Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Die With A
Smile' keeps the crown
Sunday, October 20, 2024
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Absolutely no
changes in the upper region of our
Global Track Chart, the top three
positions are frozen since six
weeks! 'Die With
A Smile' by Lady GaGa and Bruno Mars reigns
the tally for a straight seventh week with
another massive 438,000 points. That's
a 3,5%
decline compared to the previous
week.
Broken
down by segments it generated
333,000 points by streaming (down
4,5%), 36,000 points by sales (down
5%), and
69,000 points by airplay
(up 1,5%). It's Lady GaGa's 19th
global Top 10 smash and her eighth
number one. Furthermore it's the highest
position for Lady GaGa here since more than four
years, when 'Rain On Me', a collab
with Ariana Grande, topped the
hitlist in the calendar week 23,
2020. Bruno Mars celebrates his
12th global Top 10 hit and the sixth
number one. Nearly eight years ago
he was the last time at the pole
position when '24k Magic' ruled the
tally two times in the calendar
weeks one and two of 2017. The
current collab was
a
result of Mars inviting GaGa to his
studio where he had been working on
new music. He presented the track in progress to
her and the duo finished writing and
recording the song the same day.
Billie Eilish's former number one
smash 'Birds Of A Feather' holds
tight
at the runner-up slot week with 330,000
points, a little 0,5% loss with 238,000
points by streaming, 37,000 points
by sales, and 55,000 points by
airplay. Sabrina Carpenter's
'Espresso', another former no.1 hit,
rounds out the top three again with
258,000 points, a 5% decline with
159,000 points by streaming, 30,000
points by sales, and 69,000 points
by airplay. Highest debut of the
week comes from South Korean singer,
rapper, and actress Jennie Kim,
known mononymously as Jennie. The
Blackpink member bows at no.7
globally with 'Mantra' and 186,000
points. It's her second solo success
in the Top 10, after 'You & Me'
peaked at no.10 nearly one year ago
in the calendar week 42. Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other
'La Patrulla' by Peso Pluma feat.
Neton Vega at no.44, 'The Door' by
Teddy Swims at no.47, 'Gotta Be' by
Ae! Group at no.48, 'Diet Pepsi' by
Addison Rae at no.50, and 'Embrace It'
by Ndotz at no.53 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. Following the release
of a new expanded edition, 'Brat' by
Charli XCX jumps atop the Global
Album Chart with 194,000 equivalent
sales (107,000 points by streaming +
87,000 points by sales). That's a
massive 397% boost compared to the
previous week and a total of 1,56
million so far. 'Brat' started at
no.4 in the week 25, 2024 with
140,000 sales. American singer and
rapper Jelly Roll starts with the
highest new-entry of the week. His
10th studio album 'Beautifully
Broken' rockets at no.2 worldwide
with 117,000 consumption units
(18,000 points by streaming + 99,000
points by sales). His former effort
'Whitsitt Chapel' bowed and peaked
at no.8 with 92,000 sales in the
week 24, 2023. Sabrina Carpenter's 'Short n' Sweet'
rounds out this week's top three with 111,000
equivalent sales (89,000 points by
streaming + 22,000 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 8,000 / 16,459,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 25,000 / 6,003,000, '21' by Adele
20,000 / 33,238,000,
'25' by Adele 13,000 / 25,250,000,
'30' by Adele 8,000 / 6,560,000,
'After Hours' by The Weeknd 29,000 /
10,067,000, 'Cowboy
Carter' by Beyoncé 7,000 /
1,493,000,
'Divide' by Ed Sheeran 20,000 /
21,247,000, 'Emails I Can't Send' by
Sabrina Carpenter 34,000 /
1,581,000, 'Equals' by Ed Sheeran
7,000 / 6,119,000, 'Evermore' by
Taylor Swift 13,000 / 6,179,000,
