Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
Taylor Swift
sets new records
Sunday, October 12, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Taylor Swift plays in
a league of her own: The new album
"The Life Of A Showgirl" and the 12
songs from the effort breaking
records. For the first time ever an
act has seven titles in the Global
Top 10! The previous record was set
more than 60 years ago, when the
Beatles had six simultaneous Top 10
hits in the calendar week 14, 1964.
The official single release "The
Fate Of Ophelia" leads clearly with
689,000 initial points, the best
result since Miley Cyrus' 'Flowers'
peaked with 713,000 points in the
week 5, 2023. It's Taylor Swift's
ninth global number one smash.
Broken down by sectors the song
starts with 655,000 points by
streaming
and 34,000 points by airplay.
'Opalite' bows shy behind at the
runner-up slot with 439,000 points
and 'Elizabeth Taylor' arrives at
no.4 with 395,000 points. According
to our chart-rules only the three
most successful songs from an album
appear with the full points, the
fourth song gets
a 10% deduction, the
fifth
20% the sixth 30%, etc.
Without this rule Taylor Swift would
occupy all places from no.1 to
no.14, interrupted only by Huntr/x's
'Golden' at no.3 and Alex Warren's
'Ordinary' at no.13.
With all her new smashes Taylor
Swift has now a total of 43 Global
Top 10 hits, the same number as
Elvis Presley and Japanese pop
phenomenon AKB 48. Only Madonna
reigns above all with 47 hits. By
the way, Taylor Swift's first entry
in the Top 10 was 'Love Story' in
the calendar week 10, 2009. Back to
this week's hitlist, the
above-mentioned
'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 - slides back to
no.3 (after eleven weeks at no.1)
with 420,000 points (down 0,3% with
329,000 points by streaming, 36,000
points by sales, and 55,000 points
by airplay).
Outside our
current Top 40 waiting among other
'Shiny' by Easykid & Dysbit at no.58
and 'Yellow' by Coldplay at
no.60 and for their first appearance
on the hitlist. Taylor Swift's 12th
studio album 'The Life Of A
Showgirl' is a milestone in the
chart-history! With unbelievable
stellar 5,371,000 equivalent sales
globally (764,000 points by
streaming + 4,607,000 points by
sales) in the initial week, it
succeeds the second best start by an
album worldwide in history. Only
Adele's '25' 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. Taylor Swift's new
smash was recorded in Sweden with
the producer legends Max Martin and
Shellback. Only with the first-week
sales it's the most successful album
of the year 2025. So it's the fourth
time (!!) in a row that Taylor Swift
leads the Global Album Year-End
Chart. Back to this week's hitlist:
Second and final debut on this
week's hitlist is 'Hype Vibes' by
CxM at no.2 with 235,000 sales. CxM
are S.Coups and Mingyu from the
South Korean boygroup Seventeen. The soundtrack to
'K-pop Demon Hunters' rounds out the
top three
with 125,000 comsumption units (down
8% with 108,000 points by streaming
+ 17,000 points by sales). After 16
weeks on the tally it reaches a
total of 2,08 million. 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 13,000 / 17,041,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 17,000 / 7,198,000, '21' by
Adele 13,000 / 34,072,000, '25' by
Adele 10,000 / 25,873,000, '30' by
Adele 9,000 / 7,025,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 31,000 /
11,404,000, 'Borondo' by Beéle
44,000 / 1,031,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
42,000 /
4,083,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 12,000 / 2,392,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 11,000 / 2,207,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 21,000 / 22,370,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by
Ariana Grande 47,000 / 4,715,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 10,000 /
6,867,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 31,000
/ 3,609,000, 'Folklore' by Taylor
Swift 45,000 / 12,500,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 15,000 / 1,758,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 /
9,912,000, 'GNX' by Kendrick Lamar
23,000 / 3,664,000, 'Guts' by Olivia
Rodrigo 23,000 / 5,251,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 5,093,000, 'Hurry Up
Tomorrow' by The Weeknd 32,000 /
2,284,000, 'I've Tried Everything
But Therapy' by Teddy Swims 37,000 /
3,675,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 20,000 /
2,549,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
45,000 / 2,264,000,
'Mi Vida Mi Muerte' by Neton Vega
22,000 / 1,522,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 24,000 /
12,976,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 28,000 /
2,473,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 25,000 / 9,894,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 13,000 / 6,927,000, 'Rosie' by
Rosé 17,000 / 2,158,000, 'Ruby' by
Jennie 23,000 / 1,516,000, 'So Close
To What' by Tate McRae 45,000 /
1,963,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 35,000 / 9,767,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 33,000
/ 5,494,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 23,000 / 10,357,000, 'The Rise
And Fall Of A Midwest Princess' by
Chappell Roan 31,000 / 4,329,000, 'The
Secret Of Us' by Gracie Abrams
31,000 / 3,492,000, 'The Tortured
Poets Department' by Taylor Swift
50,000 / 11,153,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 12,000 / 5,704,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 16,000 /
13,073,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 20
YEARS AGO
... "Don't Cha" was originally recorded by Tori Alamaze, a former
backing vocalist for the hip hop duo Outkast, who released the song as
her first single; however, after minor success and dissatisfaction with
her label she gave up her rights to the song. Universal Music Group gave
it to the Pussycat Dolls as the label was trying to reinvent the girl
group. The new version was released on April 19, 2005 and contains an
interpolation of "Swass" by rapper Sir Mix-A-Lot. The debut single of
the Pussycat Dolls reached the no.1 spot in United Kingdom, Germany,
Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland,
Ireland, Norway, Denmark, and New Zealand.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Swift monopolizes the top 10
thanks to her new album, The
Life of a Showgirl.
