Global Chart Report
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'Apt.' reigns a
twelfth week at no.1
Sunday, January 19, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
It's
the week of Bad Bunny! The Puerto
Rican rapper, singer, actor and
record producer climbs atop the
Global Album Chart with his new
effort 'Debí Terar Más Fotos' and
seven tracks of the set landing in
the Top 40 of the Global Track
Chart, led by the title song
(stylized as 'DtMF'), which
catapults from its no.20 debut last
week to the no.3 position with
massive 422,000 points (it's a remarkable
273% boost with 398,000 points by
streaming, 22,000 points by sales,
but only 2,000 points by airplay).
Bad Bunny became the most streamed
artist of the year, doing so three
consecutive time in 2020-2022. 2023
and 2024 he was replaced by Taylor
Swift, but this year he could return
to the summit. All 17 songs from the
album together generated more than
half a billion streams on Spotify
alone last week!
'Apt.'
by South Korean singer, songwriter
Rosé in collaboration with Bruno
Mars remains at the summit of the
Global Track Chart for a twelfth
non-consecutive
week with another
539,000 points, an 1%
increase compared to last week and
it's the eleventh week that the song
gets more than 500,000 points.
Since seven and a half year no other
hit reached that level. 2017 placed
'Despacito' by Luis Fonsi & Daddy
Yankee also eleven weeks with more than
500,000 points, 'Shape Of You' by Ed
Sheeran even with twelve weeks. Broken
down by segments, 'Apt.' generated
404,000 points by streaming this
week (down 1%), 41,000 points by sales
(down 1%), and 94,000 points by
airplay (up 8%). 'Die With A
Smile' by Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars
follows still at the runner-up slot
with 478,000 points (up 0,5% with
367,000 points by streaming, 39,000
points by sales, and 72,000 points
by airplay).
Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'Perfumito Nuevo' by Bad Bunny
& RaiNao at no.50
and 'Yellow' by Coldplay at no.56 for their first appearance on the
hitlist. As already mentioned above
Bad Bunny's sixth studio album 'Debí
Terar Más Fotos' rises at the summit
of the Global Album Chart with
215,000 equivalent sales (197,000
points by streaming + 18,000 points
by sales). Last week the set started
at no.3 with 126,000 consumption
units. His nearly three-year-old
album 'Un Verano Sin Ti' sold a
total of 8,24 million so far. Taylor
Swift's 'Lover (Live At Paris)'
arrives at the runner-up slot as the
highest debut of the week with
203,000 equivalent sales (all from
physical and digital album sales).
It consists of live renditions of
eight songs from Swift's seventh
studio album 'Lover' (2019),
recorded at the Olympia theater in
Paris on September 9, 2019. The
album were released in May 2020, but
was re-released on January 7, 2025,
on Swift's webstore as a 72-hour
limited edition. Rounds out this
week's top three is the former
number one smash 'SOS' by SZA with
152,000 consumption units (147,000
points by streaming + 5,000 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 7,000 / 16,557,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 31,000 / 6,419,000, '21' by
Adele 16,000 / 33,468,000, '25' by
Adele 13,000 / 25,407,000, '30' by
Adele 8,000 / 6,664,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 28,000 /
10,420,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 20,000 / 1,626,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 14,000 / 21,481,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 21,000 / 1,937,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 7,000 /
6,269,000, 'Eternal Sunshine' by
Ariana Grande 31,000 / 2,545,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 19,000 /
6,423,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 42,000
/ 2,059,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 43,000 / 817,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 15,000 /
9,304,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
31,000 / 4,234,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,307,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
18,000 / 4,567,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 42,000 / 11,434,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 36,000 /
12,026,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 37,000 /
1,573,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 38,000 / 8,516,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 19,000 / 6,359,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 37,000 / 8,508,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 49,000
/ 4,135,000, 'The Death Of Slim
Shady (Coup De Grâce)' by Eminem
15,000 / 1,438,000, 'The Highlights'
by The Weeknd 40,000 / 9,191,000,
'Un Verano Sin Ti' by Bad Bunny
38,000 / 8,236,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 30,000 / 4,973,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 18,000 /
12,290,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 70 YEARS
AGO
... Yes, we celebrate the 70th
anniversary of our Global Chart by
Media Traffic! The first weekly
chart was dated to January 8, 1955
and reigned by The Chordettes' "Mr.
