Mariah Carey’s “All I Need for Christmas Is You” botches a record-tying nineteenth week atop the Billboard Scorching 100.
Denise Truscello/Getty Photos for Reside Nation Las/Getty Photos North America
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Denise Truscello/Getty Photos for Reside Nation Las/Getty Photos North America
Mariah Carey‘s “All I Need for Christmas Is You” returns to No. 1 this week, notching its record-tying nineteenth week atop the Billboard Scorching 100. Its outright possession of the all-time document appears as inevitable because the tides — as does, sadly, the additional vacation dominance of 1 Michael Steven Bublé.
TOP STORY
In 2019, Lil Nas X set a document that regarded more likely to stand for some time: His music “Previous City Highway (feat. Billy Ray Cyrus)” held down the No. 1 place on the Billboard Scorching 100 for an astounding 19 weeks. Final 12 months, Shaboozey matched that feat with one other nation/hip-hop hybrid: “A Bar Track (Tipsy).”
That is to not counsel that “Previous City Highway” and “A Bar Track” are the 2 greatest hits of all time. They’re merely beneficiaries of a streaming panorama wherein listeners are regularly fed the identical songs they’ve already loved; that is led to epic chart runs which have made it more durable than ever for brand spanking new songs to interrupt by way of.
This week, Lil Nas X and Shaboozey are joined within the document books by… effectively, actually one of many greatest hits of all time, as Mariah Carey’s “All I Need for Christmas Is You” leaps to No. 1 and secures its personal nineteenth week atop the Scorching 100. The music, which got here out in 1994 and first hit the highest 10 in 2017, has now led the chart for the final seven vacation seasons. To name that an all-time document is an understatement: Just one music in historical past has made it to No.1 for two separate chart runs: Chubby Checker’s 1960 basic “The Twist.”
It is actually doable that different Christmas songs will unseat Carey each on occasion: Brenda Lee‘s “Rockin’ Across the Christmas Tree” briefly knocked it to No. 2 a number of years in the past, thanks partly to a then-recent video. However it’s laborious to surpass a music that is change into so synonymous with the season.
The competitor with probably the most momentum — and “momentum” is a humorous phrase to make use of when the music in query got here out in 1984 — is “Final Christmas” by Wham! That observe has been gaining steam in recent times, and this week rises to its highest-ever chart place at No. 2.
Chart tendencies in vacation music usually unfold glacially, 12 months over 12 months, however they’re there in case you search for them. The one with probably the most potential to shake up the sphere additionally occurs to be probably the most egregious: For individuals who search the musical equal of eggnog spiked with bathwater, Michael Bublé is hitting new profession highs. Within the course of, he is endangering the perennial success of some vacation staples.
One quirk of the vacation charts is that, for all of the repetition of requirements within the Christmas canon, there’s actually solely room for one go-to model of every music. In actual fact, of the 37 vacation songs that pop up on this week’s high 50, solely two are duplicates. Perry Como’s “It is Starting to Look a Lot Like Christmas” (1951) and Burl Ives’ “A Holly Jolly Christmas” (1964) abruptly discover themselves competing with newer variations by Michael Bublé.
The competitors is proving particularly daunting for Ives, whose model of the music was within the high 5 as lately as a 12 months in the past. This week, it languishes at No. 16 — a major lag, given how incrementally the vacation charts usually change from 12 months to 12 months. It is one factor for Bublé’s rise to dim the sunshine of, say, Perry Como, whose vocal similarities to Michael Bublé mirror poorly on each singers. However Burl Ives? This implies conflict!
And, look, if it looks like our man Bubes is catching extra flak than standard on this week’s column, that is on him. You mess with the Burl, you get the horns.
TOP SONGS
In just some weeks, Mariah Carey, Wham! and, sure, Michael Bublé will get stuffed again into the attic with the unreal tree. And once they do, we’ll doubtless get a chart panorama that appears fairly a bit prefer it did initially of final month, led by three of 2025’s greatest chart-toppers: HUNTR/X’s “Golden,” Taylor Swift‘s “The Destiny of Ophelia” and Alex Warren‘s “Atypical.”
These three songs have not but been crowded all the best way out of the highest 10. And it is value noting that, after eight weeks at No. 1, “The Destiny of Ophelia” is now not the highest non-holiday music on the Scorching 100. With awards season — and, in all probability, an Oscar nomination — looming, “Golden” is trying, effectively… like some shade that signifies success.
Additionally gaining momentum, however a little bit simpler to overlook, is the nation singer Ella Langley. Had been it not for the vacation onslaught, her music “Choosin’ Texas” — which drops from No. 11 to No. 27 this week — would doubtless be sitting at No. 9, which might have made it the primary high 10 hit of her profession.
TOP ALBUMS
Positive, Taylor Swift’s “The Destiny of Ophelia” offers up a little bit of floor this week. However The Lifetime of a Showgirl returns to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart after per week away, adopted by two of 2025’s most sturdy hits: Morgan Wallen‘s I am the Downside and the soundtrack to KPop Demon Hunters.
Three vacation albums be a part of them within the high 10 — Michael Bublé’s Christmas, Bing Crosby‘s Final Christmas and Vince Guaraldi‘s A Charlie Brown Christmas — whereas the likes of Nat “King” Cole, Mariah Carey and Phil Spector hover awkwardly simply outdoors the door, blow on their arms, keep away from eye contact and wait to be let in.
The Christmas cavalcade apart, this week is a part of a slower stretch for the albums chart, as main stars are likely to chorus from releasing new albums in December.
However one outdated album made a transfer value noting this week. Buoyed by the streaming launch of a positive documentary on HBO Max, Jeff Buckley‘s 1994 basic Grace re-enters the Billboard 200 at No. 144. That is the very best chart place it is ever attained — a reminder that the Billboard charts do not at all times correctly measure an album’s attain or impression.
Take final week’s debut of One Extra Time, a five-song EP by Aerosmith and YUNGBLUD. On final week’s Billboard 200, One Extra Time debuted at No. 9. This week, it plummets from the chart solely.
It is value contemplating which suggests extra: a high 10 album that charted for all of seven days, or a multiplatinum basic that is taken 31 years to hit No. 144. On the charts, as in life, there are extra methods to measure success than merely itemizing the place you have peaked.
