Billboard Charts

Billboard Top 10 for May 9th 2026

todayMay 10, 2026 2

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    The Great Divide

    Noah Kahan [The Great Divide]

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      The Great Divide Noah Kahan

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    Dandelion

    Ella Langley [Dandelion]

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      Dandelion Ella Langley

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    I'm The Problem

    Morgan Wallen [I’m The Problem]

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      I'm The Problem Morgan Wallen

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    Kehlani

    Kehlani [Kehlani]

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      Kehlani Kehlani

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    Body to Body

    BTS [ARIRANG]

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      Body to Body BTS

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    SWAG

    Justin Bieber, Cash Cobain & Eddie Benjamin [SWAG]

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      SWAG Justin Bieber, Cash Cobain & Eddie Benjamin

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    Thriller

    Michael Jackson [Thriller]

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      Thriller Michael Jackson

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    The Art of Loving (Intro)

    Olivia Dean [The Art of Loving]

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      The Art of Loving (Intro) Olivia Dean

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    One Thing At A Time

    Morgan Wallen [One Thing At A Time]

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      One Thing At A Time Morgan Wallen

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    Stick Season

    Noah Kahan [Stick Season (We'll All Be Here Forever)]

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      Stick Season Noah Kahan

From All-Vibin’ Radio, this week’s playlist feels like a snapshot of modern music’s most magnetic currents: confessional songwriting, genre-blurring production, and the kind of fan connection that can turn a single into a cultural touchstone. The songs on this list don’t just chart moods—they map how artists are building worlds around them, one detail, one hook, one emotional reveal at a time.

Leading the conversation is Noah Kahan with “The Great Divide”, a song that feels tailor-made for the era of overthinking and open-hearted honesty. Kahan has built his career on turning small-town specificity into widescreen emotional resonance, and this track extends that lane with sharp writing and a chorus that lands like a confession you’ve been carrying for years. It’s the kind of song that thrives in a streaming culture hungry for authenticity, and its reception reflects that: listeners don’t just hear Kahan, they recognize themselves in him.

That same plainly powerful storytelling shows up in “Stick Season”, now one of Kahan’s defining records. What began as a breakout anthem has become a cultural shorthand for modern folk-pop: fragile, literary, and endlessly replayable. Across platforms, its rise proved that deeply personal songs can still scale into major hits when the writing is this precise.

Morgan Wallen continues to dominate country’s commercial center with “I’m The Problem” and “One Thing At A Time”, both of which showcase his knack for mixing self-awareness with radio-ready hooks. Wallen’s appeal lies in tension: rough edges wrapped in polished melodies. In today’s country landscape, where crossover success is built on streaming momentum and relatable detail, he remains one of the genre’s most data-defining artists.

Ella Langley’s “Dandelion” brings a fresher, more intimate perspective. Langley writes like someone fully aware of country music’s classic traditions but unafraid to modernize them. Her sound sits comfortably in the current wave of artists who are making room for vulnerability without losing grit.

Meanwhile, Kehlani on “Kehlani” doubles down on the power of self-titled expression—identity as statement, sound as signature. In a pop era shaped by individuality and genre fluidity, the track underscores why Kehlani remains such a compelling creative force. Their voice is as much atmosphere as melody, and that’s exactly what makes the record resonate.

On the pop frontier, Justin Bieber teams with Cash Cobain and Eddie Benjamin on “SWAG”, a collaboration that hints at the ongoing merger of mainstream pop and left-of-center internet-leaning production. It’s a reminder that today’s biggest stars are increasingly collaborating across scenes, not just genres.

Elsewhere, Olivia Dean’s “The Art of Loving (Intro)” offers a graceful reset, a warm opening statement from an artist whose rise has been powered by timeless songwriting and contemporary cool. And though catalog entries like Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” and BTS’s “Body to Body” continue to live in very different cultural lanes, their presence on any modern conversation speaks to how legacy, performance, and global fandom still shape the way we listen.

At All-Vibin’ Radio, the takeaway is clear: the most relevant songs today are the ones that feel personal enough to matter and adaptable enough to travel. Whether it’s folk, country, pop, or global crossover, these tracks prove that listeners still crave songs with identity, atmosphere, and a point of view—and the artists behind them know exactly how to deliver it.


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