Sandman". The legendary song was
written by Pat Ballard and published in 1954. It was first
recorded in May of that year by Vaughn Monroe & His Orchestra
and later that year by the Four Aces and The Chordettes, the
latter was the most successful version. Cadence Records'
founder, Archie Bleyer, was the orchestra conductor on the
recording, and provided a rhythmic beat using his knees.
Bleyer's voice is heard in the third verse, when he says the
word "Yes?" The piano is played by Moe Wechsler. Liberace's name
is mentioned for his wavy hair, and a glissando (a flourish
common in his music) immediately follows. Pagliacci is mentioned
for having a lonely heart, which is a reference to the opera
Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo. "Mr. Sandman" reached number
one on all three of Billboard's popular music charts, in United
Kingdom it peaked at no.11.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Die With A Smile' scores
third week at No.1
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’
“Die With a Smile” secures a
third total and consecutive
week at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100 songs
chart. The ballad became
Gaga’s sixth Hot 100
leader and Mars’ ninth. Gaga
ties her second-longest
command, as her debut smash
“Just Dance,” featuring
Colby O’Donis, ruled for
three weeks in January 2009.
She dominated for six weeks
in February-April 2011 with
“Born This Way.” Mars runs
up his fifth Hot 100 reign
of three or more weeks,
following his featured turn
on Mark Ronson’s “Uptown
Funk!” (14 weeks at No. 1,
in 2015) and his own “Locked
Out of Heaven” (six,
2012-13), “Grenade” (four,
2011) and “Just the Way You
Are” (four, 2010). “Die With
a Smile,” on Streamline /
Interscope / Atlantic,
totaled 62 million radio
airplay audience impressions
(essentially even
week-over-week), 29 million
official streams (up 4%) and
6,000 sold (up 5%) in the
United States Jan. 10-16.
The track holds at its No. 2
high on the Radio Songs chart;
falls to No. 3 after two
weeks atop Streaming Songs;
and keeps at No. 3 on
Digital Song Sales, which it
led for two weeks. Bad Bunny
bounds into the Hot 100’s
top 10 with
three songs, all from his
new album, DeBÍ
TiRAR MáS FOToS,
which ascends 2-1 on the
Billboard 200 chart
following its first full
week of activity (Jan.
10-16; it was released Jan.
5): “DtMF” (38-2), “BAILE
INoLVIDABLE” (28-3) and
“NUEVAYoL” (27-8). He pushes
his total to 15 career top
10s – extending his mark for
the most among acts who
record primarily Latin
music. He also now boasts 13
top 10 hits recorded in
Spanish, the most
non-English-language top 10s
among all artists. “DtMF”
concurrently becomes Bad
Bunny’s second No. 1 on the
Streaming Songs chart, after
“I Like It,” with Cardi B
and J Balvin, in July 2018.
“DtMF” drew 34.9 million
official U.S. streams in the
tracking week. “BAILE
INoLVIDABLE” tallied 26.8
million and “NUEVAYoL,” 23.5
million. Rosé and Bruno
Mars’ “Apt.” keeps at its
No. 5 Hot 100 high and lifts
2-1 on the Digital Song
Sales chart (6,000 sold, up
10%). It becomes Rosé’s
first leader as a soloist;
Blackpink, with her as a
member, has achieved five
top 10s, led by the No.
2-peaking “How You Like
That” and “Ice Cream,” the
latter with Selena Gomez, in
2020. Rosé becomes the first
female artist prominent in
K-pop (Korean pop) to top
Digital Song Sales.
