Bruno Mars stays at #1 with a 13% bump over the previous week, but Rihanna slips two slots to #4, overtaken by Taylor Swift(+29%) and (we can’t believe we’re typing this) The Lumineers, continuing their improbable upward climb. Ho Ho “Ho Hey” indeed. Otherwise, the Top 10 went through the typical reshuffling, the lone newcomers soon-to-be Voice winnerCassadee Pope with in-show her performance of Keith Urban’s “Stupid Boy,” and another indie act with a feel-good story, this one from Seattle hip-hop mavericksMacklemore & Ryan Lewis.
1. Bruno Mars,“Locked Out of Heaven” – 222k
2. Taylor Swift,“I Knew You Were Trouble” – 167k
3. The Lumineers, “Ho Hey” – 131k 4. Rihanna,“Diamonds” – 121k
5. will.i.am f/Britney Spears, “Scream & Shout” – 120k
6. Cassadee Pope, “Stupid Boy” – 117k
7. Justin Bieber f/Nicki Minaj, “Beauty and a Beat” – 108k
8. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, “Thrift Shop” – 102k
9. PSY,“Gangnam Style” – 123k
10. Ke$ha, “Die Young” – 94k
All three Voice finalists did decent biz, as TerryMcDermott’s cover of“Let It Be” moved 66k units, putting it at #18, and Nicholas David’s“You Are So Beautiful” sold 40k, landing at #38. All three will likely do even better on next week’s chart, which will reflect the highly rated final two shows. For the record, the week’s best-selling Xmas single once again was Mariah Carey’slatter-day standard“All I Want for Christmas Is You,” with another 65k, bringing the life-of-record total to 2.375 million, as Mariah finds herself on both ends of the “Give the Gift of Music” transaction. [HitsDailyDouble]
Psy’s “Gangnam Style” has already become YouTube’s most watched video, but this morning the smash hit hit one billion views, making it the first video on the Internet to reach the marker, according to Billboard. The K-Pop smash hit has tallied up 6.5 million views a day, far surpassing the 813 million views Justin Bieber’s “Baby” has accumulated. Bieber’s clip gets about 300,000 views per day, meaning it won’t reach a billion until late 2014.
With a reported rate of $2 per 1,000 views on YouTube, “Gangnam Style” has generated $2,000,000 from the site alone. Psy has also pulled in nearly $4 million in digital downloads, with more than 3 million singles sold for $1.29 a pop, and $50,000 from streaming services. [RollingStone]
Who made the biggest, most disruptive impact on the music industry in 2012? Here are ten to consider…
(1) Jeff Price, former CEO, Tunecore.
Balls, he’s got ‘em. Fights, he picks ‘em. Results, he sometimes gets ‘em. And in an industry mired in hugely complicated and logjammed issues with endless doubletalk, that’s pretty good.
There were a few plum headbutts this year. Prior to getting fired from the company he started, Tunecore’s Jeff Price was unabashedly confrontational with huge companies like Amazon and Grooveshark, not to mention Tunecore itself. Price remained unafraid to call out deeply-entrenched machines (ie, Amazon’s songwriter payout structures), question endless subterfuge (ie, Grooveshark’s resistance against paying mechanicals), and even call bulls–t on your favorite music industry trade magazine (ie,Billboard). Check out the rest after the jump! [DigitalMusicNews]
(2) Daniel Ek, CEO, Spotify.
Let the artists eat cake? Well, if streaming is the future, Ek’s Spotify is now extremely well positioned to be your bakery. Ek is all about growth, and in 2012, Spotify reached 5 million subscribers, 1 million in the US, and a $3 billion valuation. Be very afraid of this man.
(3) Ellen Shipley, songwriter.
She co-wrote an 80s smash hit, and in 2012, crystallized a discussion around internet royalties. After receiving 3.1 million plays over a three-month span on Pandora, Shipley received an astonishingly-paltry $39, and soon put it all in a WTF post. That continued to put Pandora’s fight for lowered artists royalties in a different light, especially with top executives like Tim Westergren and Tom Conrad cashing tens of millions in stock. Other writers, including Desmond Child and Kara DioGuardi, were soon sharing similarly-despressing stats on Capitol Hill.
(4) Brian Zisk, SF MusicTech Summit.
If overbloated, dinosaur conferences are holding on for dear life, Zisk is serving a smaller, scrappier business. SF MusicTech Summit is not only affordable to attendees and sponsors, it’s packed every time. The future is smaller, and Zisk is creating a conference that fits.
(5) Daniel Glass, Glassnote Records.
If Glass won’t share his secret sauce, maybe someone will buy it. In 2012, Glassnote Records continued to smash concepts of what an indie can accomplish, with Mumford & Sons the biggest success story. That is percolating rumors of an acquisition in 2013, though the more interesting story might surround Glass’ next breakthrough artist.
(6) PSY
No, PSY probably won’t deliver another ‘Gangnam Style,’ especially if all that anti-Americanism catches up with him. But in 2012, PSY redialed expectations around virality by creating the biggest video in YouTube history, and that rarely ubiquitous cultural landmark.
(7) Axel Dauchez, CEO, Deezer.
Deezer isn’t in the US, yet, though CEO Axel Dauchez is very carefully considering that entrance. Even so, Deezer has 3 million subscribers, $130 million in financing, and different take on low-rent, freebie access. If you’re Spotify, Deezer is now a problem.
(8) Rich Bengloff, President, A2IM
He’s getting millions from Congress to fly indie artists around the world. Any questions?
(9) Scott Borchetta, President & CEO, Big Machine Label Group.
Borchetta’s had a deliciously disruptive 2012. Big Machine is now inking some groundbreaking, direct licensing deals with major radio conglomerates, and chipping away at a decades-old legacy of extreme radio royalty complication. He’s also shown the chutzpah to thumb his nose at Spotify, while maximizing revenue through deals that emphasize full album sales.
(10) Jimmy Iovine & Dr. Dre
Iovine and Dre already upended the white earbud, but in 2012, they pounced on MOG. That sets the stage for a potentially disruptive shakeup on the software side in 2013, one that challenges not only fast-rising services like Spotify, but also a sea offidelity mediocrity.
Anyone who thinks investment in music is ‘drying up’ clearly hasn’t looked at the numbers. Because with less than two weeks left in 2012, investment in music-related startups and companies has reached $619.3 million, a near-34 percent gain over 2011. [AlLindstrom]
Apple’s (AAPL) most recent smartphone launch was its biggest ever by a wide margin. The company sold more than 5 million iPhone 5 handsets during its first three days of availability, and iPhone sales across all models in the iPhone 5′s debut quarter totalled 27 million units. Apple’s latest iPhone isn’t just a big deal to Apple fans, however — according to Mobile Future, a coalition of wireless companies and non-profit organizations, the iPhone 5 had a staggering impact on the U.S. economy in 2012.