'For All The Dogs' by
Drake 10,000 / 3,241,000, 'Future Nostalgia' by Dua
Lipa 13,000 / 9,128,000, Génesis' by
Peso Pluma 18,000 / 2,375,000,
'Golden' by Jung Kook 28,000 /
3,020,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
34,000 / 3,819,000,
'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 11,000 / 7,155,000,
'Heroes &
Villains' by Metro Boomin 18,000 /
4,346,000, 'Lover' by Taylor Swift
37,000 / 10,890,000, 'Midnights' by Taylor
Swift 27,000 /
11,552,000, 'One Moment At A Time'
by Morgan Wallen 37,000 / 8,003,000, 'Radical Optimism' by
Dua Lipa 10,000 / 842,000, 'Red (Taylor's
Version)' by Taylor Swift 13,000 /
6,123,000, '17 Is Right Here' by
Seventeen 11,000 / 1,433,000,
'Speak
Now (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 9,000 / 3,484,000, 'Stick
Season' by Noah Kahan 37,000 /
3,557,000,
'The Highlights' by The Weeknd
35,000 / 8,672,000, 'Un Verano Sin
Ti' by Bad Bunny 37,000 / 7,830,000, 'Utopia'
by Travis Scott 38,000 / 4,552,000,
and 'When We All Fall Asleep,
Where Do We Go?' by Billie Eilish
16,000 / 12,073,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 10 YEARS
AGO
... "Shake It Off" is the lead
single from Taylor Swift's fifth
studio album, 1989 (2014) and was
released on 18 August 2014. It's an
uptempo pop track and features a
departure from Swift's earlier
country pop musical style. "Shake It
Off" debuted atop the US Billboard
Hot 100 chart, becoming the 22nd
song to do so. It produced
first-week digital sales of 544,000
units for the chart issue dated
September 6, 2014, the largest debut
sales week for a single of 2014 in
the USA. The song topped also the
charts in Canada, Australia and New
Zealand. The music video, directed
by Mark Romanek, was shot in June
2014, over three days in Los
Angeles. The video features Swift
"embracing her inner dorky dancer by
submerging herself with some of the
world's best dancers in the styles
of hip hop, lyrical, ballet, jazz
and even cheerleader."
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
Shaboozey scores 14th week
at No.1
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” orders a 14th
round at No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100. The song,
which became the
singer-songwriter’s first
leader in July, extends
2024’s longest reign
and moves to within two
weeks of tying the longest
command this decade; Morgan
Wallen’s fellow country/pop
crossover smash “Last Night”
led for 16 weeks in 2023. “A
Bar Song (Tipsy),” on
American Dogwood / Empire,
totaled 75.6 million radio
airplay audience
impressions, 26.4 million
official streams (down 1%
week-over-week in each
metric) and 6,000 sold (down
22%) in the United States
Oct. 4-10. The track posts
an 11th week at No. 1 on the
Radio Songs chart;
rebounds 2-1 for an eighth
frame atop Streaming Songs;
and holds at No. 2 following
13 weeks at No. 1 on Digital
Song Sales. “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” is now one of only
14 No. 1s in the Hot 100’s
history to amass 14 or more
weeks on top – an honor that
a mere 1.2% of all No. 1s
have achieved. All 14 hits
have led since the chart
adopted
electronically-monitored
Luminate data in November
1991, at which point longer
reigns than before
subsequently became more
common;
since then, 3.4% of all No.
1s have led for 14 or more
weeks. Billie Eilish’s
“Birds of a Feather” flies
in place at its No. 2 Hot
100 high. Post Malone’s “I
Had Some Help,” featuring
Morgan Wallen, climbs 4-3 on
the Hot 100, following six
weeks at No. 1 beginning
upon its debut in May.
Sabrina Carpenter boasts
three songs in the Hot 100’s
top 10 for a seventh
consecutive week: “Espresso”
buzzes 5-4, after becoming
her first top 10, reaching
No. 3; “Taste” rises 9-7,
after it debuted at its No.
