Streaming
music in U.S. up 93 percent in 2015; Adele tops album
sales
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[January 07, 2016]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
U.S. music consumers almost doubled their use of
streaming services in 2015, with Apple Inc's new Apple
music platform helping boost volume a record 93 percent,
Nielsen Music said on Wednesday.
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Music consumers used on-demand streaming platforms to listen
to 317 billion songs, exceeding projections. Physical album
sales declined again, with British singer Adele's "25" providing
a bright spot in an otherwise dreary market.
"The amount of exposure Apple gave to streaming can't be
understated," said David Bakula, senior vice president of
industry insights at Nielsen Entertainment.
About 241 million albums were purchased last year, a 6 percent
drop from 2014; 103 million albums were bought in digital
formats and nearly 12 percent of all albums were bought on
vinyl.
Rock music accounted for a third of the albums sold over 2015,
while pop music dominated singles.
But while streaming dominated the music industry with
large-scale platforms including Google Play, Amazon Prime Music
and Spotify, two of the year's biggest-selling albums, Adele's
"25" and Taylor Swift's "1989," were strategically kept off
streaming services.
Adele's "25" smashed opening week sales records in November and
has clocked a total of 7.4 million albums sold by year end.
Taylor Swift had the second biggest-selling album of the year
with her "1989" record selling just under 2 million copies.
"What works for Adele and Taylor Swift doesn't necessarily work
for everyone else," Bakula said, suggesting the two were
exceptions to the rule and that most artists still turned to
streaming for a part of their sales.
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The third biggest-selling album of the year, Justin Bieber's
"Purpose," smashed streaming records in November, with 205 million
global streams in its debut week.
Bakula added there was "no question" that streaming had helped curb
the online piracy of music that severely hurt the industry in the
early 2000s with platforms such as Napster.
R&B and hip hop music accounted for 21 percent of the 317 billion
streams consumed on on-demand platforms, and artists such as Drake,
Future, The Weeknd and Kendrick Lamar delivered some of the year's
top-selling and best-received records.
A steady increase in vinyl sales seemingly defies the masses of
consumers flocking to streaming platforms.
"Vinyl is driven by independent record stores and consumers who are
into sound quality and tangible, physical products," Bakula said.
"Everything about the technology revolution is counterintuitive to
vinyl sales, and yet, it still increases."
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy, editing by Jill Serjeant and David
Gregorio)
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