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” slips 2-4 on the
Hot 100, following a
record-tying 19 weeks at No.
1 beginning last July. It
rules Radio Songs for a 25th
week (63.2 million in
audience, down 5%), moving
to within one week of The
Weeknd’s record 26-week
command with “Blinding
Lights” in April-October
2020. Kendrick Lamar and
SZA’s “Luther” rises 7-6 on
the Hot 100, after hitting
No. 3.
Billie Eilish’s “Birds of a
Feather” falls 3-7 on the
Hot 100, after reaching No.
2. Teddy Swims’ “Lose
Control,” which led the Hot
100 for a week in March
2024 – and became the year’s
top song – descends 6-9 and,
rounding out the top 10,
Gracie Abrams’ “That’s So
True” drops 8-10 after
hitting No. 6. Following its
first full week of activity,
Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más
Fotos climbs 2-1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
(dated Jan. 25), scoring the
superstar his fourth leader
on the list. Bunny’s album
was released on an off-cycle
Sunday (Jan. 5), and, thus,
it arrived on the chart a
week ago with only five days
of activity (as the chart’s
tracking week runs Friday
through Thursday). In the
tracking week ending Jan.
16, Debí Tirar Más Fotos
earned 203,500 equivalent
album units (up 67%) in the
U.S., according to Luminate
— largely driven by
streaming activity. The set
was only available as a
standard 17-song streaming
album, and as a digital
download for purchase
(widely through all digital
retailers, as well as
Bunny’s official webstore).
Traditional album sales
drove just under 8,000 of
the album’s activity for the
week. Bunny previously led
the Billboard 200 with Nadie
Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar
Mańana (in 2023), Un Verano
Sin Ti (2022) and El Último
Tour del Mundo (2020). At
No. 2 on the Billboard 200,
Taylor Swift’s 2023 album
Lover: Live From Paris
reenters, with 202,500
equivalent album units
earned, all from album
sales, following its reissue
on vinyl (161,000 sold for
the week), as well as its
first release as a digital
download album. The album
was exclusively available
only to purchase as either a
vinyl LP or download in
Swift’s webstore. It marks
the 18th top 10-charting
effort for Swift and the
highest-charting live album
in over five years. It’s the
top-selling album of the
week, and also scores the
single-largest sales week
for a live album on vinyl
since Luminate began
tracking sales in 1991. Of
Debí Tirar Más Fotos’
203,500 equivalent album
units earned in the week
ending Jan. 16, SEA units
comprise 195,000 (up 72%,
equaling 264.03 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s songs; it holds
at No. 1 on the Top
Streaming Albums chart for a
second week), traditional
album sales comprise 7,500
(down 3%, falling 6-8 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise 1,000 (up 123%).
The 264.03 million streams
of the album’s songs mark
the largest streaming week
for any album since Kendrick
Lamar’s GNX arrived with
379.72 million (Dec. 7, 2024
chart), and the largest for
any Latin music album since
Bunny’s own Un Verano Sin Ti
debuted with 356.55 million
(May 21, 2022 chart). Taylor
Swift’s Lover: Live From
Paris returns to the
Billboard 200, reentering at
No. 2 with 202,500
equivalent album units
earned (up from nothing the
week previous). The
eight-song set was recorded
in 2019 and had a limited
release on vinyl in 2023
(exclusively through Swift’s
webstore), and spent one
week on the Billboard 200
that March, at No. 58. As
for the rest of the top 10
on the latest Billboard 200
chart, four former No. 1s
are at Nos. 3-6. SZA’s SOS
is steady at No. 3 (102,000
equivalent album units
earned; down 10%), Kendrick
Lamar’s GNX is a non-mover
at No. 4 (64,000; down 4%),
Lil Baby’s WHAM falls 1-5 in
its second week (55,000;
down 60%) and Sabrina
Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet
slips 5-6 (48,000; down 6%).
Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard
and Soft is stationary at
No. 7 (40,000 equivalent
album units earned; down
7%), the Wicked film
soundtrack falls 6-8
(39,000; down 15%), Morgan
Wallen’s chart-topping One
Thing at a Time dips 8-9
(nearly 39,000; down 4%) and
Gracie Abrams’ The Secret of
Us descends 9-10 (36,000;
down 4%).
Record Of The Month
'Tu Boda' is
the second collab between
Mexican musician Óscar
Maydon and American
regional Mexican band Fuerza
Regida and it's a massive
success in Latin America.
It was met with criticism
for its lyrics, specifically
the lyric reading, "Quiero
manchar el vestido
blanco de rojo" ("I want to
stain the white dress red"),
which were suspected to
promote femicide.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Gracie Abrams keeps the
number one spot
Monday, January 20, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
In the tightest top three in
more than two years, That’s
So True by Gracie Abrams is
No.1 for the third week in a
row, and the eighth week in
total, with consumption
rising 2.98% week-on-week to
50,584 units (536 digital
downloads and 50,048
sales-equivalent streams) –
its highest level for eight
weeks.
It continues to be followed by Apt (2-2, 49,759 sales) by Rosé & Bruno Mars and
Messy (3-3, 49,468 sales) by Lola Young, both of which register double digit
percentage increases in consumption to new highs.
The margin of 1,116 units between No.1 and No.3 is the smallest since 9 December
2022 (110 weeks ago), when All I Want For Christmas Is You (44,797 sales) by
Mariah Carey led from Escapism (43,895 sales) by Raye feat. 070 Shake and Last
Christmas (43,685 sales) by Wham!. The Top 3 range that week was thus 1,112
units, the smallest since 2007.
Nine weeks after it debuted and peaked at No.12, Nice To Meet You becomes the
second Top 10 hit thus far for Bedfordshire singer/songwriter Myles Smith,
powering 13-6, with consumption growing 36.11% to 22,839 units, after he
performed it and chatted on BBC1’s Graham Norton Show last Friday (January 10).
Meanwhile, Sabrina Carpenter’s Bed Chem – which peaked at No.6 –
rebounds 12-10
(19,772 sales), returning to the Top 10 after an absence of eight weeks, with
1,371 of those sales coming from its newly released 7-inch vinyl format.
Increasing consumption for the 10th week in a row to its highest level yet,
Chrystal’s debut hit The Days bounces 6-5 (30,987 sales), returning to the peak
it first scaled a fortnight ago.
Teddy Swims continues to have two Top 10 hits, with The Door (7-7, 21,887 sales)
and Bad Dreams (9-9, 20,999 sales). Lose Control (23-27, 12,583 sales)
completing his trio of concurrent hits under primary artist rules, meaning that
Swims is in the unfortunate and unusual position of having his brand-new track,
Are You Even Real – a soulful collaboration with Giveon, and the first taste of
his upcoming I’ve Tried Everything But Therapy Part 2 album – being starred-out
between No.47 and No.48 (9,055 sales).
Completing a Top 10 in which seven songs are static and every track increased
consumption: Sailor Song (4-4, 33,228 sales) by Gigi Perez and Lady Gaga & Bruno
Mars’ duet, Die With A Smile (8-8, 21,304 sales).
After returning to the Top 10 last week, Who now dips 5-13 (18,599 sales) for
BTS star Jimin, while Defying Gravity (10-11, 19,488 sales) also exits the top
tier for Cynthia Erivo feat. Ariana Grande.
Overall singles consumption is up 8.13% week-on-week to 29,389,252 units, 5.10%
above same week 2024 consumption of 27,962,332 units. Paid-for sales are up
12.88% week-on-week at 244,394, 9.03% below same week 2024 sales of 268,664.
Some 23 weeks after it first topped the chart, The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest
Princess returns to No.1 for Chappell Roan.
