- Share this article on Facebook
- Share this article on Twitter
- Share this article on Flipboard
- Share this article on Email
- Show additional share options
- Share this article on Linkedin
- Share this article on Pinit
- Share this article on Reddit
- Share this article on Tumblr
- Share this article on Whatsapp
- Share this article on Print
- Share this article on Comment
The transition to the streaming ecosystem in the U.S. is picking up steam. The decline in download sales accelerated in the first quarter to nearly match historic drops in CD sales from 2007-2010.
At the end of the quarter, digital tracks were down 12.5 percent, to 312 million units from 356.5 million units. Digital albums were down 14.2 percent, to 27.8 million from 32.4 million in the U.S., according to Nielsen SoundScan. Looked at another way, taking into account digital albums plus track equivalent albums (whereby 10 tracks equal one album), U.S. digital sales were down 13.3 percent in the first quarter of 2014. In contrast, even though U.S. digital sales over all of 2013 were down 3.1 percent, at the end of the first quarter of last year, digital sales were actually up 3.9 percent at the end for the first quarter.
For the first time since the advent of digital sales, the format’s declines resemble the now-routine annual percentage declines for the CD in the new millennium, when drops in CD sales ranged from 18.2 percent to 19.7 percent each year from 2007-11.
PHOTOS: NBA All-Star Game: Pharrell Williams and Janelle Monae Perform; Chris Tucker Rocks Out
However, digital interactive streaming — not including passive streams from services like Pandora, iTunes Radio and Sirius — appears to be making up the slack, on a revenue basis at least. According to SoundScan, interactive music and video streaming totaled 34.28 billion streams in the first quarter of the year, versus 25.44 billion streams in 2013’s corresponding period. Not only have streams grown by nearly 9 billion, but per-stream payout has improved this year versus last year, according to label sales executives.
Last year, interactive streams paid an average of $0.00375 per stream, meaning 2,000 streams equaled the average $7.50 wholesale — the average price when you consider the $9.99 list price for most albums and $11.99 for some superstar albums — for a digital album download. This year the industry average is more like $0.005, which means that 1,500 streams equal the wholesale cost of an album.
Figuring 2,000 streams per stream equivalent album last year, and 1,500 streams per stream equivalent album this year, that means that SEA totaled 22.85 million in the first quarter of this year, while last year totaled 12.72 million, a difference of 10.1 million album units. So, while digital albums and track equivalent albums were down 9.06 million units, streaming revenue growth is outpacing digital sales decline.
STORY: Streaming Made Up One-Fifth of U.S. Recorded Music Revenue in 2013
But the industry is still not out of the woods. Again, the CD’s decline has accelerated. After dropping 14.5 percent over the last year, the CD album format is down 20.5 percent so far this year, to 31.9 million units from the 40.1 million units scanned in the first quarter of 2013.
Analyzing the 16.6 percent decline in album sales — to 61.7 million units from the 74 million scanned in 2013’s first quarter — current albums (sales of albums released in the last 18 months, plus sales of albums out longer that remain in the top half of the Billboard 200) are down 18.5 percent, to 30 million, and are doing slightly worse than catalog albums which are down nearly 15 percent, to 31 million units. Looking at the year’s top selling albums thus far, last year, 31 albums had scanned more than 200,000 units by the end of the first quarter; while this year so far only 17 have done so. The Frozen soundtrack leads the way with scans of 1.5 million units.
Moving over to track sales, Pharrell Williams‘ “Happy” is the top-selling digital song, with 3.6 million scans. So far this year 16 tracks have scanned more than 1 million units. Last year, 15 tracks hit that milestone, led by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis‘ “Thift Shop,” featuring Wanz, with 4.2 million units by the end of the first quarter of 2013.
“Overall, there is still strong demand for people buying and streaming hits,” says Nielsen Entertainment senior VP Dave Bakula. “It’s the catalog and the bottom levels of the charts, where weakness is occurring.”
Looking at genre sales, electronica was the only large genre — which for this story Billboard defines as a genre with more than one million unit album scans — to post a gain, with a 2.7 percent increase, to 1.45 million units from 1.32 million units. Jazz didn’t decline as much as the overall U.S. album market, as the genre posted an 8.5 percent decrease. Classical — with a 33.3 percent decline to 1.4 million units — and pop — with a 28.6 percent decline to 4.6 million units — both had the weakest showing so far this year. The other large genres — rock, R&B, country, and gospel/Christian — were all down, ranging from 16-19 percent. Latin was down nearly 21 percent.
On the flip side, when looking at tracks, Latin had the best showing of the genres tracked by Billboard for this story, suffering only a 2.5 percent decline to 1.8 million song downloads, followed by R&B, which declined 8.6 percent to nearly 63 million downloads. Rock, pop and country were each down, respectively 15.8 percent, 8.5 percent and 16.9 percent.
Moving over to music merchandisers, the Universal Music Group posted 38.8 percent in albums plus TEA, versus the 37 percent it had in the first quarter of 2013. That gives UMG a commanding lead over the 28.4 percent chalked up by Sony Music Entertainment, from the 29.9 percent it had at the end of 2013’s first quarter. But within Sony Music, Columbia remains the No. 1 U.S. label with 8.05 percent in album plus TEA marketing share, including ChristianScan album counts.
Finally, for the first time in recent memory, all different store types posted declines, with chains and mass merchants suffering the biggest hits with 24.4 percent and 24.5 percent declines respectively, to 7.5 million units and 14.1 million units for the first quarter. But download stores also had a big decline, 14.2 percent to 27.8 million units, suffering a reversal in fortune after a decade of gains. Also, non-traditional CD merchants also posted a slight decline of 2.9 percent to 8 million units while indie stores were down 16.6 percent to 4.1 million units.
Q1 At-A-Glance
Digital sales (albums + TEA): Down 13.3 percent
Interactive streaming: 34.28 billion streams (vs. 25.44 in Q1 2013)
Interactive streaming rate: $0.005 (vs. $0.00375 in 2013)
Streaming equivalent albums: 22.85 million
CD sales: 31.9 million scanned (vs. 40.1 million in Q1 2013)
Number of tracks > 1M scans: 16 (vs. 15 in Q1 2013)
Electronica: 2.7 percent increase in sales
Classical: 33.3 percent decrease in sales
Pop: 28.6 percent decrease in sales
Related Stories
Related Stories
THR Newsletters
Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day