advertisement
FYI

Chart Toppers: Adele, Michael Bublé, Taylor Swift, and Ed Sheeran

Adele’s 30 holds at No. 1 on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart for the third straight week, earning the highest album sales and on-demand streams in the period.

Chart Toppers: Adele, Michael Bublé, Taylor Swift, and Ed Sheeran

By FYI Staff

Adele’s 30 holds at No. 1 on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart for the third straight week, earning the highest album sales and on-demand streams in the period.


Michael Bublé’s Christmas edges 3-2 and Taylor Swift’s Red (Taylor’s Version) drops to 3.

Ed Sheeran’s = remains at 4 and Elton John’s The Lockdown Sessions sprints 20-11. Both albums contain their new Merry Christmas seasonal duet, which is this week’s No. 1 selling digital song.

American rapper Polo G’s Hall of Fame rockets 64-5 thanks to a new deluxe version of the album. The title originally peaked at 2 when it was released in June.

advertisement

The top debut of the week belongs to established Quebec City rapper Souldia’s Dixque D’Art, at 25. It is his highest-charting album since Sirvivant reached No. 22 in November 2018.

Other debuts include Blue Rodeo’s Many a Mile at 45; Spanish hardcore band Niño’s Jefe, at 52; and Danish rock unit Volbeat’s Servant of The Mind, at 56.

– All data courtesy of SoundScan with additional detail provided by MRC Data's Paul Tuch

advertisement
Nick Jonas
Billy Kidd

Nick Jonas

Pop

Nick Jonas Previews Upcoming Album 'Sunday Best' at Intimate Toronto Brunch Concert

Jonas played stripped-back hits including "Jealous" with a full choir at the Powder Room in Yorkville. Later that day, in Hamilton, Jonas Brothers welcomed special guests Arkells and JP Saxe for surprise guest performances.

Nick Jonas treated a handful of lucky fans to an intimate brunch concert in Toronto on Sunday (Dec. 14).

The Jonas Brothers singer-songwriter decked out Yorkville's new hotspot the Powder Room in a Sunday Best theme, also the name of his upcoming 2026 album. Prior to the event, fans sent in baby pictures of themselves, which they found framed on a table when they entered, scrawled with a handwritten message: "you're doing fine."

keep readingShow less
advertisement