Global Chart
Report
----------------------------------
'Ophelia'
rules a 12th week
Sunday, March 22, 2026
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Taylor Swift's
'The Fate Of Ophelia' remains at the
pole position on our Global Track
Chart for a 12th non-consecutive
week with 224,000 points, a 4%
decrease compared to the previous
week. It's the lowest point-frame
for a number one song since Myke
Towers' 'Lala' placed there with
218,000 points in the calendar week
29, 2023. Broken down by sectors
'Ophelia' gets 124,000 points by
streaming (down 5%), 27,000 points
by sales (down 1%), and 73,000
points by airplay (down 4%). The
song leads also the year-to-date
list with a total 3,503,000 points.
Incidentally, it seems pretty
certain that BTS' new smash 'Swim'
will be the new number one next
week. Back to the current tally
where
'I Just Might' by Bruno Mars holds
tight at the runner-up slot with
214,000 points (down 7,5% with
90,000 points by streaming, 17,000
points by sales, and 107,000 points
by airplay). '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 - rises back to
the top three with another 210,000 points (up
2,5% with 138,000 points by
streaming, 25,000 points by sales,
and 47,000 points by airplay).
Outside
our Top 40 waiting among
other 'Rein Me In' by Sam Fender &
Olivia Dean at no.49, 'Gone Gone Gone' by David
Guetta | Teddy Swims | Tones And I
at no.53, and 'No Batidâo' by Zxkai &
Slxughter at no.54 for their first appearance on
the hitlist. Harry Styles' fourth
studio album 'Kiss All The Time.
Disco, Occasionally.' defends the
top position of the Global Album
Chart for a second week, despite a
massive 81% points loss to 148,000
(103,000 points by streaming +
45,000 points by sales). Last week
the set started with magnificent
775,000 equivalent sales (219,000
points by streaming + 556,000 points
by sales) and it generated the biggest weekly
sales by an album since Taylor
Swift's 'The Life Of A Showgirl'
bowed with 5,37 million consumption
units in the calendar week 42, 2025
(the second biggest weekly sales by
an album in history, after Adele's
'25' with 5,71 million in the week
49, 2015). Two albums from Asia
following at no.2 and no.3 this
week: 'Unique', the 10th extended
play by South Korean boy band
P1Harmony, bows at the runner-up
slot with 147,000 sales and shy
behind lands 'Yujitsumuni', the 12th
studio effort by Japanese boy group
West., with 112,000 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
18,000 / 17,365,000, '1989 (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 11,000 /
7,503,000, '21' by Adele 12,000 /
34,369,000, '25' by Adele 10,000 /
26,104,000, '30' by Adele 8,000 /
7,227,000, 'After Hours' by The
Weeknd 24,000 / 12,055,000,
'Borondo' by Beéle 27,000 /
1,795,000, 'Brat' by Charli XCX
18,000 / 4,563,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 9,000 / 2,437,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 20,000 / 22,812,000,
'Eternal Sunshine' by Ariana Grande
29,000 / 5,527,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 9,000 / 7,085,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 17,000 / 4,147,000, 'Folklore'
by Taylor Swift 22,000 / 13,144,000,
'Future Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa
16,000 / 10,303,000, 'GNX' by
Kendrick Lamar 16,000 / 4,182,000,
'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo 19,000 /
5,730,000, 'Hit Me Hard And Soft' by
Billie Eilish 50,000 / 7,904,000, 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' by
The Weeknd 18,000 / 2,850,000, 'I've
Tried Everything But Therapy' by
Teddy Swims 23,000 / 4,340,000,
'Lux' by Rosalíá 15,000 /
799,000, 'Man's Best Friend' by
Sabrina Carpenter 51,000 /
2,730,000, 'Mayhem' by Lady GaGa
29,000 / 3,154,000, 'Midnights' by
Taylor Swift 15,000 / 13,405,000,
'One Thing At A Time' by Morgan
Wallen 27,000 / 10,449,000, 'Red
(Taylor's Version)' by Taylor Swift
9,000 / 7,161,000, 'Ruby' by Jennie
26,000 / 2,003,000, 'Short n' Sweet'
by Sabrina Carpenter 52,000 /
7,040,000, 'Starboy' by The
Weeknd 31,000 / 10,532,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 46,000 /
6,439,000, 'Swag' by Justin Bieber
23.000 / 1,869,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 24,000 / 10,900,000,
'The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess' by Chappell Roan 22,000 /
4,922,000, 'The Secret Of Us' by
Gracie Abrams 22,000 / 4,162,000,
'The Tortured Poets Department' by
Taylor Swift 36,000 / 11,979,000,
'Tropicoqueta' by Karol G 22,000 /
1,480,000, and 'When We All Fall
Asleep, Where Do We Go?' by Billie
Eilish 13,000 / 13,425,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 60
YEARS AGO
...
