Atlantic: Digital music sales overtake CDs

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28 Nov 08 23:58 by Randomus in category Uncategorized To news archive

Atlantic Records publicly revealed that digital music sales have finally surpassed CDs, with more than 50 percent of music sales now coming from online music downloads.

Atlantic, a Warner Music Group unit, is the first major record label to have digital music sales surpass physical media sales.

"We’re like a college basketball team on an 18-2 run," said Craig Kallman, Atlantic chairman and CEO.

In April, industry numbers indicated U.S. consumers still purchase more CDs as opposed to downloading digital music, but several record labels mentioned the gap was closing and digital sales would soon overtake CDs.  The milestone is significant because this marks one of the first times a digital technology has helped surpass brick-and-mortar retail revenue for media delivery.

Since Napster helped revolutionize the way music listeners can acquire music, digital music has undergone a great revolution over the past nine years.

Even so, there are dozens of legal music download services available for consumers to choose from:  Apple iTunes, Amazon, Napster, Rhapsody, Wal-Mart, etc.  iTunes is now the No. 1 online music retailer, with Wal-Mart and Amazon attempting to catch up.

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has long struggled to adapt to the digital age, and still continues to battle music copyright infringement by launching lawsuits against thousands of file sharers across the U.S.

As digital music continues to steal market share away from physical CDs, the industry will face a sobering reality because the overall market for music continues to shrink. 

Information gathered by Forrester Research indicates U.S. music sales in 2013 will be valued at just $9.2 billion, with the number dropping from $10.1 billion in 2008.  In 1999, music sales were worth $14.6 billion, the RIAA said.

Record labels will again be forced to branch out and try to find revenue streams from new locations it never had to work with.  Dell will work with Universal to offer music bundles on new Dell PCs, while Nokia will work with several music labels to have preloaded tracks and music downloading built into new mobile phones.

5 Comments

shaolin007
Posts: 883
Posted on: 29 Nov 08 09:05
"Information gathered by Forrester Research indicates U.S. music sales in 2013 will be valued at just $9.2 billion, with the number dropping from $10.1 billion in 2008. In 1999, music sales were worth $14.6 billion, the RIAA said."


Well if you sell crap, what do you expect? If they didn't "focus" on mainly teenagers and early 20 year olds, they might actually make some money. I don't know how people I know that love classic rock. How about doing that? Or even the metal that was back in the 80's? I can't stand todays music. It comes off artificial, fake, and the lyrics just suck.
Randomus
Posts: 1668
Posted on: 29 Nov 08 19:58
Don't young people buy music? I'd be curious to see who is buying what kind of music today, as I agree that a lot of today's music is just nothing but pop garbage. (But you must remember that pop music is what is played on radios, and there are enough people out there who actually enjoy it.)

As the record labels continue expanding their revenue streams -- using services such as ringtones -- they are focusing on younger people, who apparently are more willing to spend money on this music.

Look forward to hearing which record labels will be next to announce digital music sales have overtaken physical media sales.
guest
Posts: 15288
Posted on: 29 Nov 08 20:19
I suspect that to get more than 50% of digital sales that CD sales at Atlantic have tanked over the past year.
DeadMan
Posts: 1560
Posted on: 29 Nov 08 22:55
Personally I am looking forward to the death of music corporations.
guest
Posts: 15288
Posted on: 11 Dec 08 21:42
Ask yourself this: how many files from your 1986 Apple computer can you still access? I'm not ready to jump on the phyiscal-media-is-dead bandwagon quite yet. Last year, legitimate experts also predicted that we'd never again see gasoline prices below $2 and look how that turned out. CDs are far superior for quality sound and archiving and I think the recession is going to turn a lot of predictions upside down. People might indeed be looking for products that are long-lasting and durable and little mp3 files have yet to prove they are either.

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