Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Apt.' reigns a
seventh week
Sunday, December 8, 2024
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
'Apt.' by South Korean singer,
songwriter Rosé in collaboration
with Bruno Mars rules the Global
Track Chart easily for a seventh
consecutive week. Inspired by a
popular South Korean drinking game
named Apartment, from which the
title of the song is also derived,
the tune employs the game's rhythmic
chant of apateu (Korean: 아파트) to
create a playful and addictive
chorus. 'Apt.' remains at the summit
with another massive 540,000 points,
that's a 2% decline compared to
last week.
Broken
down by segments, 'Apt.' generated
437,000 points by streaming this
week (down 4%), 37,000 points by sales (down
1%), and 66,000 points by airplay (up
11%).
By the way,
'Apt.' interpolates Toni Basil's
1982 hit 'Mickey', which peaked at
no.5 globally in December of that
year. The top
three is unchanged since seven
weeks, behind 'Apt.' follows still
the former number one
smash 'Die With A
Smile' by Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars
with 428,000 points, an 1,5%
decrease,
with 329,000 points
by streaming, 35,000
points by sales, and 64,000 points
by airplay.
Billie Eilish's 'Birds Of A Feather'
(also a former no.1 hit) holds tight
at no.3 with 297,000
points, a 3% decline, with 206,000
points by streaming, 33,000 points
by sales, and 58,000 points by
airplay.
Our two legendary Xmas classics are
celebrating a round anniversary:
Wham!'s 'Last Christmas' was
released 40 years ago in December
1984 and Mariah Carey's 'All I Want
For Christmas Is You' started 30
years ago in October 1994. The
latter jumps now back at no.4
globally with 264.000 points, a 55%
boost. It's
the hundredth week for this carol inside
our tally, and that's the first time
that a song ranks 100 weeks on the
hitlist! 'Last
Christmas' jumps at no.5 with
244,000 points (up 66%). With a total of
11,884,000 points it reaches no.32
on the
ALL TIME CHART,
'All I Want For Christmas Is You'
ranks at no.5 there with 18,199,000
points.
Exactly one year ago, in the
calendar week 50, 2023, Mariah
Carey's classic reached the top spot
with 304,000 points and stayed there
for four weeks. It was the sixth
year in a row, that the tune went at
no.1 during the Xmas season. But
this year it will be very difficult
to jump at the summit, because the
competition is too powerful. Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'Nadie' by
Tito Double P at no.49 and
'Degenere' by Myke Towers & Benny
Blanco at no.57 for their first appearance on the
hitlist. Back to the roots: Over 20
years ago Media Traffic started the
weekly Global Album Chart. At that
time this hitlist was based
exclusively on sales figures and -
like the Track Chart - included 40
positions. But the global album
sales fell dramatically over the
years, and that's why we shortened
the Top 40 to a Top 10 list in June
2016. Later we included streaming
data and now with the further
increase in the streaming share we
can finally offer an expanded
hitlist again. Taylor Swift's
multi-million seller 'The Tortured
Poets Department' returns to the
pole position for an 11th week.. and
it's 16 weeks after its last time at
that place. Since the start of our
Global Album Chart only two albums
stayed longer at no.1, Adele's '25'
from 2015 was 13 weeks at the
summit, and her predecessor '21'
from 2011 even 42 weeks at no.1.
'TTPD' rules with huge 486,000
equivalent sales this week (54,000
points b streaming + 432,000 points
by sales). The renewed massive
success follows the first-time
release of physical formats of its
The Anthology edition with 35
tracks. With a total of 8,416,000
equivalent sales the set is still
far and away the most successful
album of the year 2024, following by
Billie Eilish's 'Hit Me Hard And
Soft' with 3,168,000 total sales.
Last week's number one, Kendrick
Lamar's sixth studio album 'GNX',
sails to the runner-up slot with
167,000 sales (149,000 points by
streaming + 18,000 points by sales).