2 best; and “Please Please
Please” ascends 10-9, after
it became her first Mo. 1 in
June. Thanks to the trio of
hits, all from her album Short
n’ Sweet,
she has become one of just
six acts that have tripled
up in the top 10 for seven
consecutive weeks or more.
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars’
“Die With a Smile” pushes
6-5 on the Hot 100, after
hitting No. 3, and Chappell
Roan’s “Good Luck, Babe!”
lifts 7-6, after reaching
No. 4. Teddy Swims’ “Lose
Control,” which led the Hot
100 for a week in March,
holds at No. 8, as it ties
for the fifth-most weeks
spent in the top 10 over the
chart’s history. Rounding
out the Hot 100’s top 10,
Benson Boone’s No. 2-peaking
“Beautiful Things” returns
to the region, rising 12-10.
(Although it last ranked in
the tier in early August, it
has placed in the top 15
each week dating to its
February debut.) Following
the 39 weeks in the top 10
for “Lose Control” (starting
on the Jan. 20-dated chart),
“Espresso” and “Beautiful
Things” rank second with 25
top 10 weeks each this year;
“A Bar Song (Tipsy)” follows
with 24.
Coldplay captures its fifth
No. 1 album on the Billboard
200 chart, and first in over
a decade, as Moon Music
debuts atop the list (dated
Oct. 19). The set launches
with 120,000 equivalent
album units earned, of which
106,000 are in traditional
album sales. Both figures
represent the biggest week,
by units and album sales,
for the group since 2015.
Overall, Moon Music marks
the 10th top 10-charting
effort for the band. The act
previously led the list with
Ghost Stories (2014), Mylo
Xyloto (2011), Viva La Vida
or Death and All His Friends
(2008) and X&Y (2005). Of
Moon Music’s first-week
units of 120,000, album
sales comprise 106,000 (it’s
the top-selling album of the
week at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units comprise
13,000 (equaling 16.71
million on-demand official
streams of the set’s songs)
and TEA units comprise
1,000. The group last
garnered a larger week, in
either overall units or
album sales, with the debut
frame of 2015’s A Head Full
of Dreams, which bowed with
210,000 units, of which
195,000 were in traditional
album sales. The album’s
vinyl sales total 29,000 for
the week — Coldplay’s best
sales week on vinyl ever.
Sabrina Carpenter's Short n’
Sweet falls a spot to No. 2
(with 93,000 equivalent
album units; down 8%) after
four nonconsecutive weeks
atop the list. It’s No. 1 on
the Top Streaming Albums
chart for a sixth
nonconsecutive week.
Chappell Roan’s The Rise and
Fall of a Midwest Princess
dips 2-3 on the Billboard
200 (56,000; down 12%),
Morgan Wallen’s
chart-topping One Thing at a
Time is a non-mover at No. 4
(50,000; down less than 1%),
and Billie Eilish’s Hit Me
Hard and Soft is stationary
at No. 5 (50,000; up 1%).
Three former leaders are up
next: Taylor Swift’s The
Tortured Poets Department
rising one spot to No. 6
(45,000 equivalent album
units; up 1%), Post Malone’s
F-1 Trillion dips 6-7
(43,000; down 8%) and
Future’s Mixtape Pluto falls
3-8 (40,000; down 28%).
Rounding out the top 10 are:
Noah Kahan’s Stick Season,
descending 8-9 (37,000
equivalent album units; down
2%), and Morgan Wallen’s
former No. 1 Dangerous: The
Double Album, holding steady
at No. 10 (32,000; down 2%).
