; that mix does not due to Kehlani’s vocals being much more minimized than on the others. Meanwhile, Kehlani remains the only artist credited on the song on the Hot 100, as none of its remixes outperformed the original in consumption for the week.) Huntr/x’s “Golden,” from Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters, is steady at No. 2 on the Hot 100, following eight weeks at No. 1 beginning in August. Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,” which led the Hot 100 for 10 weeks starting in May, keeps at No. 3, while topping Radio Songs for a landmark 20th week (78.5 million in audience, down 1%). Only two other songs have reached 20 or weeks atop the airplay tally: Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” (27, beginning in August 2024) and The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights” (26, starting in April 2020). Olivia Dean’s first Hot 100 entry, “Man I Need,” becomes her first top five hit, climbing 8-5, and Justin Bieber’s “Daisies” pushes 7-6, after reaching No. 2. Morgan Wallen’s “I Got Better” holds at No. 9 on the Hot 100, after reaching No. 7. Taylor Swift’s The Life of a Showgirl spends its first month atop the Billboard 200 chart, as it racks up its fourth straight week at No. 1 (on the chart dated Nov. 8). It earned 146,000 equivalent album units (down 25%) in the United States in the week ending Oct. 30, according to Luminate. The Life of a Showgirl is only the second album in 2025 to spend its first month at No. 1, following Morgan Wallen’s I’m the Problem (which spent its first eight weeks atop the list, of its total 12 at No. 1). Swift’s own The Tortured Poets Department spent its first 12 weeks at No. 1 in 2024, of its total 17 weeks atop the list. With The Life of a Showgirl spending a fourth week at No. 1, Swift adds her 90th career week at No. 1 on the chart, extending her record among soloists. Elvis Presley has the second-most among soloists, with 67. The total encompasses her 15 No. 1 albums, the most among soloists. Only The Beatles have more weeks at No. 1 (132) and more No. 1 albums (19) among all artists. Of The Life of a Showgirl’s 146,000 equivalent album units earned in the latest tracking week, SEA units comprise 121,000 (down 22%, equaling 157.82 million on-demand official streams of the set’s tracks — it’s No. 1 on Top Streaming Albums for a fourth week), album sales comprise 22,000 (down 41%; it falls 1-3 on Top Album Sales) and TEA units comprise 3,000 (up 411%). The chart-topping KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack is a non-mover at No. 2 on the latest Billboard 200 (84,000 equivalent album units earned, down 12%), while I’m the Problem is also stationary at No. 3 (76,000, down 8%). Daniel Caesar collects his first top 10 album as Son of Spergy debuts at No. 4 with 43,000 equivalent album units earned — his best week by units ever. Of that sum, SEA units comprise 26,000 (equaling 34.11 million on-demand official streams of the set’s tracks, marking his best streaming week ever; it debuts at No. 10 on Top Streaming Albums), album sales comprise 17,000 (his best sales week ever; it debuts at No. 4 on Top Album Sales) and TEA units comprise a negligible sum. Sabrina Carpenter’s former leader Man’s Best Friend holds at No. 5 on the latest Billboard 200 (42,000 equivalent album units earned, down 3%), while Olivia Dean’s The Art of Loving rises 7-6 (39,000 units, up 5%). Brandi Carlile captures her fifth top 10 album on the Billboard 200 as Returning to Myself debuts at No. 7 with 35,000 equivalent album units earned. Of that sum, album sales comprise 32,000 (it debuts at No. 1 on Top Album Sales), SEA units comprise 3,000 (equaling 4.31 million on-demand official streams of the album’s tracks) and TEA units comprise a negligible sum. Cardi B’s former No. 1 Am I The Drama? falls 6-8 with 32,000 equivalent album units earned (down 20%). Demi Lovato scores her 10th top 10 album on the Billboard 200 as It’s Not That Deep debuts at No. 9 with 31,000 equivalent album units earned. Of that sum, album sales comprise 24,000 (it debuts at No. 2 on Top Album Sales), SEA units comprise 7,000 (equaling 9.78 million on-demand official streams of the set’s tracks) and TEA units comprise a negligible sum. Closing out the new top 10 on the latest Billboard 200 is SZA’s former No. 1 SOS, which falls 8-10 with nearly 31,000 equivalent album units earned (down 2%).


Record Of The Month
As the first salvo from her new album, Lux, Spanish reggaeton and flamenco artist Rozalíá has uncorked a dazzling opus featuring Björk, Yves Tumor and a full-on symphony orchestra.