Rounds out the top three and the
highest new-entry of the week is
'The Party Never Ends', the fifth
and final studio album by American
rapper Juice WRLD, who died 5 years
ago. It bows with 146,000
consumption units (141,000 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 / 16,516,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 43,000 / 6,215,000, '21' by Adele
16,000 / 33,372,000,
'25' by Adele 12,000 / 25,337,000,
'30' by Adele 8,000 / 6,616,000,
'After Hours' by The Weeknd 23,000 /
10,265,000, 'Cowboy
Carter' by Beyoncé 7,000 /
1,542,000,
'Divide' by Ed Sheeran 17,000 /
21,387,000, 'Emails I Can't Send' by
Sabrina Carpenter 24,000 /
1,792,000, 'Equals' by Ed Sheeran
13,000 / 6,182,000, 'Eternal
Sunshine' by Ariana Grande 31,000 /
2,356,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 27,000 / 6,298,000,
'Fireworks & Rollerblades' by Benson
Boone 39,000 / 1,830,000, 'Future Nostalgia' by Dua
Lipa 13,000 / 9,225,000, Génesis' by
Peso Pluma 16,000 / 2,498,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
41,000 / 4,047,000,
'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 12,000 / 7,238,000,
'Heroes &
Villains' by Metro Boomin 16,000 /
4,467,000, 'I've Tried Everything
But Therapy (Part 1)' by Teddy Swims
43,000 / 1,682,000, 'Lover' by Taylor Swift
51,000 / 11,178,000, 'Midnights' by Taylor
Swift 45,000 /
11,797,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 39,000 /
1,342,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 38,000 / 8,275,000, 'Radical Optimism' by
Dua Lipa 10,000 / 914,000, 'Red (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 29,000 /
6,237,000, '17 Is Right Here' by
Seventeen 8,000 / 1,496,000,
'Speak
Now (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 9,000 / 3,546,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 31,000 / 8,296,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 43,000
/ 3,846,000, 'The Death Of Slim Shady
(Coup De Grâce)' by Eminem 22,000 /
1,321,000,
'The Highlights' by The Weeknd
47,000 / 8,938,000, 'Un Verano Sin
Ti' by Bad Bunny 26,000 / 8,044,000, 'Utopia'
by Travis Scott 32,000 / 4,792,000,
and 'When We All Fall Asleep,
Where Do We Go?' by Billie Eilish
16,000 / 12,190,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 40 YEARS
AGO
... The charity single "Do They Know
It's Christmas?" was inspired by a
series of reports made by the BBC
journalist Michael Buerk in 1984,
which drew attention to the famine
in Ethiopia. Boomtown Rats singer
Bob Geldof watched the broadcast and
were deeply affected by it. He began
recruiting musicians to make a
charity record, among others with
Sting, George Michael, Simon Le Bon,
Boy George, Phil Collins, Bono, and
Paul Young. Released on December 3,
1984, the song sold more than a
million copies in the first week in
United Kingdom alone, making it the
fastest-selling single there at this
time. Furthermore it reached the
number one position in Germany,
Canada, Australia, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Sweden, Norway,
Denmark, Austria, Switzerland,
Ireland, and New Zealand. In the
United States it sold also more than
a million copies but did not reach
number one there, due to the more
complex nature of the chart system,
which counted airplay as well as
sales. Despite outselling the
official number one by four to one,
it did not make the Top 10 due to a
lack of airplay, ultimately peaking
at no.13 on the Billboard Hot 100.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Mariah Carey returns at No.
1
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Lamar joins only Taylor
Swift, Drake and The Beatles
in having ranked at Nos. 1-5
in a single week. As
Kendrick Lamar’s new LP, GNX,
blasts in at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart,
Carey’s “All I Want for
Christmas Is You,” on
Columbia Records/Legacy
Recordings, drew 38.2
million streams (up 42%) and
24.4 million radio airplay
audience impressions (up
56%) and sold 3,000
downloads (up 81%) in the
U.S. Nov. 29-Dec. 5,
according to Luminate.
The single soars 10-1 on
Streaming Songs for a 19th
week on top (tying Morgan
Wallen’s “Last Night” for
the second-longest rule in
the chart’s history; Lil Nas
X’s “Old Town Road,”
featuring Billy Ray Cyrus,
led for 20 weeks in 2019).
“All I Want for Christmas Is
You” also reenters Digital
Song Sales at No. 6,
following four weeks at the
summit, and pushes 35-21 on
Radio Songs, where it has
hit a No. 11 best.
Holiday hits decorate half
the Hot 100’s top 10. Below
Carey, Brenda Lee dances
15-2 with “Rockin’ Around
the Christmas Tree,” which
spent three weeks at No. 1
last holiday season,
reaching the top for the
first time following its
1958 release. The song
totaled 35.7 million streams
(up 52%), 19.8 million in
airplay audience (up 39%)
and 1,500 sold (up 84%) Nov.
