PDA

View Full Version : U.S. Music Album Sales Down 7 Percent


Petr
12-29-2005, 11:01 PM
BWAHAHAHAHAAA! Die, mass-produced crap culture, die! I get similar warm fuzzies when I read that Hollywood is suffering economically.

:smile:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051229/ap_en_mu/music_sales


U.S. Music Album Sales Down 7 Percent

By ALEX VEIGA, AP Business Writer

Wed Dec 28, 8:20 PM ET


LOS ANGELES - U.S. album sales were down about 7 percent as 2005 drew to a close, but the budding market for music downloads, which more than doubled over last year, helped narrow the revenue gap, according to figures released Wednesday.

Album sales from January through the week ending Dec. 25 stood at 602.2 million, compared with 650.8 million for the same period last year, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Combined, album and singles sales fell about 8 percent over the same time last year. More than 95 percent of music is sold in CD format.

Downloaded tracks from online retailers soared to 332.7 million this year, compared with 134.2 million in 2004, an increase of 148 percent.

While good news for recording companies looking to expand download sales, it doesn't bode well for music retailers relying on customers to buy music CDs rather than digital downloads to turn a profit amid declining sales.

"More and more we're seeing customers switch to downloads or burning CDs from their friends," said Jesse Klempner, owner of Aron's Records in Hollywood. "The last couple of years we've been hanging on by our teeth."

The top three best-selling albums of 2005 through Dec. 21 were rapper 50 Cent's "The Massacre," which had sold 4.8 million copies, followed by Mariah Carey's "The Emancipation of Mimi" with 4.6 million sold, and Kelly Clarkson's "Breakaway," which sold 3.3 million units, Nielsen SoundScan said.

Full-album downloads are counted under album sales along with other formats. Most digital downloads reflect single-track purchases.

Sales of music-related videos, another key revenue source for brick-and-mortar retailers, plunged 23 percent over the same time last year, Nielsen SoundScan said.

Holiday shoppers helped pump up music download sales figures with some last-minute shopping, buying 9.6 million downloads — the biggest sales week ever for digital downloads, according to the company.

Music lovers bought 5 million tracks during the same week last year.

Final 2005 figures won't be available until Jan. 4, 2006. The last week of the year typically sees a boost in music sales as gift certificates or other promotions given out for the holidays are spent. Those additional sales could help narrow the sales gap further.


Petr

raven
12-29-2005, 11:08 PM
Yay to MP3 downloading. :222:

Anarch
12-29-2005, 11:11 PM
OMFG, Shitney Spears' new album might not make triple platinum! THE SKY IS FALLING!

Hurrah.

Petr
12-29-2005, 11:16 PM
OMFG, Shitney Spears' new album might not make triple platinum! THE SKY IS FALLING!

Hurrah.
Even the greatest journey begins with one step.

Or to put it Biblically:

Zechariah 4:10

For who hath despised the day of small things?


Petr

Anarch
12-29-2005, 11:41 PM
Even the greatest journey begins with one step.

Or to put it Biblically:

Zechariah 4:10

For who hath despised the day of small things?


Petr
You'll never convert me, Petr, but I do agree on this point.

Petr
12-29-2005, 11:45 PM
You'll never convert me, Petr, but I do agree on this point.

I myself will not convert you, that's for sure. It's the Holy Spirit that will have to do it.


Petr

Anarch
12-30-2005, 01:25 AM
When I do turn, no doubt I'll go traditionalist Catholic :p

FranzJoseph
12-30-2005, 02:04 AM
...78 R.P.M records were introduced in 1915 and the recording industry continued its campaign to convince people they needed music in their homes. The public took the bait and the industry sprouted, pushing sales over the $47 million mark in 1921. Surprisingly, according to the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), when recorded music sales are weighed as a fraction of US gross domestic product, sales have never surpassed the peak reached in 1921.

By the early 1920s, RCA started mass-producing commercial radios. While everyone agreed that the radio did not sound as good as the phonograph, if you had a radio, the music was suddenly free to listen to. The recording industry was incensed and attempted to sue the radio stations to prevent them from playing recordings on the air. The first judges presented with this issue, decided that if the radio station had purchased a copy of the recording, they had a right to play it, since there was really no law preventing it.

Sounds familiar yet? Free music, doesn't sound as good as the actual recording, but the public eats it up anyway. Industry tries to sue the "offender" into submission. Comes up short....


...The truth is that radio did hurt the recording industry, but not as bad as they make it sound. Sales went from $47 million in 1921 to just shy of $27 million in 1925 (a more than 40 percent drop) before climbing back to $34 million in 1929. Radio had damaged the music market, but it certainly had not killed it. Another reason for the uptick in sales could be the introduction of the 33-1/3 LP record in 1928.

With 1929 came the stock market crash and the Great Depression, which completely removed discretionary income for most Americans, driving record sales down to a mere $2.5 million in 1933. The recording industry had seen a 95 percent decline since 1921, with the largest drop between 1929 and 1933. The phonograph division of the Thomas A. Edison company was the first to go, folding in 1929. RCA bought Victor, CBS bought Columbia and most labels simply disappeared. Radio may have hurt the industry, but it was the Depression that almost killed it off...

The rest from an interesting little piece of history:

"The World's Oldest Whine": http://www.azoz.com/riaa/news/whine.html

Jimbo Gomez
12-30-2005, 08:38 AM
BWAHAHAHAHAAA! Die, mass-produced crap culture, die! I get similar warm fuzzies when I read that Hollywood is suffering economically.

hehehe, I have that too

Lord_Lugdreg
12-30-2005, 09:04 AM
This truly is good news! Not only is the quality of the so-called 'music' today poor, but the CDs themselves cost between $18-20!! A rip off when one considers I could buy tapes back in the day for only $10 and that was not that long ago. I rarely buy CDs anymore and in the last 2 years have only bought like two. Chris Cornells 'Euphoria Morning' (created before he got with the commies in Rage Against the Machine, but remember that he used to be cool and hanged out with Andrew Wood.) and I just recently purchased MTV 2 Headbangers Ball which I kind of felt obligated to do since for a long time Headbangers Ball had alot of good Heavy Metal (White Peoples music) which I immensely enjoyed watching years ago before the show was ethnically cleansed by Murray Rothstein from Ntv.

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00001QGL2.01._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0000CERNM.01._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg

Fade the Butcher
12-30-2005, 05:03 PM
The only thing that has changed is that the poison is being distributed in a different format.