Global Chart Report
----------------------------------
'Die With A
Smile' reigns a 13th week
Sunday, May 4, 2025
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Where are the big new hits? More
than a
third of the year is over, but only
17 songs from this week's Top 40
were released this year. The most
successful hit of these is 'DtMF' by
Bad Bunny, which peaked at no.3 in
the calendar week 4 and generated a
total of 3,508,000 points so far. In the current
Top 10 are only three songs, which
were released this year, led by Alex
Warren's 'Ordinary' at no.3 with
235,000 points. 17 songs of the Top
40 ranking since more than a half
year on
the hitlist, that's a new record and
a very unusual situation!
In the calendar week 37, 2024 (dated
to September 14),
'Die With A Smile' by
Lady GaGa & Bruno Mars ruled the
Global Track Chart for the first
time. Now the song
tops the tally for a 13th
week with another healthy 306,000
points, an 1,5% decline compared to the
previous week. The Grammy-decorated 'Die
With A Smile' breaks more and more
records... never before a hit was
such a long time at no.1 on
Spotify's
streaming chart and
also on YouTube's hitlist. On our
ALL TIME CHART
it ranks currently at no.11
with a total of
15,498,000 points and it has a big
potential to come dangerously close to the top
spots there,
where Elton John's 'Candle In The
Wind 1997' leads since 27 years with
a total of 21,314,000 points. The
Weeknd's 'Blinding Lights' from 2019
ranks at the runner-up slot on that
list with 21,290,000 points and
Mariah Carey's eternal carol 'All I
Want For Christmas Is You' from 1994
holds no.3 with 19,433,000 points.
Broken down by
sectors 'Die With A Smile' gets
222,000 points by streaming
this week (down 1,5%), 35,000 points by sales
(down 2%), and 49,000 points by
airplay (down 1%).
'Apt.' by
South Korean singer,
songwriter Rosé in collaboration
with Bruno Mars ranks still at the
runner-up slot, after 21 weeks at
number one, with 283,000 points
(down 3%, with 180,000 points by
streaming, 30,000 points by sales,
and 73,000 points by airplay).
By the way, without 'Apt.', 'Die
With A Smile' would have been
number one now for an unbelievable
34th week! And it's the 27th week
that the same two songs leading the
Global Chart, also a spectacular
historic record! Biggest winner of
the week is Ed Sheeran's 'Azizam',
which climbs at no.14 with 129,000
points, a 15% increase. The tune is
driven by massive airplay, it
reaches no.3 on the (not-published)
Global Airplay Chart with 63,000
points, only overtaken by Lola
Young's 'Messy' (72,000 points) and
Rosé & Bruno Mars' 'Apt.' (73,000
points).
Outside
our current Top 40 waiting among
other 'Undressed' by Sombr at no.44,
'Morena' by Neton Vega & Peso Pluma
at no.48, 'Multo' by Cup Of Joe at
no.53, 'Vitamina' by Jombriel | DFZM
| Jotta at no.54, and 'No One
Noticed' by The Marias at no.56 for their first appearance on the
hitlist. Let's take a look to the
year-to-date lists: Of course 'Apt.'
and 'Die With A Smile' ruling the
track sector with 7,584,000,
respectively 7,332,000 points in
2025. In the third place ranks
Billie Eilish's 'Birds Of A Feather'
with 4,623,000 points, followed by
Gracie Abrams' 'That's So True'
(3,913,000 points) and Kendrick
Lamar feat. SZA's 'Luther'
(3,683,000 points). In the album
sector SZA's 'SOS (inclusive the
deluxe edition 'Lana') reigns the
year-to-date list with 2,361,000
equivalent sales. At the runner-up
slot ranks Bad Bunny's 'Debí Tirar
Más Fotos' with 1,877,000 sales,
followed by Kendrick Lamar's 'GNX'
(1,824,000), Sabrina Carpenter's
'Short n' Sweet' (1,797,000), and
Snow Man's 'The Best Of 2020-2025'
(1,570,000). Back to the weekly
hitlists: The South Korean boy group
TWS jumps at no.1 with their third
extended play 'Try With Us' and
228,000 equivalent sales (almost all
of these are physical sales). TWS
(pronounced as 'two-us') is an
abbreviation for twenty four seven
with us. The Swedish rock band Ghost
