Madonna, The Beatles, Elton John Among Most Popular Artists of All Time – via Liberty Games

Madonna, The Beatles, Elton John Among Most Popular Artists of All Time – via Liberty Games

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Liberty Games: The Most Iconic Songs of All Time

Madonna, The Beatles, Elton John Among Most Popular Artists of All Time

March 11, 2022
By Elizabeth Scarlett

Liberty Games analysed over 6,500 songs and chart records to reveal the most popular artists in history, and Madonna came in at number one

According to Liberty Games, Madonna is the most popular artist of all time. This isn’t just some daring statement made by an overly-enthusiastic Madonna mega fan though, this result was conceived from hard analysis.

  From analysing over 6,500 songs from the top 100 Billboard charts, starting from 1959 all the way to the present day, the games retailer produced a list ranking the most successful performers in history.

Their popularity was ranked by how many times they appeared in the chart, with Madonna holding the highest amount on a total of 34 times.

Continue reading “Madonna, The Beatles, Elton John Among Most Popular Artists of All Time – via Liberty Games”

Vinyl Album Sales Surpass Music CDs in 2021

Vinyl Album Sales Surpass Music CDs in 2021

1 Out of Every 3 Albums Sold in the US in 2021 Were Vinyl LPs – (paywall)

Indie retailers sold almost half of all vinyl LPs, while Taylor Swift was the format’s top-selling artist — accounting for 2.6% of total sales.

Vinyl Records Reach Highest Sales Numbers In Last 30 Years

In 2021, vinyl albums constituted more than 25% of physical album sales in the UK.

Driven by Adele, vinyl and CD sales both went up in 2021, data says 

January 11, 2022

Streaming has been dominating the music industry for years now, but 2021 saw a notable rise in sales of physical albums, thanks in part to the success of Adele’s latest album.

Both CDs and vinyl experienced high sales in 2021, according to an annual year-end music data report from MRC Data, released this week.

….”In recent years, I notice customers preferring to physically own music, other than streaming, usually in its best form (vinyl),” said Tobago Benito, owner of record store DBS Sounds, in MRC’s data roundup.

He attributes that rise both to the inclusion of record players in movies and television, but also to the joy people get from digging for a certain vinyl in a record store, one that may “bring back wonderful memories,” he said.

The rise in vinyl sales is also a significant jump from just one year ago, in 2020, when vinyls made up 27.5 million of physical music sales, about 40% of all total sales. To now make up just about half of total sales is significant.

…But one surprise from last year was the uptick in CD sales in the U.S., which went up by 1.1% — from 40.2 million sales in 2020 to 40.6 million in 2021. CD sales have been in steady decline for years, so the fact that they did not actively decline last year could be significant.

One reason for the bump in sales was the release of Adele’s “30” and Taylor Swift’s “Red (Taylor’s Version).”

The Target CD version of “30,” which contained three bonus tracks, helped the CD version of the album sell 378,000 copies in its first week — the biggest CD sales week of 2021, MRC said. Just a week prior, “Red (Taylor’s Version)” sold 146,700 copies.

The Official Top 40 best-selling vinyl albums and singles of 2021

The top vinyl list includes popular releases by Lana Del Rey, Adele and ABBA.

Vinyl outsold CDs in the US for the first time in decades – (paywall)

Vinyl Earns Biggest Sales Week Since 1991

by Brad Callas, Dec. 29, 2021

Vinyl just had its best sales week in three decades.

Americans bought 2.11 million copies of vinyl records in the week ending on Dec. 23, marking the biggest sales week for vinyls since MRC Data began tracking music sales back in 1991, Billboard reports. It’s a 45% increase from the week prior (1.46 million), suggesting the spike can be attributed to the holiday shopping season.

Continue reading “Vinyl Album Sales Surpass Music CDs in 2021”

Taylor Swift Breaks Whitney Houston’s 33-year-old Billboard Record​

Taylor Swift Breaks Whitney Houston’s 33-year-old Billboard Record​

Well, this is a shame. I believe most of Houston’s music surpasses that of Swift’s, quality-wise.

That’s true of music over-all, I believe though; music that’s been released by  Photos of Taylor Swift (top) and Whitney Houston (bottom)any band or singer since around 2010 has been awful.

Very few post- 2009 songs by anyone have been any good, and certainly none of it stands up to the majority of 1970s and 1980s era music.

(Note: I am not a Taylor Swift “hater.” She does have a few songs that are very good.)

 Taylor Swift Breaks Whitney Houston’s 33-year-old Billboard Record​

by James Hibberd
Sept 28, 2020

Taylor Swift just topped a record set by Whitney Houston that’s stood for more than three decades: The singer has surpassed Houston for the most weeks at No. 1 by a woman in the Billboard 200 chart.

According to Billboard, Swift’s surprise quarantine album Folklore has now clocked seven non-consecutive weeks at the top, which gives Swift a career total of 47 weeks ruling the chart. Houston had 46 weeks. In third place is Adele with 34 weeks.

Continue reading “Taylor Swift Breaks Whitney Houston’s 33-year-old Billboard Record​”

Toxic Fans in the Music World: The Stans

If you’re Gen X as I am, you may remember that back in junior high and high school there were cliques, and some of them divided themselves up on the basis of what music they listened to.

Or, the cliques (which may have consisted of jocks, dweebs, surfers, or what have you) all naturally seemed to gravitate towards one type of music or another.

And sometimes, one could find a “metal head” (heavy metal fan) mocking or making fun of the kid who was into Michael Jackson, for instance.

It went from being acceptable to find Michael Jackson cool in the early or mid 1980s to being considered nerdy by other kids if you still admitted to liking him or his music by the late 1980s or so.

I remember one day, in my sophomore year of high school, before math class started, that the resident stoner metal head guy (who normally wore “Iron Maiden” band t-shirts to school) was being teased by a black guy about his metal fandom when the white metal kid shot back, “And I guess you’re a big Michael Jackson fan!” – That was considered a put-down.

By that time, MJ was out of favor with a lot of kids. If you were a MJ fan, you were supposed to keep it to yourself and not advertise it around other kids.

Anyway, that’s about as heated as things got.

But kids in the 1980s more or less politely agreed to disagree with each other over whatever singers or bands other kids enjoyed. Another kid may find your favorite singer or taste in music lame, and even tell you so, but things never got terribly heated.

Not so today.

Today, on social media, even among 20- and 30  something adults, one can find the fan groups (fandoms) of various singers going at each other’s throats.

Continue reading “Toxic Fans in the Music World: The Stans”

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