Album Sales Slightly Down, Digital LP Sales Up 15% So Far in 2012_ SoundScan _ Billboard
Transcript of Album Sales Slightly Down, Digital LP Sales Up 15% So Far in 2012_ SoundScan _ Billboard
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7/28/2019 Album Sales Slightly Down, Digital LP Sales Up 15% So Far in 2012_ SoundScan _ Billboard
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the billion-unit mark for the first time in the first nine months of 2012.
U.S. album sales are down 4.4% to 218.4 million units for the first nine
months of the year, fueled by CD sales dropping to 129.7 million units from
151.6 million units in the corresponding period last year, according to
Nielsen SoundScan. While digital album sales are up 15.3% to 85.5 million
units, the 11.3 million-unit gain from last year's tally at the nine month point
is only about half of the 21.9 million unit decline in CDs. Like digital, vinylis also up dramatically -- a 16.3% increase to 3.2 million units from 2.7
million units. But it's still only about 1.5% of total U.S. album sales.
After nine months, Adele remains the leader in album sales with four million
unit scans for her album, "21," to bring total sales of the title to 9.85 million
units since its release in February 2011.
Digital track sales closed out the nine-month mark with 1.009 billion units.
That represented a 6% increase over the 951.7 million units scanned in the
first nine months of 2011.
One Direction's "Up All Night" has surpassed Lionel Richie's "Tuskegee" to
move into second place for the year so far with 1.25 million units, versus the
latter's 1.02 million units.
In digital songs, Gotye's "Somebody That I Used To Know' (featuring Kimbra) is the top selling song with
scans of nearly 6.5 million units. Two other titles are over the five million-unit milestone: Carly Rae Jepsen's
"Call Me Maybe," with scans of 5.8 million units, and Fun's "We Are Young" (featuring Janelle Monae),
which has scans of 5.6 million units.
The Universal Music Group (UMG) remains the top U.S. album distributor with a market share of 29.83% in
albums plus track equivalent ones, just beating out Sony Music Entertainment by one percentage point. Sony
Music posted 28.84% for the first nine-months of the year in that album count.
If only albums are considered, Sony is the top distributor with 32%, versus UMG's 26%. The latter's 31.2%
track share, a six percentage point lead over Sony's, is how the company retains its lead in album plus TEA.
Catalog albums continue to drive the U.S. business. The category enjoyed a 3.7% gain to 110.5 million units
from 106.6 million units in 2011's corresponding period. Meanwhile, current album sales drop 11.5% to
107.8 million units from 121.9 million units.
While catalog continues to hold a larger portion of album sales than current for the first time in SoundScanhistory, its lead softened somewhat in the third quarter -- at midyear catalog was up nearly two percentage
points higher at 5.4% for the first six months of this year versus last year.
m Sales Slightly Down, Digital LP Sales Up 15% So Far in 2012: ... http://www.billboard.com/biz/articles/news/retail/1083534/album
3/21/2013