Home to the hits Hot To Go!, Red Wine Supernova, Pink Pony Club and Casual – but
not Roan’s breakthrough hit Good Luck, Babe! – the 2023 release is 26-year-old
Roan’s only album to date and got off to a slow start, taking nearly six months
to make the Top 75 and nine months to make the Top 10.
Roan was announced as the winner of the annual BBC Sound Of… award last week.
Her election to that prestigious title, and Pink Pony Club’s elevation to Tune
Of The Week on BBC Radio 1 and B-list on BBC Radio 2 add up to a heap of help
from the corporation, driving a 63.44% increase in consumption of The Rise And
Fall…, which consequently jumps 7-1 (10,191 sales, including 556 CDs, 4,238
vinyl albums, 42 cassettes, 167 digital downloads and 5,188 sales-equivalent
streams) on its 31st consecutive appearance in the Top 10. The biggest factor in
its success this week, however, was the release of a new blue ‘crushed splatter’
vinyl edition, which accounted for 2,265 sales.
Leading all of the week’s sales flashes, Franz Ferdinand’s first album of new
material in nearly seven years, The Human Fear, was on target to earn the
Glasgow-based quintet its second No.1, more than 19 years after their second
album, You Could Have It So Much Better topped the chart. However, it has to
settle for a No.3 debut on consumption of 8,999 units, being overtaken at the
death not only by The Rise And Fall… but also by Short M’ Sweet, which is No.2
(10,087 sales) for the fourth week in a row, and the 15th time in 21 weeks since
its release for Sabrina Carpenter.
The Rise And Fall’s return to No.1 was despite it achieving the lowest
consumption for a No.1 album for 54 weeks, and its lead over Short N’ Sweet –
104 sales - was the smallest for a No.1 over a No.2 in more than seven years –
since, in fact, Michael Ball & Alfie Boe’s Together Again trumped Stereophonics’
Scream Above The Sounds 43,795 to 43,760 in the 6 November 2017 chart, 376 weeks
ago.
Returning to Franz Ferdinand, The Human Fear is their sixth studio album, and
consists entirely of original songs penned by their 52-year-old lead singer and
lead guitarist Alex Kapranos – some of them with other band members – and
although its bid for No.1 ends in valiant failure, its first week consumption
was 17.31% higher than the 7,671 units their last studio album, Always
Ascending, registered on debut in 2018.
The Human Fear is Franz Ferdinand’s seventh straight Top 10 album – their entire
studio output plus 2022 compilation Hits To The Head. Contrary to the title of
their last album, overall consumption of their studio albums is always
descending. Their eponymous 2004 debut peaked at No.3 and has consumption of
1,314,892 copies; 2005 chart-topper You Could Have Is So Much Better has
consumption of 517,437 units; 2009 No.2 set, Tonight, has consumption of 124,388
units; 2013 No.6 set Right Thoughts Right Words Right Action has consumption of
51,081 units and Always Ascending, No.6 on debut in 2018, has consumption of
19,251 units. Hits To The Head, which reached No.7, included a couple of new
tracks, and has to-date consumption of 25,579 units.
The rest of the Top 10: SOS (3-4, 8,644 sales) by SZA, +-=÷× Tour Collection
(4-5, 7,431 sales) by Ed Sheeran, The Highlights (5-6, 7,217 sales) by The
Weeknd, Diamonds (1-7, 7,056 sales) by Elton John, 50 Years: Don’t Stop (10-8,
5,920 sales) by Fleetwood Mac, Hit Me Hard And Soft (6-9, 5,776 sales) by Billie
Eilish and Stick Season (9-10, 5,760 sales) by Noah Kahan.
Brat – which became Charli XCX’s first platinum album last week – exits the Top
10 for the fourth time, falling 8-11, with sales of 5,555 copies raising its
cume to 307,929.
Overall album sales are up 7.06% week-on-week at 2,417,907 units, 4.86% above
same week 2024 sales of 2,305,766. Physical product accounts for 273,119 sales,
11.30% of the total.