29-Dec. 5.
Wham!’s “Last Christmas”
vaults 18-3 on the Hot 100,
as the 1984 single hits a
new Hot 100 high, surpassing
its prior No. 4 peak. It
tallied 34.3 million streams
(up 57%), 17.9 million in
radio reach (up 20%) and
2,000 sold (up 75%) in the
tracking week. Six of
Wham!’s seven top 10s have
now reached the top three,
with the duo of George
Michael (who died in 2016)
and Andrew Ridgeley having
previously hit the top three
in 1984-86 with “Wake Me Up
Before You Go-Go,” “Careless
Whisper” (each No. 1 for
three weeks), “Everything
She Wants” (No. 1, two
weeks), “Freedom” and “I’m
Your Man” (each No. 3);
plus, the pair’s “The Edge
of Heaven” hit No. 10 in
1986.
Two other classic carols
return to the Hot 100’s top
10: Bobby Helms’ “Jingle
Bell Rock” (19-5) and Burl
Ives’ “A Holly Jolly
Christmas” (33-10); they
have peaked at Nos. 3 and 4,
respectively. The former,
released in 1957, drew 33.5
million streams (up 55%) and
19.9 million airplay
audience impressions (up
35%) and sold 1,000 (up 67%)
in the tracking week. The
latter, from 1964, collected
25.5 million streams (up
60%) and 18.7 million in
airplay audience (up 30%)
and sold 1,000 (up 85%).
Taylor Swift's
TTPD was initially released
on April 19 as a standard
16-song digital download
album, as well as an in
array of 17-song physical
configurations. Two hours
after the album dropped,
Swift issued an expanded
31-song edition of the
album, dubbed The Tortured
Poets Department: The
Anthology, which added 15
additional songs. However,
the Anthology edition was
only available as a digital
download and streaming set
until Nov. 29, when its CD
and vinyl editions became
available for purchase
exclusively through Target.
The Target CD and vinyl
additionally boasted four
bonus acoustic tracks (which
were previously released in
other alternative versions
of the album).
The announcement of Poets’
return to No. 1 comes on the
same day (Dec. 8) that Swift
closes her globe-trotting,
stadium-filling The Eras
Tour in Vancouver, after 149
dates. The retrospective
trek launched in March 2023
and visited 21 countries
across five continents.
Of The Tortured Poets
Department’s 405,000
equivalent album units
earned in the week ending
Dec. 5, traditional album
sales comprise 368,000 (up
4,377%; it surges 17-1 on
Top Album Sales for a ninth
nonconsecutive week on top),
SEA units comprise 37,000
(up 6%; equaling 48.19
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs;
it holds at No. 9 on Top
Streaming Albums) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum (down 21%).
Of TTPD’s 368,000 album
sales for the week, vinyl
sales comprise 191,000 (up
3,284%) and CD sales
comprise 177,000 (up
7,738%), largely driven by
sales from the exclusive
editions sold at Target.
(Digital download and
cassette sales comprise a
negligible sum for the
week.)
Poets spent its first 12
weeks on the Billboard 200
at No. 1 (charts dated May
4-July 20), fell to No. 4
for two weeks, returned to
No. 1 for three more weeks
(Aug. 10-Aug. 24 charts) and
then departed the top slot
until the latest chart.
With a 16th week at No. 1 on
the Billboard 200, The
Tortured Poets Department
now solely has the
third-most weeks at No. 1
among albums by women (since
the list began publishing on
a regular, weekly basis in
March 1956). It steps past
Carole King’s Tapestry,
which registered 15 weeks at
No. 1 in 1971. Only Adele’s
21 (24 weeks in 2011-12) and
the Whitney Houston-led
soundtrack to The Bodyguard
(20 weeks in 1992-93) have
more weeks at No. 1 among
women. Kendrick Lamar’s
GNX falls 1-2 on the
Billboard 200 in its second
week with 165,000 equivalent
album units earned (down
48%).
The Wicked film
soundtrack dips 2-3 in its
second frame, with 108,000
units earned (down 22%).
The late Juice WRLDcollects
his sixth top five (and top
10) charting effort — the
entirety of his charting
releases — as The Party
Never Ends debuts at No. 4.
The set bows with 86,000
equivalent album units
earned. Of that sum, SEA
units comprise 84,000
(equaling 123.43 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
debuts at No. 2 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 2,000 and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum.