She does so for a third time
— no one else ever has at
all. Taylor Swift claims the
top 12 spots on the latest
Billboard Hot 100,
all via her new album, The
Life of a Showgirl.
On the chart dated Oct. 18,
“The Fate of Ophelia” leads
her dozen debuts at No. 1 —
as the 12-song set becomes
the first album ever to
place all its songs
uninterrupted from the top
of the chart on down. Swift
was already the only artist
ever to hold the Hot 100’s
entire top 10 and now
achieves the feat for a
third time. She first filled
the top 10 thanks to her
album Midnights in
November 2022 and
outpaced herself via The
Tortured Poets Department in
May 2024 —
when she stormed the chart’s
top 14 positions. With “The
Fate of Ophelia,” Swift
scores her 13th career Hot
100 No. 1, tying for the
fourth-most over the chart’s
67-year history. She also
ups her count to 69 top 10s,
the most among women. “The
Fate of Ophelia,” which
arrives as the 1,184th No. 1
in the Hot 100’s history,
drew 92.5 million official
streams and 38.5 million
radio airplay audience
impressions in the United
States Oct. 3-9.
It, like all tracks from The
Life of a Showgirl,
has no sales counting toward
the list, as they were not
available for purchase
individually during the
album’s first week of
release. The single is
Swift’s 10th leader on the
Streaming Songs chart, the
most among women (and second
overall only to Drake’s 21).
On Radio Songs, it debuts as
her 22nd top 10 at No. 7;
it’s just the fifth song to
start in the top 10 since
the ranking began measuring
all-format airplay in
December 1998, joining
Rihanna’s “Lift Me Up” (No.
6, 2022); Adele’s “Easy on
Me” (No. 4, 2021); Lady
Gaga’s “Born This Way” (No.
6, 2011); and Janet
Jackson’s “All for You” (No.
9, 2001). Taylor
Swift achieves her 15th No.
1 album on the Billboard 200
albums chart (dated Oct. 18)
in record-breaking fashion
with the debut of The Life
of a Showgirl. Swift breaks
out of a tie with Drake and
JAY-Z for the most No. 1
albums among soloists and
becomes the sole act with
the second-most No. 1s. Only
The Beatles, with 19 No. 1s,
have more, dating to when
the chart began publishing
on a regular, weekly basis
in 1956. The Life of a
Showgirl debuts with 4.002
million equivalent album
units (which include pure
album sales and streaming
activity) earned in the
United States in the week
ending Oct. 9, according to
Luminate, following its Oct.
3 release. Of that sum, pure
album sales total 3,479,500.
Those are the largest weekly
sums for an album, by both
equivalent album units and
pure album sales, since
Luminate started
electronically collecting
data in 1991, beginning the
modern era of weekly music
tabulation. Previously, the
modern-era records for
single-week equivalent album
units, and pure album sales,
for an album were set by the
opening frame of Adele’s 25,
with 3.482 million units, of
which 3.378 million were
pure album sales, in
November 2015. Of The Life
of a Showgirl’s 4.002
million first-week
equivalent album units, pure
album sales (purchases of
the physical and digital
versions of the album)
comprise 3,479,500 (it
debuts at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales) and SEA units
comprise 522,600 (equaling
680.9 million on-demand
official streams of the
tracks on the album; it also
debuts at No. 1 on Top
Streaming Albums). The album
has zero TEA units, as none
of its tracks were available
to purchase individually on
digital retail services. The
Life of a Showgirl is the
only debut in the top 10 on
the latest Billboard 200.