United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Rapper Dave bows with his third no.1 album
Monday, November 3, 2025
by Alan Jones, London

 
The Golden era has returned: Five weeks after it was last at the apex, Golden jumps back to No.1 for Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon Hunters Cast. No.3 for the last fortnight, it overwhelms three-week topper, The Fate Of Ophelia (1-2, 61,228 sales) by Taylor Swift and Olivia Dean’s

Man I Need, which falls into ACR (2-6, 30,914 sales) but would have been overtaken anyway, with unadjusted consumption of 61,072 units. Dean’s Nice To Each Other is also an ACR casualty, tumbling 8-22 (14,535 sales), while her Sam Fender collaboration Rein Me In also exits the Top 10 (10-14, 20,304 sales). With schools’ half-term break in full swing, streaming of Kpop Demon Hunters is on the rise, and propels all three of the Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon Hunters Cast tracks to increased consumption. High profile debuts higher in the chart encumber How It’s Done (9-10, 23,222 sales) and What It Sounds Like (13-13, 20,474 sales), despite their percentile gains of 2.24% and 3.72% respectively, but Golden is not to be denied, with a 5.26% increase in consumption to 65,982 units (8 CDs, 201 vinyl, 1,709 digital downloads and 64,064 sales-equivalent streams) – its highest for five weeks – earning it its ninth week at No.1.

All 10 tracks from Dave’s chart-topping third album, The Bow Who Played The Harp, debut inside the Top 50 of the Top 200 Combined Tracks chart, but under primary artist rules, only three are eligible for the main Top 75 chart. Tems collaboration Raindance leads the way (No.5, 34,935 sales), followed by James Blake collaboration History (No.9, 25,119 sales) and Kano collaboration, Chapter 16 (No.11, 22,415 sales). Where Is My Husband! Is up one notch for the third week in a row, and revisits its earlier No.3 peak (42,869 sales) for Raye. The rest of the Top 10: Opalite (5-4, 35,868 sales) by Taylor Swift, So Easy (To Fall In Love) (6-7, 30,454 sales) by Olivia Dean and Elizabeth Taylor (7-8, 25,743 sales) by Taylor Swift. Overall singles consumption is up 1.70% week-on-week to 30,984,457 units, 3.21% above same week 2024 consumption of 30,021,156 units. Paid-for sales are up 11.80% week-on-week at 279,507, 3.07% below same week 2024 sales of 288,372. Dave becomes the first homegrown British rap act to have three albums debut at No.1, with The Boy Who Played The Harp racking up first week consumption of 73,779 units (20,612 CDs, 15,561 vinyl albums, 15,636 cassettes, 368 digital downloads and 21,602 sales-equivalent streams). The third full-length album by the 27-year-old from Streatham, it emulates the chart-topping starts made by his debut release, Psychodrama in 2019, and follow-up We’re All Alone In This Together in 2021. Its first week consumption far eclipses the former’s 26,390 units and almost matches the latter’s 74,191 units. Seventy-two weeks after Bon Jovi’s 16th studio album, Forever, debuted and peaked at No.3 on consumption of 22,812 units – becoming their 18th Top 10 and 21st Top 75 entry in total - an expanded ‘legendary’ version of the set, sees all 12 of its songs reimagined as duets with artists like Bruce Springsteen, Jelly Roll, Ryan Tedder and Robbie Williams. Also adding new Bon Jovi anthem Red, White And Jersey, it exceeds the original in both metrics, debuting at No.2, on consumption of 27,999 units. It is a standalone release, not combined with the original Fearless, which racks up further consumption of 683 units this week, to raise its career tally to 35,474 units. A candid concept album addressing her marital woes with ‘artistic licence’, Lily Allen’s fifth studio album, West End Girl, emulates its predecessors by making the Top 10. Opening at No.4 on consumption of 20,402 units, despite not yet being available physically, West End Girl was recorded in just 16 days, and Allen co-wrote all of its songs, three of which simultaneously make their Top 20 singles chart debuts this week. Allen’s first two albums are both quadruple platinum, with 2006 debut Alright, Still on 1,210,017 units and 2009 follow-up It’s Not Me, It’s You on 1,242,106 units. In America, The Life Of A Showgirl (TLOAS) will this weekend become the sixth album by Taylor Swift to start its chart campaign with four or more weeks at No.1 – it’s something she has yet to do here. Last week, TLOAS equalled Swift’s personal best opening of three weeks at No.1 set by Folklore in 2020 and matched by 1989 (Taylor’s Version) in 2023 but it now slips to No.3 (23,561 sales) – the highest consumption for an album in that position for 60 weeks. Swift has spent a grand total of 90 weeks at No.1 on the album chart in America, a total surpassed only by The Beatles (132 weeks), whilst her UK tally of 35 weeks is surpassed by eight acts, with The Beatles again leading the way (176 weeks). The rest of the Top 10: The Art Of Loving (3-5, 16,989 sales) by Olivia Dean, Man’s Best Friend (5-6, 11,115 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter, The Highlights (6-7, 8,218 sales) by The Weeknd, , +-=÷× Tour Collection (7-8, 7,469 sales) by Ed Sheeran, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (8-, 7,187 sales) by Fleetwood Mac and Time Flies: 1994-2009 (10-10, 6,292 sales) by Oasis. Overall album sales are up 3.08% week-on-week at 2,658,710 units, 5.16% above same week 2024 sales of 2,528,150. Physical product accounts for 396,212 sales, 14.90% of the total.

GLOBAL ALBUM CHART          GLOBAL TRACK CHART