The patriotic song was uniquely successful in an era of protest songs
and anti-Vietnam War sentiment, focusing not on battle but the humanity
of the soldiers. Barry Sadler began writing the song while he was
training to be a Special Forces medic. Author Robin Moore, who wrote the
book The Green Berets, helped him write the lyrics and later sign a
recording contract with RCA Victor. Released on December 18, 1965, "The
Ballad Of The Green Berets" shipped two millions copies in its first few
weeks at retail in the United States, making it the then-fastet selling
single in RCA's history and of course it catapulted easily at number one
there. Billboard has recognized the song as the top song of the year
1966. Outside the USA the track reached no.4 in Germany and no.7 in New
Zealand..
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Choosin' Texas'
tops Hot 100 for a fourth week
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
by Keith Caulfield & Gary
Trust, Los Angeles
Ella Langley's “Choosin’
Texas”
holds for a historic fourth
week at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100.
The song first led in
mid-February and added its
second week on top at the
beginning of
March. “Choosin’ Texas”
solely claims the most weeks
ever spent atop the Hot 100
for a song by a woman that
also hit No. 1 on Billboard’s
Hot Country Songs chart,
one-upping Taylor Swift’s
three-week Hot 100 reign
with “We Are Never Ever
Getting Back Together” in
2012. “Choosin’ Texas,” on
Sawgod/Columbia Records,
with Triple Tigers promoting
it to country radio, drew
21.8 million official
streams (down 4% week over
week) and 43.6 million radio
airplay audience impressions
(down 3%) and sold 6,000
(down 1%) in the United
States March 13-19. The
single rebounds a spot for a
fourth week at No. 1 on the
Streaming Songs chart;
repeats at its No. 9 best on
Radio Songs;
and dips to No. 2 after five
weeks atop Digital Song
Sales. Olivia Dean earns her
second Hot 100 top 10 as “So
Easy (To Fall in Love)”
rises 11-9. The song drew
11.6 million streams (down
11%) and 32.2 million in
airplay audience (up 20%)
and sold 2,000 (up 13%) in
the tracking week.
Meanwhile, the London-born
singer-songwriter’s “Man I
Need” holds at its No. 2 Hot
100 high, as it logs its
fifth nonconsecutive week as
runner-up. With “Man I Need”
having first hit the Hot
100’s top 10 in November,
Dean has notched her first
two top 10s in less than
five months. That’s the
fastest accumulation of two
initial top 10s for a solo
woman since her Island
Records labelmate Sabrina
Carpenter tallied her first
two with “Espresso” in April
2024 and “Please Please
Please” less than two months
later (with, as with Dean
this week, both songs in the
top 10 together at the
time). Bruno Mars’ “I Just
Might” keeps at No. 3 after
three nonconsecutive weeks
atop the Hot 100 in January
to mid-March. It leads Radio
Songs for a fourth week with
81.5 million in audience (up
7%) — becoming the first
song to surpass 80 million
in weekly airplay reach
since Shaboozey’s “A Bar
Song (Tipsy)” (82 million,
Sept. 7, 2024). Alex
Warren’s “Ordinary” ascends
5-4 on the Hot 100 after 10
weeks at No. 1 last
June-August. Huntr/x’s
“Golden” climbs 7-5 on the
Hot 100 following eight
weeks at No. 1 last
August-October. It sports an
11% gain to 12.3 million
streams in the week ending
March 19, after the trio
performed it and it won the
Academy Award March 15 for
best original song, while
parent movie KPop
Demon Hunters took
home the Oscar for best
animated feature. It also
soars 9-1 for a sixth week
atop Digital Song Sales
(6,000, up 185%).
PinkPantheress’ “Stateside,”
with Zara Larsson, is steady
at its No. 6 Hot 100 high.
Taylor Swift’s “Opalite”
rises 10-7 on the Hot 100, a
month after it led for one
week, and “The Fate of
Ophelia” holds at No. 8,
after it began her
career-best 10 weeks in
charge of the chart upon its
debut in October and led
through January. Rounding
out the Hot 100’s top 10,
Harry Styles’ “American
Girls” falls to No. 10 a
week after it debuted at No.
4. Harry Styles’
Kiss All the Time. Disco,
Occasionally. spends a
second week atop the
Billboard 200 chart (dated
March 28), following its
debut at No. 1 a week ago.