The KPop Demon Hunters
soundtrack is pushed down to
No. 2 with 96,000 equivalent
album units for the week
(down 7%) and the rest of
the top six titles are also
former No. 1s. Morgan
Wallen’s I’m the Problem
falls 2-3 (82,000, down 7%),
Cardi B’s Am I The Drama?
shifts 3-4 (63,000, down
24%), Sabrina Carpenter’s
Man’s Best Friend is a
non-mover at No. 5 (50,000,
down 12%) and Bad Bunny’s
DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS jumps
10-6 (41,000, up 5% after he
hosted the season premiere
of NBC’s Saturday Night Live
on Oct. 4). Olivia Dean’s
The Art of Loving rises 8-7
in its second week on the
Billboard 200 (35,000, down
19%), Alex Warren’s You’ll
Be Alright, Kid lifts 11-8
(32,000, down 6%), SZA’s
chart-topping SOS steps 12-9
(nearly 32,000, down 2%) and
Morgan Wallen’s former
leader One Thing at a Time
ascends 13-10 (31,000, down
2%).
Record Of The Month
'Where Is My Husband?' is
the new smash by British
singer / songwriter
Rachel Agatha Keen, known
professionally as Raye.
The song was billed as the
lead single of her upcoming
second studio album.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift
Monday, October 13, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
Not for the first time in
her glorious career, Taylor
Swift makes chart history
this week, becoming the
first artist ever to have
simultaneous new entries at
No.1, No.2 and No.3. It’s
the first top three made up
entirely of debuts since 28
November 2014 - 568 weeks
ago – when Band Aid 30’s Do
They Know It’s
Christmas debuted at No.1 (312,928 sales), Clean Bandit’s
Real Love (feat. Jess Glynne) at No.2 (81,837 sales) and Olly Murs’
Wrapped Up at No.3 (75,081 sales).
Justin Bieber (2016) Ed Sheeran (2017), Harry
Styles (2022) and Sabrina Carpenter (2024) are the only acts to
previously fill out all the medal positions in a week – but none of them
did so with new entries alone.
Swift’s feat is courtesy of The Fate Of Ophelia
(No.1, 132,501 sales), Opalite (No.2, 93,017 sales) and Elizabeth Taylor
(No.3, 90,636 sales), tracks from her blockbuster new album, The Life Of
A Showgirl (TLOAS) which achieve their lofty positions from
sales-equivalent streams alone – no track on TLOAS is available
physically or for download. The Fate Of Ophelia’s DUS tally is the
highest for a No.1 since LadBaby’s Sausage Rolls For Everyone (feat. Ed
Sheeran & Elton John) opened its account with 136,445 units 198 weeks
ago, in December 2021.
Swift’s first new hits in
more than a year raise
her all-time tallies to 77 Top 75, 58 Top 40, 33 Top 10, 17 Top 3 and
five No.1 hits. They all eclipse the previous highest consumption in any
week of any track so far this year. Although not coming near the record
193,799 sales-equivalent streams that Adele’s Easy On Me derived from
19,422,185 audio streams and 4,577,520 video streams when it debuted at
No.1 in 2021 (207 weeks ago), the tally turned in by The Fate Of Ophelia
– from 13,580,262 audio streams and 1,271,829 video streams – is very
impressive.
The rest of the 12 tracks on TLOAS – all
co-written and co-produced with Swedish songwriters Max Martin &
Shellshock – are ‘starred-out’. Were it not for the change in chart
regulations which limited primary artists to three simultaneous hits,
after Ed Sheeran occupied nine of the Top 10 slots in 2017, Taylor would
this week have equalled the record. The ‘starred-out’ tracks: Father
Figure (80,195 sales), The Life Of A Showgirl (with Sabrina Carpenter)
(72,088 sales), Actually Romantic (67,893 sales), Eldest Daughter and
Wood (both 66,017 sales), Cancelled (65,721 sales), Wish List (65,349
sales), Ruin The Friendship (63,344 sales), and very much bringing up
the rear, Honey (53,000 sales).
Swift’s triple whammy means lower chart berths all
round for the rest of the Top 10, namely Man I Need (1-4, 69,816 sales)
and Nice To Each Other (4-8, 33,066 sales) by Olivia Dean, Golden (2-5,
64,331 sales) by Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna, Rei Ami & KPop Demon
Hunters Cast, Where Is My Husband? (3-6, 47,557 sales) by Raye, Soda Pop
(5-7, 34,172 sales) and Your Idol (8-9, 28,684 sales) by Saja Boys,
Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo, samUIL Lee & KPop Demon
Hunters Cast, and 12 To 12 (7-10, 28,428 sales) by Sombr.