Record Of The Month
'The Emptiness Machine' is
Linkin Park's lead single
from their upcoming eighth
studio album 'From Zero' and
the first time to feature
Emily Armstrong on vocals
and Colin Brittain on drums.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Sabrina Carpenter's 'Taste'
tops a seventh week
Monday, October 14, 2024
by Alan Jones, London
Its consumption slipping
2.20% week-on-week to its
lowest level yet, Taste
nevertheless racks up a
seventh straight week at
No.1 for Sabrina Carpenter
on consumption of 51,717
units (490 digital downloads
and 51,227 sales-equivalent
streams). Thus equalling the
amount of time her first
chart-topper
(Espresso) spent at the
summit in two runs and –
when Please Please Please’s
five weeks at the apex are
added in – raising
Carpenter’s occupation of
the No.1 spot to 19 weeks
out of the last 24. That’s
the second most by a solo
artist in a single calendar
year, surpassing the 18
weeks that Elvis Presley
spent at No.1 in 1961, and
Ed Sheeran spent at No.1 in
2017 but falling short of
the 27 weeks that Frankie
Laine spent at No.1 in 1953.
With the aforementioned
Espresso dipping 3-4 (36,528
sales) and Please Please
Please holding at No.5
(32,388 sales), Carpenter
extends her record run of
having three titles in the
top five to an unprecedented
seven weeks. Good Luck,
Babe! is No.2 for the sixth
week in total and fourth
week in a row for Chappell
Roan on consumption of
38,549 units, and the top
five is completed by Die
With A Smile, which rises
4-3 (36,660 sales), reaching
a new peak for Lady Gaga &
Bruno Mars. Sailor Song by
Gigi Perez has
been becalmed three times so far on its 12-week
chart voyage, with two week turns at No.35, No.13 and No.11 but it has never
gone down, and moves off the latter mark to make the Top 10 for the first time
this week, breezing to No.6 (29,228 sales).
Somedays returns to growth, climbing 10-8 (28,120 sales) to surpass its previous
peak of No.9 for Sonny Fodera, Jazzy & D.O.D.
The rest of the Top 10: Backbone (6-7, 28,799 sales) by Chase & Status and
Stormzy; Kisses (8-9, 27,209 sales) by Bl3ss, CamrinWatsin and Bbyclose; and Hot
To Go! (9-10, 26,353 sales) by Chappell Roan.
Overall singles consumption is up 2.06% week-on-week to 29,672,017 units, 10.52%
above same week 2023 consumption of 26,848,732 units. Paid-for sales are down
2.04% week-on-week at 282,878, 11.53% above same week 2023 sales of 253,628.
Eclipsing the first week sales of any album by a group since One Direction’s
third album, Midnight Memories, launched on sales of 237,338 units in November
2013, Coldplay’s latest studio album, Moon Music, goes into orbit high above the
chasing pack on this week’s album chart, racking up stellar first week
consumption of 236,796 units (182,166 CDs, 27,248 vinyl albums, 20,737 digital
downloads and 6,645 sales-equivalent streams).
Effecting the 10th change of leadership of the chart in as many weeks it also
maintains their perfect 10 – being their 10th consecutive studio album (their
entire output) to reach No.1 in a career spanning more than 24 years.
Preceded by the hits Feelslikeimfallinginlove and We Pray, the core version of
Moon Music consists of 10 tracks with a playing time of 43 minutes, with all
tracks being co-penned by the band – Chris Martin, Guy Berryman, Jonny Buckland
and Will Champion – and crediting outsiders, including late poet and civil
rights activist Maya Angelou, Brian Eno, Jay-Z, Nile Rodgers, Chris Martin’s
(adult) children Apple and Moses and the unrelated Swedish songwriting legend
Max Martin, who also co-produced the set.
It is only the fifth album to achieve consumption in excess of 200,000 sales in
a week in the 249 that have thus far elapsed in the 2020s, behind Taylor Swift’s
The Tortured Poets Department, which opened with 270,091 sales in May, Adele’s
30 (261,856 in December 2021) and ahead of Swift’s Midnights (204,501 in October
2022) and ABBA’s Voyage (203,909 in November 2021).
