Makes interesting reading. Vinyl still selling well, albeit the top 10 are mainly legacy titles, but downloads and CDs plummeting. Streaming surging ahead propelled by youngsters if you view the titles and this doesn’t account for YouTube figures. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42541440
Makes interesting reading. Vinyl still selling well, albeit the top 10 are mainly legacy titles, but downloads and CDs plummeting. Streaming surging ahead propelled by youngsters if you view the titles and this doesn’t account for YouTube figures. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42541440
Tidal, Hi Def, MQA, probably less than 1% of the whole market. Not of any consequence to the unwashed masses, hence not to this report. Vinyl is only mentioned because Millenials are buying it (not often to actually play, but for the artwork, collectability).
Totally agree .... but my guess would be waaaaaaaay less than 1%. And I now am part of the less then 1% and have quit purchasing physical discs. Tidal Hi Def streaming may or may not be as "perfect" as the physical media but more than good enough for these old ears. And lots of fun. I find myself listening to lots of 70's groups where I might already have much of their music on my sever but not all of it. I do hope Tidal survives !!
Makes interesting reading. Vinyl still selling well, albeit the top 10 are mainly legacy titles, but downloads and CDs plummeting. Streaming surging ahead propelled by youngsters if you view the titles and this doesn’t account for YouTube figures. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-42541440
As for CD sales "plummeting", percentage wise the decline is much less than than of downloads in the graph's timeline, from 2013 to 2017. Pop music sales on CD are probably way down, but as I perceive it, for classical music and jazz the CD medium will remain relevant for some time to come. The standard medium for new releases in those genres is still CD.
As for CD sales "plummeting", percentage wise the decline is much less than than of downloads in the graph's timeline, from 2013 to 2017. Pop music sales on CD are probably way down, but as I perceive it, for classical music and jazz the CD medium will remain relevant for some time to come. The standard medium for new releases in those genres is still CD.
Which is hardly the point. Are we now in a popularity contest? Does the newest pop queen make Bach, Beethoven or a great contemporary composer irrelevant, just because more teens stream her records?
Which is hardly the point. Are we now in a popularity contest? Does the newest pop queen make Bach, Beethoven or a great contemporary composer irrelevant, just because more teens stream her records?
Well, obviously in classical and jazz today's music business decision as to stream vs cd doesn't follow the popularity contests of pop. Otherwise new releases would not routinely be put out on CD.
Which is hardly the point. Are we now in a popularity contest? Does the newest pop queen make Bach, Beethoven or a great contemporary composer irrelevant, just because more teens stream her records?
Jazz and classical may not be dead but they are on a ventilator. The great composers will maintain their place in history books and as you note only a few of todays artists will be remembered in another 50 years.