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Posted

Here's a Billboard report out today I found on Yahoo News:

Music business suffers a long, cold winter

By Ed Christman Mon Apr 9, 1:16 AM ET

NEW YORK (Billboard) - While it is no shock that CD sales plummeted in the first quarter, what may be more surprising is who and what are leading that decline.

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First things first: Overall album sales for the January 1-April 2 period are down 16.6% to 117.1 million units, led -- or perhaps misled -- by a 20.5% decline in CD album sales.

Industry executives attribute the decline to a weak release schedule, the consumer's loss of confidence in the CD and a reduction in store space for the format.

Certainly, the last point is documentable. Between first-quarter 2006 and now, several key retailers have disappeared. FYE shuttered 131 stores in January, and Tower Records liquidated 89 superstores in December. Musicland also closed 500 stores beginning in January 2006, so many of those outlets -- and their going-out-of-business sales -- contributed to first-quarter 2006.

"We are seeing a customer dislocation," says Mike Dreese, CEO of Newbury Comics, a 27-store chain based in New England. "A lot of people are confused about where they shop, and it's changing their habits ... it takes a while for people to find new stores."

Digital track sales, although they are still growing, could not pick up the slack. More than 280 million digital tracks were sold, outpacing album sales by more than 100 million units, according to Nielsen SoundScan. When those digital tracks are converted to track equivalences (10 tracks counting as one album sale), unit album sales were still down 10.3%.

Digital sales growth is slowing from last year, when tracks were up 87% and digital albums up 144% at the end of 2006's first quarter. At the end of first-quarter 2007, digital track sales were up 51.9%; digital album sales, which total 11.5 million units, were up 56%. But as a percentage of album sales, digital albums are nearly 10% now, versus the 5.2% they were at the end of first-quarter 2006.

Meanwhile, two tracks topped the million-unit milestone: Fall Out Boy's "This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race" and

Gwen Stefani's "The Sweet Escape." The top-selling digital download at the end of first-quarter 2006 was James Blunt's "You're Beautiful," which stood at 714,000 scans.

IT'S ROUGH TO BE A WAL-MART IN NASHVILLE

For the first time since the early days of the industry, such mass merchants as Wal-Mart, Target and Kmart have surpassed chains, which include such retailers as Trans World, Best Buy, Barnes & Noble, Newbury Comics and Gallery of Sound.

The discount department stores scanned 44.8 million album copies versus the 44.5 million units that chains sold.

But in a subtle change, for the first time in recent years, mass merchants, with a 17.8% decline, didn't turn in a better performance than the overall U.S. market's 16.6% decline.

Meanwhile, the independent store-sector seems to have stabilized, after shrinking faster than the overall marketplace for the last five years. In the first quarter, indie stores declined 14.5% to 8 million units. In contrast, at the end of first-quarter 2006 when total U.S. album sales declined 5%, indie stores were down 18.5%.

Nontraditional sales -- which include digital album downloads, CD sales through online stores, retailers like Starbucks, TV 800-phone sales and concert hall sales -- continue to be the star performer, with sales up 29.2% to 19.8 million units.

Despite worries about the reduction in store space devoted to CDs, catalog sales, down 14.6% to 47.5 million units, continue to show more strength than current album sales, which are down 18.9% to 69.6 million.

The top-selling album so far this year is

Norah Jones' "Not Too Late," with nearly 1.2 million scans, the only album to top the million-unit mark. Last year at the end of the first quarter three albums had hit 1 million units --

Mary J. Blige's "The Breakthrough," the "High School Musical" soundtrack and Blunt's "Back to Bedlam."

Within genres sales, rock, which includes alternative and hard rock and is responsible for nearly 30% of all U.S. album sales, showed resilience to the sales downturn, with the genre and both subgenres down in the 10%-12% range.

The country and rap genres appeared to be the big losers.

Rap, which SoundScan also counts within R&B, had the largest genre decline. Sales fell 33.6% to 10.9 million scans from the 16.5 million units the genre tallied in first-quarter 2006 sales.

R&B, the second-largest genre with scans of 24.7 million units, was down only 17.6% for the year. If rap's decline is removed from the equation, then R&B albums actually showed a 1.9% increase in sales for the year, making that category the only genre to grow.

Country sales were the second-biggest loser of the large genres, with a 30.7% decline to 12.1 million units.

"Country hasn't had sizzle in the new-release category so far this year," says Ben Kline, executive VP of sales, marketing and new media at Universal Music Group (UMG) Nashville, who also notes that carryover sales of 2006 releases are not as strong either.

Indeed, last year, Carrie Underwood's 2005 release "Some Hearts" sold more than 900,000 units in the first quarter; there were two Johnny Cash-related albums that between them sold 1 million units; and Rascal Flatts,

Trace Adkins and

Keith Urban each had albums that, combined, generated another 1.25 million in sales.

In contrast, this year the three best-selling country albums were Rascal Flatts' 2006 release "Me and My Gang," the Dixie Chicks' "Taking the Long Way" and

Tim McGraw's "Let It Go," which just sneaked in with 325,000 units sold in the quarter's final week. Combined, the three have eked out 1 million units.

Fortunately, Kline says the country release schedule for the rest of the year "looks pretty stout."

In the market-share race, UMG held steady in the top spot, racking up a 30.6% slice of the pie in total album market share and 33.6% in current market share. But because of the overall sales decline, UMG's album scans were down 1 million units to 36 million. Sony BMG Music Entertainment had a 7.5 million-unit drop in sales.

The industry remains generally stymied by the freefall.

"I don't know what's going on," the head of sales at a major record label says. "Except it's scary out there and changing every week."