bows at no.2 with their sixth studio
album 'Skeletá' and 132,000
equivalent sales (only 14,000 points
by streaming, but 118,000 points by
sales). The band's former studio
effort 'Impera' started at no.4
globally in the week 12, 2022 with
112,000 sales. 'D&P Á Vie', the new
set by French rapper Jul, rounds out
the current top three with 126,000
consumption units (8,000 points by
streaming + 118,000 points by
sales). SZA's 'SOS' it's gradually becoming
a classic. Placed for the first time
in December 2022, it sails at no.5
this week with another 107,000 equivalent
sales (103,000 points by streaming +
4,000 points by sales). It's the
fantastic 100th week for the set on our tally,
only a few albums reached that level
in the past. 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 10,000 / 16,718,000,
'1989 (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 22,000 / 6,792,000, '21' by
Adele 16,000 / 33,759,000, '25' by
Adele 13,000 / 25,630,000, '30' by
Adele 10,000 / 6,817,000, 'After
Hours' by The Weeknd 25,000 /
10,819,000, 'Alligator Bites Never
Heal' by Doechii 38,000 / 753,000, 'Chromakopia' by Tyler,
The Creator 27,000 / 1,991,000, 'Cowboy Carter' by
Beyoncé 15,000 / 1,895,000, 'Divide'
by Ed Sheeran 22,000 / 21,806,000,
'Emails I Can't Send' by Sabrina
Carpenter 20,000 / 2,289,000,
'Equals' by Ed Sheeran 9,000 /
6,397,000,
'Evermore' by Taylor Swift 12,000 /
6,635,000, 'Fireworks &
Rollerblades' by Benson Boone 45,000
/ 2,709,000, 'From Zero' by Linkin
Park 31,000 / 1,253,000, 'Future
Nostalgia' by Dua Lipa 14,000 /
9,544,000, 'Guts' by Olivia Rodrigo
28,000 / 4,704,000, 'Harry's House'
by Harry Styles 11,000 / 7,482,000,
'Heroes & Villains' by Metro Boomin
13,000 / 4,800,000, 'I've Tried
Everything But Therapy (Part 1)' by
Teddy Swims 46,000 / 2,693,000,
'Incómodo' by Tito Double P 42,000 /
1,933,000, 'Lover' by
Taylor Swift 31,000 / 11,957,000,
'Midnights' by Taylor Swift 24,000 /
12,438,000, 'Muse' by Jimin 20,000 /
2,015,000, 'One Thing At A Time' by
Morgan Wallen 44,000 / 9,122,000,
'Red (Taylor's Version)' by Taylor
Swift 14,000 / 6,595,000, 'Rosé' by
Rosie 38,000 / 1,606,000, 'Starboy'
by The Weeknd 31,000 / 8,998,000,
'Stick Season' by Noah Kahan 39,000
/ 4,770,000, 'The Highlights' by The
Weeknd 31,000 / 9,749,000, 'Un Verano Sin Ti' by Bad Bunny
51,000 / 8,873,000, 'Utopia' by
Travis Scott 22,000 / 5,347,000, and
'When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do
We Go?' by Billie Eilish 23,000 /
12,653,000.
GLOBAL NO.1 - 30 YEARS
AGO
... "Back For Good" was released on March 27, 1995,
as the second single from the band's third studio effort Nobody Else
(1994). The fantastic blue-eyed soul ballad won British Single Of The
Year at the 1996 Brit Awards. Gary Barlow claimed he wrote the song in
only fifteen minutes. However, "Back For Good" catapulted atop the
hitlist in United Kingdom with nearly 350,000 single sales in its
initial week, so this made it one of the fastest selling singles of the
year there. Furthermore the song went to the summit in Germany, Canada,
Australia, Spain, Norway, Ireland, and reached the Top 10 in many other
countries, even in the United States.
USA
Billboard Report
(excerpt)
'Luther' leads Hot 100
for an 11th week
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
by Keith Caulfield & Gary Trust,
Los Angeles
Dating to the Hot 100’s Aug.
4, 1958, start “Luther”
matches Puff Daddy and Faith
Evans’ “I’ll Be Missing You”
(featuring vocal group 112),
in 1997, for the most weeks
spent at No. 1 among
duets by co-billed lead solo
men and women. “Luther,”
whose title honors late R&B
great Luther Vandross (who
is also sampled on the
song), became Lamar’s
sixth Hot 100 No. 1 and
SZA’s third. Lamar and SZA
each extend their longest
career commands on the chart
with the song. “Luther”
totaled 67.9 million radio
airplay audience impressions
(down 1% week-over-week),
20.5 million official
streams (down 6%) and 2,000
sold (up 4%) in the U.S.
