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Lil Baby and Bad Bunny have fantastic chart debuts

Lil Baby and his team pulled out all the stops to make sure the artist's WHAM rap would make it to the edge of heaven on this week's Billboard charts.
Astrida Valigorsky/WireImage
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WireImage
Lil Baby and his team pulled out all the stops to make sure the artist's WHAM rap would make it to the edge of heaven on this week's Billboard charts.

Early January is usually a slow stretch when it comes to the Billboard charts, but 2025 is giving us a twist, with a few stars making big moves. and debut in the top two spots on the Billboard 200, while experiences a huge surge in the Hot 100. But that wasn't enough to knock down and ' "Die With a Smile," which sits atop the singles chart for a second straight week.

TOP ALBUMS

Last week's Billboard 200 offered at the beginning of 2025: With the holidays an already-distant memory, the chart documented huge weeks for 's SOS Deluxe: LANA (No. 1) and 's GNX (No. 2), followed by a top 10 full of usual suspects like , , Morgan Wallen and the Wicked soundtrack.

This week, , as SZA and Lamar make way for two blockbuster debuts. Lil Baby enters the chart at No. 1 with WHAM an acronym for "Who Hard As Me," not a tribute to the duo who spent in the top 5 which becomes the rapper's fourth consecutive chart-topper and seventh album to hit the top 10.

Lil Baby and his team pulled out all the stops to make sure the artist's would make it to on this week's Billboard charts. The guest-packed album came out on the first Friday in January traditionally a slow spot when it comes to new music then got extra juice from an extended edition just four days later. That version added four new songs, as part of a set that could, at least at first, only be purchased via Lil Baby's webstore.

Those machinations were necessary, because on the first Sunday in January an unusual release date if ever there was one another chart-topping superstar exercised his to release an album. Bad Bunny's DeB TiRAR M叩S FOToS out-performed WHAM on streaming services, even with two fewer days' worth of streams, but couldn't match Lil Baby's first-week sales numbers especially given the release of additional tracks a few days into WHAM's existence.

With WHAM (the week's top seller) at No. 1 and DeB TiRAR M叩S FOToS (the week's top streamer) at No. 2, SZA can't have , so SOS drops from No. 1 to No. 3. The next four records also slide two spots down: Lamar's GNX, Carpenter's Short n' Sweet, the Wicked soundtrack and Billie Eilish's Hit Me Hard and Soft. Morgan Wallen's One Thing at a Time, ' The Secret of Us and 's CHROMAKOPIA all hold steady at No. 8, No. 9 and No. 10, respectively.

TOP SONGS

Last year, 's "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" posted a record-tying 19 nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1. For a bunch of those weeks, No. 2 belonged to Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars' "Die With a Smile," which finally claimed the chart's top spot last week its 20th week on the Billboard Hot 100.

Now, for a second week in a row, , as "Die With a Smile" sits atop the chart and Shaboozey stays perched on the outside looking in at No. 2. Billie Eilish's "Birds of a Feather" is similarly baked in, as that durable hit sits at No. 3 once again.

Then we finally get a big mover, as Morgan Wallen's new single "Smile" leaps from No. 27 (where it debuted last week) all the way to No. 4. As with Bad Bunny on the albums chart, "Smile" came out part-way through last week's window of eligibility; it dropped Dec. 31, while the chart covered the period stretching from Dec. 27 to Jan. 2. So now it gets a full week to show its stuff, which was more than enough to make it the 12th top-10 hit of Wallen's career.

Wallen actually has two songs in this week's top 10 "I Had Some Help," the hit in which he features, dips from No. 8 to No. 9 but he's not the only star who can make that claim. In addition to appearing in "Die With a Smile," Bruno Mars holds at No. 5 with "APT.," his duet with 's .

That leaves four other holdovers in the top 10. ' eternal hit "Lose Control" which came out in the summer of 2023 before being named dips from No. 4 to No. 6. Kendrick Lamar's "Luther (feat. SZA)" holds at No. 7, Gracie Abrams' "That's So True" drops from No. 6 to No. 8, and Sabrina Carpenter's "Espresso" hangs in there for another week, but slips from No. 9 to No. 10.

WORTH NOTING

Looking for another data point to illustrate how radically streaming has reshaped consumers' music-listening habits? Let's compare a nice, quiet January week without holiday titles or a ton of brand-new releases to .

Care to guess how many of the titles overlap?

That is to say, how many of the country's 200 most popular albums right now were also among the country's 200 most popular albums one calendar year ago? Anyone who's scanned the Billboard 200 in recent years can sense that there'd be a fair bit of overlap, given the size of 's catalog and the sheer number of greatest-hits collections by household names like , and .

But would you have guessed that 124 of the top 200 albums are on the exact same chart a chart that's supposed to reflect the ever-shifting tastes of the popular-music audience an entire year apart?

Some of the similarities are downright eerie. 's Greatest Hits is currently No. 97; it was No. 99 last year. 's Tha Carter III was No. 180 last year; it now sits at No. 175. Greatest Hits by has been on the Billboard 200 for a total of 556 weeks, and in the last year, its chart movement has taken it from No. 103 to No. 103.

It's tempting to suggest that Billboard consider changing its chart formulas and to note that Billboard has, behind its paywall, more granular charts with information about who's bubbling up from the underground, attracting the most radio airplay or blowing up on TikTok. But the real issue here is with streaming algorithms and, on a larger scale, with artificial intelligence in general.

The purpose of a streaming algorithm is to ingest your preferences artists you've liked, music you've enjoyed, genres that interest you and tailor a playlist to suit those tendencies. But that naturally, by design, creates in which you keep re-ingesting the same stuff; your tastes aren't given much of a chance to expand or evolve.

When they're working right, and when listeners want them to perform right, algorithms can still facilitate exploration and discovery; they can take a single song search and feed you similar material that introduces you to other songs and artists you might like. But the Billboard charts are demonstrating how rarely that's happening on a grand scale. Scanning today's pop charts, with their 62% stasis year-over-year, is a bit like glancing over your local movie listings and seeing that every theater is still showing Smokey and the Bandit.

As AI gets more powerful and ever-present, it's hard not to fear a worsening of this pop-cultural calcification. Once everything we've already consumed has been capped and cauterized, we're left only to remix and recycle what we already know at the expense of new art, new ideas, new forms of expression and ways of looking at the world. How are we supposed to evolve, once we've limited ourselves to what's already been expressed?

Anyway, if you're feeling the same way like you're subsisting on digested remains at the tail-end of a musical Human Centipede at least now you've got one more data point to back that up. That's fun, right?

Copyright 2025 NPR

Stephen Thompson is a writer, editor and reviewer for NPR Music, where he speaks into any microphone that will have him and appears as a frequent panelist on All Songs Considered. Since 2010, Thompson has been a fixture on the NPR roundtable podcast Pop Culture Happy Hour, which he created and developed with NPR correspondent Linda Holmes. In 2008, he and Bob Boilen created the NPR Music video series Tiny Desk Concerts, in which musicians perform at Boilen's desk. (To be more specific, Thompson had the idea, which took seconds, while Boilen created the series, which took years. Thompson will insist upon equal billing until the day he dies.)
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