SOUNDEXCHANGE has reported a new record with total year-end royalty payments reaching approximately $462 million (up 58% from the prior year). The fourth quarter 2012 distribution also increased with more than 22,000 payments totaling approximately $134.9 million, a nearly 10% increase from its Q3 2012 distribution of $122.5 million.
The royalties are paid by Internet radio, satellite radio and cable radio services for their performance of sound recordings, and are distributed by SOUNDEXCHANGE to recording artists and record labels.
āSOUNDEXCHANGEās increasing annual royalty payments are a positive indication of where the industry is heading. As digital radio continues to grow, so should the amount that performing artists and rights owners receive for the use of their content,ā said SOUNDEXCHANGE Pres. MICHAEL HUPPE. āOur distribution represents another record-breaking year for SOUNDEXCHANGE, but more importantly, it means more money in the pockets of the creators of music. Weāre optimistic about the industryās future, and look forward to maximizing digital performance royalties for the people we serve and finding new ways to propel the music industry forward.ā
Last week the Nielsen Company and Billboard released their annual year-end report on music sales. And for industry watchers, it was seven pages of pure statistical deliciousness.
The boldface highlights have already been trumpeted. As measured by Nielsen SoundScan, overall music sales reached an another all-time high, with unit sales increasing 3.1% over last year. Overall album sales dipped 4.4%, from 331 million in 2011 to 316 million, but that doesnāt seem so surprisingāor drasticāgiven that weāve been lamenting the death of the album for years.
More albums were sold by digital music stores than by any other type of retailer, including mass merchants like Best Buy, for the first time in history. Yet vinyl continued its improbable rise (which I wrote about more extensively last year) as LP sales soared 17.7% to 4.6 million, setting a new SoundScan Era record for the fifth consecutive year.
On the artist front, Adele sold 5.1 million albums in 2012 after moving 5.8 million in 2011, making 21 the first album in SoundScanās history to be the top seller two years in a row. Taylor Swift moved 3.1 million copies in the last 10 weeks of 2012, basically ensuring sheāll be among musicās top earners in 2013. Carly Rae Jepsenās āCall Me Maybeā and Gotye and Kimbraās āSomebody That I Used To Knowā sold a lot of copiesā6.5 million and 6.8 million, respectivelyābut we already knew that.
Some of the most fascinating stories, however, are located beyond the first page of Nielsenās report. Take, for instance, the sales figures for individual genres. Of the five most popular genres in terms of total tracks sold, the fastest-growing is Dance/Electronic, with sales surging 35.6%.
Thatās not much of a surprise, as the story of EDMās rise has been told by many, including FORBES. But what might shock some people is that, despite the fact that a sizeable portion of EDM tracks are distributed for free online, the Dance/Electronic genreās sales of 53 million are already about one-third the size of the market for Country. That should serve as proof that EDM isnāt going away anytime soon.
Of the remaining three biggest genres, Pop sales are essentially flat at 304 million, Rock grew 11% to 324 million tracks and R&B/Hip-Hop dipped 5% to 249 million. Rockās roll was boosted in part by Mumford & Sonsā Babel, which moved 1.46 million copies, making it the No. 4 album of the year in terms of overall sales. The group earned the No. 6 spot last year for Sigh No More.
Mumford & Sons and Adele werenāt the only artists to post two huge years in a row. Katy Perry earned the most airplay for the second consecutive year, thanks to her Teenage Dream re-release. She and Michael Jackson remain the only two artists with five No. 1 hits from the same album.
Another interesting statistic: out of all the decades from the 1940s onward, the era that got the biggest boost this year in terms of digital album sales was the 1980s. That decadeās music got a bump of 32.7%āmore, even, than the music of the 2010s.
Why? In addition to continued demand for the music of the aforementioned King of Pop and other iconic artists who were particularly prolific in the 1980s, the decadeās music got a massive boost from Whitney Houston. The late diva sold 1.8 million albums last year, No. 7 among all artists.
Finally, the last page of Nielsenās report contains one of the most crucial clues to the future of music: streaming stats. āCall Me Maybeā was the yearās most-streamed song with 119 million audio and video playsā20 times the number of singles the song sold.
As more and more people move their music consumption to services like Pandora and Spotify, the mp3 might just be going the way of the CD. And that could throw a major wrinkle into next yearās report. [Forbes]
The good people over atĀ Rap RehabĀ took the time out to chop it up with Zach Quillen, indie star Macklemoreās manager. They talk 4 things you can learn for their rise. All you indie artists should be paying close attention.
1. Apply the 80/20 rule to your social media strategy. Rather than create a profile on every semi-popular social media platform, Macklemore focuses his efforts on Twitter, Facebook, and his official website, which is run through the Tumblr platform.
āWe never wanted to overdo it [with our social media accounts]. I think a lot of bands, if you go to their websites, you find ten different social media options, and as fans I think that can lead to a bunch of news and confusion, like āwhere do I go?ā So we really wanted to focus on those three places.ā
2. Fans respect authentic brands. The key to connecting with fans via social media is authenticity. Whether itās a new Facebook status update or an open-letter to fans posted on his Tumblr, Macklemoreās voice is always the voice behind it.
āMacklemore doesnāt have somebody tweet for him, itās always his voice, and the same with the Facebook and Tumblr. We make it super easy and accessible to them so they continue to be the ones in contact with fans and in control of their message at all times. These guys care a lot about that.ā
3. Donāt forget about your official domain. Although he has a very strong social media presence,Macklemore still has an official website, Macklemore.com. While current fans may be more likely to follow Twitter or Facebook for their day-to-day updates, Quillen notes that new fans are using Macklemore.com as a starting point because when you Google āMacklemoreā, the official domain is one of the first two results.
āItās important to have that one place thatās deemed as official and anything you see on this is coming directly from Macklemoreā
4. Donāt rely on the Internet for everything. As important as it is to have a strong web presence, it does not ensure the kind of success Macklemore has experienced independently. Specifically, the foundation that Macklemoreās touring success was built on came from a non-digital type of grind.
āI didnāt use a lot of social media in the early days of determining their touring strategy. I donāt think I really paid much attention it. It was mostly about taking evidence from the actual shows. We would put a small show on sale in a market that we felt like was either close to home or a market that should sell well. So we would put on a small show in a city like San Francisco and if it sold out, we would grow from there.ā [AlLindstrom]
The AmericanĀ AssociationĀ For Independent Music has put together a small chart comparing market ownership. As you can see, its another big win for indie record labels. These two charts respectively show the slow, but steady growth of indieĀ labelsĀ from 2011 to 2012. Indie labels are beginning to control more and more of the market. My guess is those 360 deals areĀ drivingĀ artist away from theĀ traditionalĀ major labelĀ opportunities. We will see how much growth occurs in 2013. [AlLindstrom]