In the latest tracking week,
ending March 19, the set
earned 99,000 equivalent
album units in the United
States, according to
Luminate. That’s down 77%
compared to its opening sum
of 430,000. Of Kiss All the
Time. Disco, Occasionally.’s
99,000 equivalent album
units earned in the latest
tracking week, SEA units
comprise 74,000 (down 47%,
equaling 75.10 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it’s No.
1 on Top Streaming Albums
for a second week), album
sales comprise 24,500 (down
92%, falling 1-3 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 500 (down 33%).
Back on the latest Billboard
200, Morgan Wallen's I’m the
Problem rises 3-2 with
74,000 equivalent album
units earned (down 3%).
Johnny Blue Skies (formerly
Sturgill Simpson) & the Dark
Clouds' Mutiny After
Midnight debuts at No. 3
with 59,000 equivalent album
units earned — all from
physical album sales. It’s
the best week yet, by units
earned or album sales, for
the artist. It’s the second
top 10-charting project for
Simpson, following the No.
3-peaking A Sailor’s Guide
to Earth in 2016. Mutiny
After Midnight is currently
only available on CD, vinyl
and cassette. No release
date has been announced for
a streaming version or a
digital download for
purchase. Mutiny After
Midnight marks the first
album exclusively available
on physical formats to reach
the top 10 in nearly three
years. The last to do so was
Taylor Swift’s Record Store
Day-exclusive vinyl release
Folklore: The Long Pond
Studio Sessions on the May
6, 2023-dated chart. That
set, sold only at
independent record stores,
debuted and peaked at No. 3
with 75,000 copies sold (the
entirety of its production
run) in its first week.
P1Harmony earns its
highest-charting album and
second top 10 on the
Billboard 200, as Unique
debuts at No. 4. The set
earned 58,000 equivalent
album units in its first
week, the group’s best week
by units earned. Of that
sum, album sales comprise
56,000 (the act’s best sales
week; it debuts at No. 2 on
Top Album Sales), SEA units
comprise 2,000 (equaling
2.22 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s songs) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
The group previously visited
the top 10 on the Billboard
200 with Ex in 2025,
debuting and peaking at No.
9. A pair of former No. 1s
follows P1Harmony, as: Bad
Bunny’s DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS
falls 4-5 (57,000, down 14%)
and Don Toliver’s OCTANE
descends 5-6 (56,000, down
7%). Olivia Dean’s The Art
of Loving dips 6-7 (55,000,
down 6%), and Bruno Mars’
chart-topping The Romantic
drops 2-8 (54,000, down
32%). Tate McRae’s former
leader So Close to What
surges 20-9 with 43,000
equivalent album units
earned (up 61%) after the
release of its deluxe
edition on vinyl and CD.
Rounding out the top 10 is
the chart-topping KPop Demon
Hunters soundtrack, stepping
11-10 with 38,000 equivalent
album units earned (up 9%).
The set notches its first
gain in six weeks, following
the movie’s double-win at
the Academy Awards on March
15, when it won best
animated feature and best
original song (“Golden”).
Record Of The Month
'Fever Dream' by Alex Warren
is his new smash and the first
sign of a new album?
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
'Rein Me In' turns back to
the summit
Monday, March 23, 2026
by Alan Jones, London
Dethroned last week by Harry
Styles’ American Girls, Rein
Me In returns to No.1 for
Sam Fender & Olivia Dean,
increasing consumption 0.59%
week-on-week to 61,422 units
(21 7” singles, 979 digital
downloads and 60,422
sales-equivalent streams).
Previously No.1 for three
weeks, Rein Me In is in its
39th consecutive
week in the Top 40 – the deepest into its initial chart run that any
song has ever been No.1 – and its 22nd week in the Top 10, the last 12
consecutively. In all its previous weeks at No.1, it actually had lower
consumption than Dean’s solo cut, Man I Need, and won out only because
the latter had its streaming points halved as it was on ACR.
Rein Me In won fair and square this week, with Man I Need’s unadjusted
consumption ebbing to 56,771 units. Man I Need’s adjusted consumption is
down too, but the track holds at No.10 (28,725 units), as it extends its
run in the Top 10 to 27 weeks. Dean’s So Easy (To Fall In Love) rebounds
7-5 on reduced consumption of 34,491 units, holding down a place in the
Top 10 for the 12th time in a row and 22nd time in all. Courtesy of the
three titles named, Dean is only the second act in chart history to have
three songs spend a minimum of 20 weeks in the Top 10, emulating Ed
Sheeran, who
completed his hat trick
in 2021.