April 25-May 1. It leads
Radio Songs for
a fifth week; holds at No. 3
following seven weeks atop
Streaming Songs;
and reenters Digital Song
Sales at
No. 24, after reaching No.
4. Alex Warren’s “Ordinary”
ascends 3-2 for a new Hot
100 high. It tops Streaming
Songs (21.5 million streams,
up 2%) and Digital Song
Sales (7,000 sold, up 6%)
for a second week each,
while boasting a 17% surge
to 19.7 million in radio
audience. Lady Gaga and
Bruno Mars’ “Die With a
Smile” dips 2-3, following
five nonconsecutive weeks
atop the Hot 100 beginning
in January, and Drake’s
“Nokia” holds at No. 4,
after reaching No. 2.
Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song
(Tipsy)” keeps at No. 5 on
the Hot 100, following its
record-tying 19 weeks at no.
1 beginning
last July. It notches a 43rd
week in the top five,
matching The Weeknd’s
“Blinding Lights,” in
2020-21, for the most weeks
spent in the tier all-time.
Chappell Roan’s “Pink Pony
Club” is steady at No. 6 on
the Hot 100 after hitting
No. 4. Teddy Swims’ “Lose
Control,” which led the Hot
100 for a week in March
2024, and became the year’s
No. 1 song, lifts 9-7, as it
logs a record-extending 60th
week in the top 10; two
weeks earlier, it surpassed
the 57-week run in the
region of “Blinding Lights”
for the most such frames in
the chart’s history. “Lose
Control” notches an 89th
week on the Hot 100 overall,
the third-longest stay in
the chart’s history. The
only hits with longer runs:
Glass Animals’ “Heat Waves”
(91 weeks, in 2021-22) and
“Blinding Lights” (90, in
2019-22). Morgan Wallen’s
“I’m the Problem” slips 7-8
on the Hot 100, after
reaching No. 2; Benson
Boone’s “Beautiful Things”
rises 10-9, also after
peaking at No. 2; and,
rounding out the top 10,
Doechii’s “Anxiety” returns
to the tier, up two spots
back to its No. 10 best.
Ghost
grabs the No. 1 slot on the
Billboard 200 albums chart
for the first time, as the
Swedish hard rock band’s new
studio effort Skeletá debuts
atop the tally (dated May
10) with 86,000 equivalent
album units earned in the
United States in the week
ending May 1, according to
Luminate. Of the album’s
starting sum, 89% was driven
by traditional album sales —
buoyed by a big vinyl sales
figure. Skeletá launches
with Ghost’s best week ever
by both equivalent album
units and traditional album
sales. Skeletá marks the
ninth charted effort for the
group on the Billboard 200.
The band first visited the
list in 2013 with its second
album, Infestissumam, which
also marked the act’s first
top 40-charting set,
reaching No. 28. Skeletá
scores Ghost its eighth top
40 set, and fifth to reach
the top 10. The band had
previously gone as high as
No. 2 with its last
full-length studio album,
2022’s Impera. Of Skeletá’s
86,000 first-week equivalent
album units, album sales
comprise 77,000 (it debuts
at No. 1 on Top Album
Sales), SEA units
comprise 9,000 (equaling
12.45 million on-demand
official streams of the
set’s songs) and TEA
units comprise a negligible
sum. The set’s
first-week sales were
bolstered by its
availability across more
than 15 vinyl variants,
three CD variants and four
cassette variants (all
containing the same
tracklist, but in
collectible packaging).
Skeletá is the lone debut in
the top 10 of the latest
Billboard 200 chart. The
titles at Nos. 2-7 are all
former No. 1s: SZA's SOS
slips to No. 2 (52,000
equivalent album units
earned; down 1%), Kendrick
Lamar’s GNX falls 2-3
(48,000; down 5%), Morgan
Wallen’s One Thing at a Time
is down 3-4 (46,000; down
4%), Sabrina Caprenter’s
Short n’ Sweet descends 4-5
(44,000; down 8%),
PartyNextDoor and Drake’s
$ome $exy $ongs 4 U falls
5-6 (43,000; down 6%) and
Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más
Fotos is down 6-7 (38,000;
down 3%). Shaboozey’s Where
I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m
Going gallops 45-8 with
35,000 equivalent album
units earned (up 110%) after
a deluxe reissue on April 25
that added six additional
songs, bringing its total
song count to 18. The set
debuted and peaked at No. 5
on the June 15, 2024-dated
list. (He also played the
Stagecoach Festival on April
26.) Playboi Carti’s
chart-topping MUSIC (7-9;
34,000 equivalent album
units, down 11%) and Morgan
Wallen’s Dangerous: The
Double Album (9-10; 33,000,
down 3%) round out the
Billboard 200’s top 10.
