CORTIS’ “GREENGREEN” Sustains a Breakout Run as Jennie & Tame Impala’s “Dracula” Hits New U.S. Peaks
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Two different kinds of momentum—long-form chart durability and radio-driven single growth—helped K-pop and global pop acts register notable gains on Billboard this week. CORTIS’s second EP, “GREENGREEN”, extended its run on the Billboard 200 for a fifth consecutive week, while BLACKPINK member Jennie and Australian psych-rock outfit Tame Impala’s remix of “Dracula” reached new heights on U.S. radio and recently launched seasonal rankings.
CORTIS keeps “GREENGREEN” in the Billboard 200 top 50
According to Soompi, “GREENGREEN” stayed inside the Billboard 200’s top 50 for its fifth straight week, finishing the week ending June 20 at No. 50 (down four places from the prior frame). The EP originally debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, and that early entry has now translated into a rare kind of consistency for a second release: its first-ever five-week span in the top 100.
The broader U.S. chart picture was also strong outside the Billboard 200. “GREENGREEN” returned to No. 1 on Billboard’s World Albums chart this week, and climbed back to No. 4 on Top Album Sales, making it the fourth best-selling album of the week in the United States. The numbers suggest the EP isn’t just gaining momentary attention—it’s maintaining purchase and consumption momentum.
CORTIS also continued to show cross-chart strength via its music. The EP’s title track, “REDRED,” held relatively steady at No. 29 on Billboard’s Global Excl. U.S. chart in its seventh week. It simultaneously rose to No. 52 on Billboard’s Global 200 chart, while CORTIS earned a spot at No. 32 on Billboard’s Artist 100, marking its ninth overall week on the list.
Jennie and Tame Impala’s “Dracula” rises on radio and seasonal charts
On the singles side, Soompi reports that Jennie and Tame Impala’s “Dracula” remix continues to broaden its presence on U.S. charts—particularly those powered by airplay and mainstream exposure. This week, the track hit new peaks of No. 6 on Billboard’s Pop Airplay chart and No. 8 on Radio Songs, two metrics that track weekly plays on radio across formats and genres.
The song’s ascent didn’t stop there. “Dracula” also reached a fresh high of No. 11 on Billboard’s Songs of the Summer chart, a list that launched for 2026 only three weeks ago. That timing matters: a top-15 position so early in a new chart cycle signals that the track is becoming part of the broader seasonal playlist landscape, not merely a slow-burn hit.
Meanwhile, “Dracula” held at its peak of No. 10 on the Hot 100—the best-known Billboard ranking for mainstream song performance—suggesting it remains anchored in the U.S. pop ecosystem even as it expands into additional chart categories.
Why both stories matter: durability plus mainstream penetration
Taken together, the two chart narratives illustrate a broader trend in how global acts are succeeding in the U.S. market: EP-level staying power and single-level radio traction are reinforcing each other across different audience pathways.
For CORTIS, “GREENGREEN” spending a fifth week on the Billboard 200 top 50, along with a return to No. 1 on World Albums and a rebound on Top Album Sales, indicates an expanding base of listeners and buyers. That kind of performance often depends on sustained visibility—streaming can spark discovery, but ongoing rank stability suggests more comprehensive consumption.
For Jennie and Tame Impala, “Dracula” is showing what radio momentum can do for a song already resonating on streaming platforms. Rising to No. 6 on Pop Airplay and No. 8 on Radio Songs points to growing mainstream rotation, which can further widen the audience beyond established fandom-driven channels. The track’s continued dominance at No. 1 on multiple specialized Billboard charts—such as Hot Dance/Electronic Songs and Dance Streaming Songs—also highlights how it’s positioned across listener niches that tend to feed overall chart performance.
What to watch next
With “GREENGREEN” now firmly established through week five in the Billboard 200’s top 100, the key question for CORTIS is whether the EP can convert its current stability into a higher ceiling—either by climbing back toward its debut peak or extending the top-100 run even further. In the near term, Billboard’s album charts typically respond to release cycles, promotional activity, and ongoing sales/streaming velocity, so upcoming performances and content releases could be decisive.
For “Dracula,” the immediate benchmark is how far the song can push on both mainstream and seasonal lists—especially whether it can move upward on Songs of the Summer as the chart continues to evolve. Continued strength on Pop Airplay and Radio Songs would also suggest the remix has crossed into a more durable playlist pattern rather than a short-lived radio spike.
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