Logging increased consumption for the 7th week in a row, Bella Kay’s
Iloveitiloveitiloveit returns to peak, climbing 3-2 (60,233 sales).
Harry Styles had three songs in the Top 5 last week, and scored his
fourth No.1 with American Girls. All suffer substantial dips in
consumption week-on-week with American Girls retreating to No.3 (46,343
sales), Aperture ebbing 4-6 (31,673 sales) and Ready Steady Go, being
the week’s only Top 10 departee, sliding 5-15 (22,898 sales).
Rebounding below their peaks are Stateside (6-4, 37,826 sales) by
PinkPantheress, Homewrecker (9-7, 30,941 sales) by Sombr and Lush Life
(11-8, 29,212 sales) by Zara Larsson. Fever Dream (8-9, 29,183 sales) by
Alex Warren completes the Top 10.
Overall singles consumption is up 1.25% week-on-week to 32,166,470
units, 5.12% above same week 2025 sales of 30,598,496 units. Paid-for
sales are down 3.20% week-on-week at 244,784, 0.62% above same week 2025
sales of 243,266.
Harry Styles continues atop the chart, with fourth solo album
Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally still well ahead of the
field, despite its consumption dipping to 26,524 units.
The first album by a British act to spend its first two weeks at
No.1 since Lewis Capaldi’s Broken By Desire To Be Heavenly Sent
in 2023, it is deeply indebted to streaming, which this week
provides 83.56% (22,164 units) of its overall consumption,
compared to just 23.15% last week. By the same token, pure
sales’ share of the pie dips from 76.85% to 16.44% (2,179 CDs,
1,695 vinyl albums, 40 cassettes and 446 digital downloads).
Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally’s overall consumption
this week is 85.51% below its first week tally, surpassing the
second week fall-offs of his previous solo albums Harry Styles
(2017, 62.22%), Fine Line (2019, 61.44%) and Harry’s House
(2022, 68.87%).
Styles has now spent eight weeks at No.1 in the 2020s – 2022’s
Harry’s House was No.1 for six weeks in four runs at the top) –
moving ahead of Lewis Capaldi, Sabrina Carpenter and Olivia Dean
in that metric to place third for the decade behind Taylor Swift
(32 weeks) and Ed Sheeran (10 weeks).
James Blake racked up four Top 10 and five Top 20 albums before
sixth album, Playing Robots Into Heaven peaked at No.108 in
2023. Trying Times, his critically-lauded first album in
partnership with Los Angeles label Good Boy, surpasses the peak
positions of all its predecessors, debuting at No.3 (12,200
sales). The 37-year-old London singer/songwriter’s fifth album,
Friends That Break Your Heart, was his highest-charting set
hitherto, reaching No.4 in 2021, while his eponymous 2011 debut
set, which peaked at No.9 is his most-consumed title with
to-date consumption of 98,284 units, with Overgrown (No.8, 2013,
87,414 units) and Assume Form (No.6, 2019, 45,965 units),
completing his personal top three.
Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally moves to the top of the
year-to-date rankings, with consumption of 209,572 units placing
it ahead of Olivia Dean’s The Art Of Loving (208,793 units), the
latter album being No.2 for the fifth week in a row, and, and
14th time in total, on consumption of 16,137 units.
No.2 on debut 55 weeks ago, Canadian singer/songwriter Tate
McRae’s third album, So Close To What, returns to the Top 10
after an absence of nine weeks, surging 22-5 (7,429 sales),
following the release of a deluxe edition, adding five tracks,
including most recent hits Tit For Tat, Anything But Love and
Nobody’s Girl. It now hosts eight of her 19 hits.
Released in 2022 and No.1 in 2024, Noah Kahan’s breakthrough
third album, Stick Season, jumps 14-10 (5,651 sales) to return
to the Top 10 after an absence of 36 weeks, with interest
fuelled by the release of Porch Light, the new single from his
upcoming fourth album, The Great Divide.
The rest of the Top 10: 50 Years: Don’t Stop (4-4, 8,372 sales)
by Fleetwood Mac, The Essential (7-6, 6,813 sales) by Michael
Jackson, The Highlights (9-7, 6,694 sales) by The Weeknd, +-=÷×
Tour Collection (8-8, 6,627 sales) by Ed Sheeran and You’ll Be
Alright Kid (6-9, 6,422 sales) by Alex Warren.
Overall album sales are down 4.43% week-on-week at 2,553,326
units, 2.04% above same week 2025 sales of 2,502,387. Physical
product accounts for 272,433 sales, 10.67% of the total.