At the same stage in the 2010s, sales in excess of 200,000 were achieved 14
times, and in the 2000s, 39 times. In the 21st century as a whole – a period of
1,293 weeks – it is the 117th instance of a sale in excess of 200,000 units.
Surpassing by 134.12% the 101,145 start made by Coldplay’s last album, Music Of
The Spheres, three years ago next week, Moon Music is the sixth album by the
band to achieve a first week sale in excess of 200,000, though it is far below
their personal best, the 464,471 launch of X&Y in 2005. They have achieved 200k
plus a total of seven times, putting them behind Robbie Williams (15), Take That
(12) and Adele (eight) and equal with Westlife (seven) on the 21st century
leaderboard. They have spent 21 weeks at No.1 – all since 2000 - the seventh
highest tally of any act this century, with the only group to spend longer at
No.1 in that period being Take That (23 weeks).
Moon Music’s sales on CD last week were the highest for any album in that format
since Ed Sheeran’s Divide in 2017, when its first week consumption of 671,542
units included 405,351 CDs, and its second week consumption of 303,520 units
included 186,577 CDs. It instantly moves into fourth place on the 2020s
best-selling CDs list, behind 30 by Adele (465,458), Voyage by ABBA (373,089)
and = (Equals) by Ed Sheeran (321,761) and ahead of Taylor Swift’s The Tortured
Poets Department (173,534). It also debuts at No.8 in the 2020s physical sales
chart, its total of 209,415 placing it behind 30 by Adele (523,536), Voyage by
Abba (424,677), (Equals) by Ed Sheeran (368,357), Taylor Swift albums Midnights
(283,912), The Tortured Poets Department (265,514) and 1989 (Taylor’s Version)
(222,993) and Rumours by Fleetwood Mac (214,338). It has already surpassed
to-date physical sales of its predecessor, Music Of The Spheres (170,059).
Moon Music achieved an 8.90% slice of the overall album market in the week –
39.21% of the physical market – achieving greater consumption than the rest of
the Top 40 combined and outselling its nearest challenger – Sabrina Carpenter’s
Short ‘n Sweet which bounces 3-2 (17,992 sales) to achieve runners-up slot for
the fifth time in its seven-week chart tenure – by a margin of greater than 13
to one.
Although massively overshadowed by Coldplay’s grand entrance, four more albums
debut inside the Top 10 this week: The Last Flight (No.3, 10,468 sales), the
seventh chart album (third Top 10) for London-based art rockers Public Service
Broadcasting, whose last studio set, Bright Magic, reached No.2 in 2021; Changes
All The Time (No.4, 9,447 sales), the fourth Top 5 album (his entire output) for
34-year-old Hertfordshire singer/songwriter James Bay, whose 2015 debut, Chaos
And The Calm, reached No.1 and has to-date consumption of 954,796 units; Cutouts
(No.7, 8,795 sales), the third album in short order for Radiohead spin-off act
The Smile – comprising band members Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood and drummer
Tom Skinner from jazz band Sons Of Kemet, arriving eight months after their
second album, Wall Of Eyes, opened at No.3 and two years after debut, A Light
For Attracting Attention reached No.5; and Key (No.8, 7,684 sales), erstwhile
Yazoo singer Alison Moyet’s tenth solo set, reworking her catalogue and
extending her unbroken run of Top 30 albums, 40 years after her debut solo
album, Alf, reached No.1.
The rest of the Top 10: The Rise And Fall Of A Midwest Princess (6-5, 9,412
sales) by Chappell Roan; +--=÷× Tour Collection (5-6, 9,340 sales) by Ed
Sheeran; The Highlights (8-9, 7,355 sales) by The Weeknd; and The Tortured Poets
Department (11-10, 6,944 sales) by Taylor Swift.
Overall album sales are up 8.62% week-on-week at 2,661,465 units, their highest
level for 24 weeks and 22.09% above same week 2023 sales of 2,179,863. Physical
product accounts for 534,140 sales, also their highest level for 24 weeks, and
20.07% of the total.