Record Of The Month
The song was
originally self-released by
American rapper and
songwriter Doechii to
YouTube
on November 10,
2019. It was re-recorded in
2025 following it gaining
traction on social media
platforms, being released to
streaming platforms on March
4, 2025. 'Anxiety' contains
a prominent sample of the
2011 song 'Somebody That I
Used To Know' by Gotye feat.
Kimbra.
United Kingdom
Music Week Report
(excerpt)
Alex Warren stays a seventh
week at number
one
Monday, May 5, 2025
by Alan Jones, London
The imminent threat of ACR
removed as it returns to
growth, Ordinary is No.1 for
the seventh consecutive week
for Alex Warren, with
consumption growing 4.90%
week-on-week to 69,243 units
(2,140 digital downloads,
67,103 sales-equivalent
streams) after two weeks of
decline. It has now equalled
the
seven-week run atop the
chart achieved by Noah
Kahan’s Stick Season last
year, to share the record
for longest-running No.1 by
a male solo artist since
Harry Styles spent 10
consecutive weeks at the
summit with As It Was in
2022. Ordinary is now Alex
Warren’s most-consumed
track: with a to-date tally
of 602,896 units, it
leapfrogs Carry You Home
(585,397 units) this week to
assume that position, and
will reach another landmark
in the next few days when it
becomes his first platinum
single (600,000 units).
Ordinary’s runner-up for the
sixth week in a row is Pink
Pony Club, which also
returns to growth improving
1.51% to 37,923 units for
Chappell Roan.
Achieving new peaks and
highest weekly sales thus
far, Show Me Love moves 4-3
(34,554 sales) for WizTheMC
and Bees & Honey while Love
Me Not climbs for the 10th
week in a row, closing 9-5
(31,256 sales) for Ravyn
Lenae.
The only new arrival in the
Top 10, Steve’s Lava Chicken
jumps
11-9 (24,365 sales) to
become the first Top 10 hit
for actor/comedian Jack
Black.
Already the shortest hit in
chart history, at just over
half a minute – it has an
audible presence for 31
seconds but is a 34 second
track – its latest leap
means it is also now the
shortest Top 10 hit
replacing 1939 track
Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead
by The Munchkins (The Wizard
Of Oz Film Cast), which ran
for 51 seconds and reached
No.2 in April 2013,
following a campaign to get
it to No.1 to coincide with
the funeral of former Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Perhaps the premier
purveyors of pithy pop are
The K*nts, who had four very
sweary anti-Tory and
anti-Monarchy Top 20 hits in
2021/2022, none of which
broke the two-minute
barrier.
Holding at No.7 (25,953
sales), Beautiful Things
racks up its 29th week in
the Top 10 for Benson Boone
(17 weeks at the start of
2024, 12 in its current run)
weeks, its overall tally
being inferior to only five
songs in chart history. Its
resilience this week is
despite competition from
Boone’s new single Mystical
Magical, which debuts at
No.17 (18,765 sales),
becoming his third Top 20
and eighth Top 75 hit.
The rest of the Top 10:
Azizam (3-4, 31,472 sales)
by Ed Sheeran, Anxiety (5-6,
27,471 sales) by Doechii,
Sports Car (6-8, 25,571
sales) by Tate McRae and
Busy Woman (8-10, 23,571
sales) by Sabrina Carpenter.
Overall singles consumption
is up 8.01% week-on-week to
31,760,641 units, 6.45%
above same week 2024
consumption of 29,836,597
units. Paid-for sales are up
1.90% week-on-week at
261,654, 12.09% below same
week 2024 sales of 297,644.
The spectre of Ghost haunted
Stereophonics all week, with
the former’s new album
Skeletá drawing closer to,
but never quite overhauling,
the latter’s simultaneously
unleashed Make ‘Em Laugh,
Make ‘Em Cry, Make ‘Em Wait.
Their 13th studio album and
ninth No.1, Make ‘Em Laugh…
is Stereophonics’ most
concise release yet, with
just eight songs – all
written by their 50-year-old
lead singer and founder
member Kelly Jones – and a
playing time of less than 30
minutes. That isn’t even
half as long as its
immediate predecessor,
Oochya!, which debuted at
No.1 in 2022 on consumption
of 24,067 units.