The new album was preceded
by the Billboard Hot 100
chart hit “AGATS2
(Insecure)” (with Nicki
Minaj), which reached No. 68
on the Nov. 30-dated chart.
On the Hot Rap Songs chart,
it debuted and peaked at No.
11.
The Party Never Ends is the
third posthumously released
charting effort for Juice
WRLD, who died on Dec. 8,
2019. Since his passing,
he’s notched Billboard 200
entries with Legends Never
Die (two weeks at No. 1 in
2020), Fighting Demons (No.
2 in 2021) and now The Party
Never Ends. Sabrina
Carpenter’s
chart-topping Short n’ Sweet
falls 3-5 on the Billboard
200 with 68,000 equivalent
album units earned (down
1%), while Billie Eilish’s
Hit Me Hard and Soft slips
5-6 with 59,000 units
(though up 18%). Michael
Bublé’s
chart-topping Christmas
returns to the Billboard
200’s top 10, jumping 12-7
with 56,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 53%). The
set, first released in 2011,
spent five weeks at No. 1 in
December 2011 and early
January 2012 and has
returned to the top 10 in
every following holiday
season. In the latest
tracking week, of its 56,000
units, SEA units comprise
48,000 (up 59%; equaling
63.79 million on-demand
official streams of its
songs; it climbs 13-5 on Top
Streaming Albums), album
sales comprise 8,000 (up
23%; it falls 27-30 on Top
Album Sales) and TEA units
comprise a negligible sum.
Chappell Roan’s
The Rise and Fall of a
Midwest Princess rises 10-8
on the Billboard 200 with
52,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 23%).
The legendary Bing Crosby is
back in the top 10 on the
Billboard 200 for the first
time in nearly 64 years, as
his new holiday compilation
Ultimate Christmas climbs
18-9. The set earned 50,000
equivalent album units in
the week ending Dec. 5 (up
59%). Of that sum, SEA units
comprise 46,000 (up 62%;
equaling 61.37 million
on-demand official streams
of the set’s tracks; it
jumps 16-6 on Top Streaming
Albums).
Crosby, who died in 1977,
was last in the top 10 on
the Billboard 200 with his
classic Merry Christmas
album, which ranked at No. 9
on the Dec. 31, 1960-dated
chart. It had previously
spent a week at No. 1 on
Jan. 6, 1958-dated chart.
Rounding out the top 10 of
the latest Billboard 200 is
Tyler, The Creator’s
chart-topping Chromakopia,
falling 4-10 with 49,000
equivalent album units
earned (down 19%).
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)
Five weeks at the top for Gracie Abrams
Monday, December 9, 2024
by Alan Jones, London
Band Aid and Wham! both
topped sales flashes but
Gracie Abrams unexpectedly
fought a successful
rearguard action and is No.1
for the fifth straight week
with That’s So True on
consumption of 48,176 units
(308 digital downloads,
47,868 sales-equivalent
streams). In so doing, it
further extends to
31 weeks (out of 48) in 2024, and 15 weeks in
a row that the No.1 song has been by a female soloist. On the Top 200 Combined
Tracks, where ACR is not a thing, Christmas songs occupy the top five positions,
with That’s So True ranking sixth.
With a new 2024 Ultimate Mix marking the 40th anniversary of its first release,
Do They Know It’s Christmas explodes 45-8 (28,289 sales) for Band Aid. The
original version of Do They Know It’s Christmas topped the chart in 1984, as did
a Band Aid II version in 1989, Band Aid 20 in 2004 and Band Aid 30 in 2014 The
physical and digital EP versions of the new release include the 40th anniversary
edition, and all of the others apart from Band Aid II. Selling 4,990 CDs, 2,438
12-inch vinyl singles, Do They Know It’s Christmas tops their individual format
charts this week.
Elsewhere in the Top 10, Christmas-related repertoire fills a further five
places, with climbs for Last Christmas (8-2, 42,921 sales) by Wham!, All I Want
For
Christmas Is You (10-5, 36,274 sales) by Mariah Carey, Rockin’ Around The
Christmas Tree (20-6, 31,258 sales) by Brenda Lee, Merry Christmas (31-9, 25,593
sales) by Ed Sheeran & Elton John and Jingle Bell Rock (30-10, 24,649 sales) by
Bobby Helms.
