[JPL] U.S. Album Sales Fell 9.5% in 2007

Jazz Promo Services jazzpromo at earthlink.net
Fri Jan 4 11:58:49 EST 2008


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/04/business/media/04music.html?th&emc=th

January 4, 2008

U.S. Album Sales Fell 9.5% in 2007

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES (AP) ‹ Album sales in the United States plunged 9.5 percent last
year from 2006, as the recording industry had another weak year despite a 45
percent surge in the sale of digital tracks, according to figures released
Thursday.

A total of 500.5 million albums in the form of CDs, cassettes, LPs and other
formats were purchased last year, down 15 percent from the unit total for
2006, said Nielsen SoundScan, which tracks point-of-purchase sales.

The decline in album sales drops to 9.5 percent when sales of digital
singles are counted as 10-track equivalent albums.

The number of digital tracks sold, meanwhile, jumped 45 percent, to 844.2
million, compared with 588.2 million in 2006, with digital album sales
accounting for 10 percent of total album purchases.

Overall music purchases, including albums, singles, digital tracks and music
videos, rose to 1.35 billion units, up 14 percent from 2006.

Music sales during the last week of 2007 totaled 58.4 million units, the
biggest sales week ever recorded by Nielsen SoundScan.

The recording industry has experienced declines in CD album sales for years,
in part because of the rise of online file-sharing, but also because
consumers have spent more of their leisure dollars on other entertainment,
like DVDs and video games.

An artist with the Warner Music Group, Josh Groban, had the best-selling
album, ³Noël.² The album, a collection of Christmas songs, sold around 3.7
million copies.

A soundtrack for Walt Disney¹s ³High School Musical² franchise was second
with about 2.9 million units sold.

The Eagles¹ comeback album, ³Long Road Out of Eden,² was third, selling
about 2.6 million copies, despite being independently released and available
for purchase only at Wal-Mart.

The recording industry continued to benefit from mobile music, with mobile
phone owners buying 220 million ring tones, the firm said.


Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
Privacy Policy Search Corrections RSS First Look Help Contact Us Work for Us
Site Map
   


More information about the jazzproglist mailing list