Effecting the 20th change of
leadership in the chart in
as many weeks, Make Em
Laugh… had a 29.62% bigger
first week than Oochya!,
racking up consumption of
31,195 units (21,551 CDs,
7,161 vinyl albums, 1,323
digital downloads and 1,160
sales-equivalent streams).
Their 1997 debut, Word Gets
Around, had the worst first
week sale of any album by
the act, opening and peaking
at No.6 with 13,155 copies
sold. Their third album,
Just Enough Education To
Perform, provided their
biggest first week sale
(139,728) as it debuted at
number one in 2001. With
sales to date of 1,847,774,
it is their second-biggest
seller, behind their second
album, 1999’s Performance
And Cocktails (1,954,029).
Stereophonics are the 20th
act in chart history to have
at least nine No.1 albums.
The only groups to have more
are The Beatles (15), The
Rolling Stones (12, or 14 if
the expanded versions of
Exile On Main Street and
Goats Head Soup are
included), U2 (11), Abba
(10), Queen (10) and
Coldplay (10).
Make ‘Em Laugh…’s initial
sales flashes lead of nearly
8,000 over Skeletá was down
to 4,673 units in the final
chart, with Swedish metal
band Ghost’s seventh album,
sixth Top 75 entry and fifth
Top 10 album securing an
impressive first week tally
of 26,522 units to debut at
No.2. Equalling their
previous peak, set in 2022
by their last full length
studio album Impera on
consumption of 14,021 units,
Skeletá had an 89.16% bigger
first week, thanks in part
to the release of 22
physical formats (three CD,
five cassette, one Blu-ray
and 13 vinyl variants, if
anyone is counting). Skeletá
delivers Ghost’s fifth No.1
in their homeland, their
second No.1 in Germany and
is expected to become their
first No.1 in The USA when
this week’s data is
assembled over the weekend.
Impera, incidentally, is
their all-time biggest
seller here with to-date
consumption of 69,684 units.
Completing the first all-new
top three for 13 weeks,
James Arthur becomes only
the second X Factor graduate
to make the Top 3 with all
of their first six studio
albums, with latest studio
set, Pisces, debuting at
No.3 (15,298 sales). Only
Olly Murs (seven and
counting) has managed this
feat thus far – although One
Direction had five, with
three of their members
subsequently extending their
runs via solo releases.
Winner of the ninth of 15
seasons of The X Factor in
2012, singer/songwriter
Arthur, now 37, released his
eponymous debut album the
following year. It attracted
first week sales of 63,995
copies but had to settle for
a No.2 debut/peak behind The
Marshall Mathers LP by
Eminem. Follow-up Back From
The Edge gave Arthur his
first No.1 in 2016, despite
lower first week sales of
40,906 and he returned to
No.1 with his last album,
Bitter Sweet Love, which had
first week consumption of
16,901 units as it opened at
the summit just 15 months
ago.
A Complicated Woman (No.5,
11,635 sales) is the third
album, and first Top 10
entry, for 38-year-old
Rotherham singer/songwriter
Rebecca Taylor as Self
Esteem. Taylor wrote or
co-wrote all of the songs on
the album, which follows
2019 No.172 album
Compliments, Please and 2021
No.11 album Prioritise
Pleasure.
Boosted by the inclusion of
collaborations with his
Wicked movie co-stars Ariana
Grande and Cynthia Erivo as
well as Scarlett Johansson
and Maiya Sykes, 72-year-old
actor Jeff Goldblum scores
his highest album chart
position yet with third
full-length MOR/jazz set,
Still Blooming. Accompanied,
as ever, by the
splendidly-named but
fictitious Mildred Snitzer
Orchestra, Goldblum sings
and plays piano on the set,
which debuts at No.10 (5,769
sales). His first album, The
Capitol Studios Sessions,
debuted and peaked at No.26
in 2018; his second, I
Shouldn’t Be Telling You
This, reached No.20 in 2019.
His 2023 EP, Plays Well With
Others, failed to chart.
The rest of the Top 10:
Short N’ Sweet (2-4, 12,573
sales) by Sabrina Carpenter,
+-=÷× Tour Collection (3-6,
8,192 sales) by Ed Sheeran,
50 Years: Don’t Stop (4-7,
6,996 sales) by Fleetwood
Mac, The Highlights (5-8,
6,206 sales) by The Weekn
d and Brat (8-9, 5,863
sales) by Charli XCX.
Overall album sales are up
7.81% week-on-week at
2,616,587 units, 6.33% above
same week 2024 sales of
2,460,878. Physical product
accounts for 326,058 sales,
12.46% of the total.