While Merry Christmas is in the Top 10 for the fourth year in a row since
release for John & Sheeran, the latter’s new Christmas song – Under The Tree
from the new Netflix Christmas fantasy That Christmas – is reluctant to take
off. On its first full week on release, it secures consumption of 7,707 units,
enough only for No.92.
Completing the Top 10: Apt (3-3, 39,574 sales) by Rosé & Bruno Mars, Sailor Song
(2-4, 36,765 sales) by Gigi Perez and Defying Gravity (7-7, 30,753 sales) by
Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande. It is the fifth week in a row that Apt has ranked
third, and the third week in a row its consumption has reached a new high.
Overall singles consumption exceeds 31m. units for the first time, climbing
4.17% week-on-week to 31,379,348 units, 8.25% above same week 2023 consumption
of 28,987,143 units. Paid-for sales are up 7.57% week-on-week at 288,143, 2.78%
above same week 2023 sales of 280,347.
Thirty-two weeks after it debuted at No.1, and 22 weeks after it last topped the
charts, The Tortured Poets Department (TTPD) surges 16-1 for Taylor Swift, with
a 320.95% increase in consumption week-on-week to 23,047 units, following the
first-time release of physical formats of its The Anthology edition.
With 35 tracks, including four acoustic bonus songs not hitherto released
physically, The Anthology edition accounted for the vast majority of the 7,497
CDs and 10,622 vinyl albums that TTPD sold in the latest frame, the remainder of
its consumption coming from 27 digital downloads and 4,901 sales-equivalent
streams.
Achieving its highest weekly consumption for 28 weeks, TTPD extends its already
huge lead atop the year-to-date album rankings, raising its cume to 744,761
units – more than its nearest two rivals (The Highlights By The Weeknd [383,038
Units]and Short n’ Sweet by Sabrina Carpenter [330,115 units]) combined. It is
way ahead on vinyl and sales-equivalent streams but trails on both CD and
digital downloads to Coldplay’s Moon Music. For the 2020s, TTPD ranks 20th, with
The Highlights by The Weeknd at No.1 (1,214,021 sales).
Never charting lower than No.18 so far, TTPD has racked up nine weeks at No.1,
three more than any album in the 2020s, making the largest single contribution
to Swift’s 25 weeks at the summit (9.69% of 258 that have elapsed) this decade.
This Sunday (December 8), it will be five years since Chicago rapper Juice
Wrld’s death. He had released three studio albums at the time (including a
mixtape collaboration with Future), but that total rises to six with his latest
posthumous release, The Party Never Ends, which debuts at No.5 on consumption of
9,422 units, despite being released only digitally. Including after the fact
collaborations with Nicki Minaj, Eminem, Kid Laroi and Offset, among others, it
is his third Top 10 album.
Juice Wrld’s first album, 2018’s Goodbye & Good Riddance, made its first
appearance in the Top 75 for 79 weeks last week, and now climbs to its highest
position for 178 weeks, at No.53 (2,851 sales). Despite being his joint
lowest-peaking album – No.23, same as Future collaboration Wrld On Drugs –
Goodbye & Good Riddance is his most-consumed title, with a to-date tally of
509,847 units.
Michael Bublé’s perennial Christmas has been a seasonal visitor to the top tier
ever since being released in 2011, only falling short of the Top 10 in 2015,
when it stopped at No.12. No such impediment this year, as it surges 17-4
(10,001 sales) to achieve its 59th week in the Top 10. Six of those weeks have
been at No.1 – three in 2011 and one apiece in 2020, 2022 and 2023.
The rest of the Top 10: Short n’ Sweet (3-2, 13,619 sales) by Sabrina Carpenter,
GNX (1-3, 13,473 sales) by Kendrick Lamar, Brat (5-6, 9,375 sales) by Charli
XCX, The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess (6-7, 8,279 sales) by Chappell
Roan, +--=÷× Tour Collection (7-8, 8,203 sales) by Ed Sheeran, The Highlights
(8-9, 7,039 sales) by The Weeknd and From Zero (4-10, 7,018 sales) by Linkin
Park.
Overall album sales are up 6.54% week-on-week at 2,823,031 units, their highest
level thus far in the 2020s, and 9.65% above same week 2023 sales of 2,574,496.
They were last higher nearly six years ago, in week 51 of 2018 (311 weeks ago)
when they were 3,228,818. Physical product accounts for 584,336 sales, their
highest level for 53 weeks, and 20.70% of the total.