stolen from the velvet rope.
Following is a quick and dirty summary of Nielsen SoundScan's 2006 music sales stats -- more detail coming later.
As no one who's been following these types of reports each week will be surprised to learn, album sales were down and digital track sales were up. It's not an overnight revolution, but the purchase of tracks continues to rise and albums continue to decline (although digital album sales more than doubled). Here's the statistical breakdown over the last four years:
> Album sales 2006: 588.2 million (down 4.9% from 2005)
2005: 618.9 million (down 7.2% from 2004)
2004: 666.7 million (up 1.7% from 2003)
2003: 656.2 million
> Track downloads 2006: 581.9 million (up about 65% from 2005)
2005: 352.7 million (up about 151% from 2004)
2004: 140.9 million (up about 630% from 2003)
2003: 19.2 million
More nuggets follow.
> Downloads set a new weekly record last week (the week after Christmas, when all those new iPod and other players needed to be filled up right away), with 30.1 million tracks sold. That eclipsed the old record (19.9 million, the same week last year). Also, Fergie's Fergalicious set a record for digital song sales in a week with 295,000. Beyonce's Irreplaceable set the record for digital track sales at 269,000. (The difference is that Fergalicious is available in more than one version and combining them adds up to 295,000.)
> Also zooming up: digital album sales (sales of an entire album downloaded). This year's figure was 32.6 million, more than double 2005's 16.2 million and nearly six times 2004's 5.5 million.
> Top 10 albums (physical and digital sales combined, Jan. 2 to Dec. 31):
1. High School Musical: 3.72 million
2. Rascal Flatts/Me and My Gang: 3.48 million
3. Carrie Underwood/Some Hearts: 3.02 million
4. Nickelback/All the Right Reasons: 2.69 million
5. Justin Timberlake/Futuresex/Lovesounds: 2.38 million
6. James Blunt/Back to Bedlam: 2.14 million
7. Beyonce/B'day: 2.01 million
8. Hannah Montana: 1.99 million
9. Dixie Chicks/Taking the Long Way: 1.86 million
10. Hinder/Extreme Behavior: 1.82 million
Those are significantly lower sales levels than last year's top 10, which was topped by Mariah Carey at nearly 5 million (50 Cent also nearly hit 5 million) and bottomed (at No. 10) by The Game, at 2.3 million.
> Top 10 digital songs:
1. Daniel Powter/Bad Day: 2.02 million
2. Nelly Furtado/Promiscuous: 1.71 milion
3. Justin Timberlake/SexyBack: 1.66 million
4. Gnarls Barkley/Crazy: 1.63 million
5. James Blunt/You're Beautiful: 1.62 million
6. Fray/Over My Head: 1.57 million
7. Fray/How to Save a Life: 1.56 million
8. Sean Paul/Temperature: 1.53 million
9. Chamillionaire/Ridin': 1.42 million
10. Shakira/Hips Don't Lie: 1.41 million.
These are higher than last year by around 75% as a whole. Last year's top digital song, Gwen Stefani's Hollaback Girl, sold 1.17 million.
http://blogs.usatoday.com/listenup/2007 ... sic_s.html