Reuters/Billboard

Posted (edited)

The top-selling album so far this year is

Norah Jones' "Not Too Late," with nearly 1.2 million scans, the only album to top the million-unit mark. Last year at the end of the first quarter three albums had hit 1 million units --

Mary J. Blige's "The Breakthrough," the "High School Musical" soundtrack and Blunt's "Back to Bedlam."

Reuters/Billboard

Everybody's favorite has done well. :excited::lol:

Edited by Tjazz
Posted

"We are seeing a customer dislocation," says Mike Dreese, CEO of Newbury Comics, a 27-store chain based in New England. "A lot of people are confused about where they shop, and it's changing their habits ... it takes a while for people to find new stores."

Well, the members of this board are certainly doing their part to keep Newbury in business!

(I know I am!) :g

Posted

Rap, which SoundScan also counts within R&B, had the largest genre decline. Sales fell 33.6% to 10.9 million scans from the 16.5 million units the genre tallied in first-quarter 2006 sales.

R&B, the second-largest genre with scans of 24.7 million units, was down only 17.6% for the year. If rap's decline is removed from the equation, then R&B albums actually showed a 1.9% increase in sales for the year, making that category the only genre to grow.

What's R&B, as distinct from Rap, according to these guys?

MG

Posted

Rap, which SoundScan also counts within R&B, had the largest genre decline. Sales fell 33.6% to 10.9 million scans from the 16.5 million units the genre tallied in first-quarter 2006 sales.

R&B, the second-largest genre with scans of 24.7 million units, was down only 17.6% for the year. If rap's decline is removed from the equation, then R&B albums actually showed a 1.9% increase in sales for the year, making that category the only genre to grow.

What's R&B, as distinct from Rap, according to these guys?

MG

Rap = Nelly, Jay-Z, Paul Wall (basically people with no skills as an MC rapping over cheesy, recycled beats)

R&B = Beyonce, Usher, Justin Timberlake (basically people with no soul singing over cheesy, recycled beats)

Posted

Rap, which SoundScan also counts within R&B, had the largest genre decline. Sales fell 33.6% to 10.9 million scans from the 16.5 million units the genre tallied in first-quarter 2006 sales.

R&B, the second-largest genre with scans of 24.7 million units, was down only 17.6% for the year. If rap's decline is removed from the equation, then R&B albums actually showed a 1.9% increase in sales for the year, making that category the only genre to grow.

What's R&B, as distinct from Rap, according to these guys?

MG

Rap = Nelly, Jay-Z, Paul Wall (basically people with no skills as an MC rapping over cheesy, recycled beats)

R&B = Beyonce, Usher, Justin Timberlake (basically people with no soul singing over cheesy, recycled beats)

:D

MG

Posted (edited)

When listening in not the same critical manner that we jazz snobs usually listen to jazz, i am able enjoy a lot of what musicians like Jay-Z, Beyonce and Usher have recorded. Similar to the way that sometimes I like to see a movie solely for entertainment value and not to make me think, on occassion I allow music that some would consider inferior to appeal to me. And I would have to disagree with the generalization that would imply that R&B has no soul. Some of it does. I also think that Jay-Z has mad skills - even if the scope of his subject matter is faily limited.

Edited by relyles
Posted

When listening in not the same critical manner that we jazz snobs usually listen to jazz, i am able enjoy a lot of what musicians like Jay-Z, Beyonce and Usher have recorded. Similar to the way that sometimes I like to see a movie solely for entertainment value and not to make me think, on occassion I allow music that some would consider inferior to appeal to me. And I would have to disagree with the generalization that would imply that R&B has no soul. Some of it does. I also think that Jay-Z has mad skills - even if the scope of his subject matter is faily limited.

I own and enjoy albums by both Jay-Z and Beyonce. I've never been motivated to check out Usher, but that certainly doesn't mean that I never will. I appreciate good Hip Hop and R&B based upon its own merits. I don't LOOK for the same thing in good jazz that I look for in good Hip Hop or Country or Rock.

I also disagree that Jay-Z has "no skills." He is an excellent MC. One of the best there is, although I would agree that his subject matter is limited to himself.

Sometimes I wish I COULD ignore pop music. But I can't. I'm a part of this world and a fan of the music that is made in it. I honestly can't EVER see myself becoming one of those people who complains about "this music today." The day I decide that I can't get with new music is the day either I die, or music does.

Posted

We all know you're a closet Christian rock fan, Alexander. 'Fess up now. You'll feel better.

:P;):)

Haven't heard any Christian Rock that I've enjoyed, but I LOVE Gospel music. If the music is good, I don't care if it praises Jesus, Hitler or my next door neighbor.

Posted

Todays "pop" music is so mind-numbingly boring I'm suprised they could give it away.

The record companies have dumbed music down so much they deserve to go broke.

Posted

Todays "pop" music is so mind-numbingly boring I'm suprised they could give it away.

The record companies have dumbed music down so much they deserve to go broke.

Really? How much of it have you really listened to lately? And I don't mean on the radio.

Posted

Sometimes I wish I COULD ignore pop music. But I can't. I'm a part of this world and a fan of the music that is made in it. I honestly can't EVER see myself becoming one of those people who complains about "this music today." The day I decide that I can't get with new music is the day either I die, or music does.

I hear what you are trying to say Alexander, but that doesn't mean that one has to subject oneself to this garbage to validate one's own personal view of one's "hipness". There is pleanty of excellent music being made today without having to resort to listening to the newest American Idol or all this crap on MTV that is claiming to be "hip hop" or "R&B". The music is watered down and sounds like its coming off an assembly line. And I'm not going to defend it just so that I can think of myself as not being an old fart who hates "this music today".

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