Overall singles consumption is up 1.81% week-on-week to 31,024,333
units, their highest level for 12 weeks, and 4.56% above same week 2024
consumption of 29,672,017 units. Paid-for sales are up 0.28%
week-on-week at 267,595, 5.40% below same week 2024 sales of 282,878.
Even swifter: 18 months after The Tortured
Poets Department (TTPD) exploded to a No.1 debut on first week
consumption of 270,091 units – the highest for any album for
seven years, and the highest of Taylor Swift’s career to that
point – follow-up The Life Of A Showgirl (TLOAS) soars even
higher, racking up first week consumption of 423,444 units, a
tally that includes 194,596 CDs, 125,592 vinyl albums, 2,652
cassettes, 16,535 digital downloads and 84,069 sales-equivalent
streams.
TLOAS’ consumption is the highest achieved
in a week since Ed Sheeran’s ÷ (Divide) racked up 671,542 units
on debut 448 weeks ago, in March 2017, and the 12th highest
ever. The 10th different album to secure consumption of this
level, it falls short of the all-time mark of 800,307 set by
Adele’s 25 in 2015 – and that album’s subsequent 439,337 and
449,870 frames – but is the highest by a woman since then, and
the highest ever by an overseas artist, eclipsing the estimated
350,000 that Michael Jackson’s Bad sold on debut in 1987.
Selling nearly 17 times as many copies as
any other album in the latest frame, TLOAS outsold the rest of
the Top 100 combined, and singlehandedly secured a 14.39% share
of the overall album market, and 48.31% of the vinyl market.
With The Fate Of Ophelia debuting atop the
singles chart, Swift does the double for the fourth time in her
career, following Midnights/Anti-Hero in 2022; 1989 (Taylor’s
Version)/Is It All Over Now (Taylor’s Version) in 2023; and
TTPD/Fortnight (feat. Post Malone) in 2024. The only acts to do
it more are The Beatles, Elvis Presley and Ed Sheeran.
For the vinyl version of the album to sell
125,592 units is staggering. It replaces TTPD (66,388 sales) as
the album which has sold most copies on vinyl in a week in the
Kantar (Millward Brown) chart era (1994 onwards).
James Morrison is back in the Top 10 with
a studio album for the first time in 10 years, with sixth studio
set, Fight Another Day, debuting at No.5 (7,844 sales). In the
interim, his last studio album, You’re Stronger Than You Know,
peaked at No.14 in 2019, while his 2022 Greatest Hits set
reached No.6. His first album for Cooking Vinyl, Fight Another
Day consists entirely of new songs co-written by Morrison and
extends his chart career – in which has had two No.1s and seven
Top 15 albums with total consumption exceeding 3m units – to
more than 19 years.
No.1 for 10 weeks in its initial chart run
in 1995/1996, Oasis’ second album, 1995’s (What’s The Story)
Morning Glory reached its highest chart placing in nearly 29
years in July, reaching No.2 when the band’s Live ’25 Reunion
Tour was in full swing. 13 weeks on, its 30th anniversary is
marked by the release of deluxe editions across CD, vinyl and
digital, prompting it to revisit that position, surging 21-2,
with consumption up 276.44% week-on-week to 24,963 units. That
is its highest tally for 1,502 weeks (nearly 29 years), and
elevates its all-time consumption to 5,551,710 units. Oasis’
compilation Time Flies: 1994-2009 remains in the Top 10, holding
at No.6 (7,825 sales).
The rest of the Top 10: The Art Of Loving
(1-3, 22,727 sales) by Olivia Dean, Man’s Best Friend (2-4,
13,954 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter, The Highlights (9-7, 7,717
sales) by The Weeknd, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (10-8, 7,626 sales)
by Fleetwood Mac, +-=÷× Tour Collection (8- 9, 7,490 sales) by
Ed Sheeran and You’ll Be Alright Kid (7-10, 7,479 sales) by Alex
Warren.
Thanks to the Swift effect, overall album sales are up 15.35%
week-on-week to 2,942,015 units, their highest level since
Christmas week 2018 (355 weeks ago), and 10.54% above same week
2024 sales of 2,661,465. Physical product accounts for 632,313
sales, a 42-week high, and 21.49% of the total.