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What A Crappy Present
Posted by FolkTom Barger in on November 19, 2004 at 3:54 PM



Music Industry Fears Bad Tidings in Slowing CD Sales
By ETHAN SMITH for the Wall St. Journal
RAPPER EMINEM dazzled the music industry when his new album, "Encore," released last Friday, sold 711,000 copies. Those sales, tallied by Nielsen SoundScan, are considered impressive for a full week. Eminem moved the total in just the first three days.

Music executives have been cheered by signs, in the Eminem release and elsewhere, that their industry's demise has been overstated. In almost every week of the first nine months of 2004, U.S. music sales outpaced those for the year-earlier week. After three years of sales declines, a recovery finally .seemed to be at hand.

But as the music industry heads into the crucial holiday shopping season, some executives are worried that the bottom is falling out of their nascent recovery. For the past nine weeks running, weekly music sales have lagged behind sales for the year-ago week, sometimes by as much as 20%. Even Eminem's strong showing couldn't pull total sales last week ahead of the 2003 tally. To date, album sales for 2004 are running ahead of last year by slightly more than 5%—marking a significant loss of steam compared with August, when album sales were ahead 8.8%. The fourth quarter is more crucial than ever this year for global music companies. EMI Group PLC, Warner Music Group, Vivendi Universal SA's Universal Music Group and Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG's Sony BMG Music Entertainment are watching closely to see if the tactics they deployed to pull them out of a long tailspin are having any effect.During the past year, they have sued people whom they allege are trading online in pirated copies of their offerings, as well as cut prices and trimmed staff in an attempt to remain profitable.

Eminem's album, on Universal's Interscope label, is just the first in a crush of high-wattage artists releasing albums during the fourth quarter, when the music industry rings up as much as 40% of its annual retail sales. Among the big acts with albums just out or coming soon are U2, whose "How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb" arrives next week; rapper Ludacris; country-pop singer Shania Twain and Gwen Stefani, formerly of the pop-rock band No Doubt and now a solo artist.

Even long-gone acts, such as Nirvana and the Beatles, have boxed sets in the pipeline, thanks to music company marketing departments and their endless ability to recycle old material. Similarly, rapper Jay-Z, who less than a year ago announced his'retirement from making new albums, is planning on Nov. 30 to release "Collision Course," a CD-DVD combination on which he performs live backed by the band Linkin Park.

Now, the hope is that Eminem and the others can set the industry back on course. It may be a long shot. For one thing, there is the threat of piracy. Eminem's album was rushed into stores to pre-empt content that had been leaked on-line. Other artists have been forced to do the same: R&B trio Destiny's Child and rapper Snoop Dogg also had their discs pushed into stores ahead of schedule by their labels—a phenomenon retailers say can upend a carefully planned release-date strategy. As a result, "you haven't had that huge event launch day for some of the larger releases," says Dave Alder, chief marketing officer at Virgin Entertainment Group U.S., which operates Virgin Megastores for Virgin Group Ltd. It isn't clear whether there will be more release-date scrambles to come. Interscope has sent copies of the new U2 album to radio stations early, but for now it hasn't announced plans to move the retail release
up from Tuesday.

Then there is clutter in the vast middle part of the album chart. The top 10 albums last week actually have sold more than the top 10 albums in the same week a year ago, points out Geoff Mayfield, director of charts at Billboard magazine. It is the next 190 entries in the Billboard album chart that are lagging behind. Earlier in the year, that trend was flipped: The top 10 albums were faring relatively poorly while overall sales were strong, driving a broad recovery.

"I can't put my finger on what happened to the middle of the business," says Joe Nardone Jr., who owns and oper- ates an ll-store chain, Gallery of Sound, in Pennsylvania. Mr. Nardone theorizes that lackluster chart toppers from earlier in the year—including acts such as Ryan Cabrera, LL Cool J, Good Charlotte, Sum 41 and Jill Scott—now constitute the lackluster middle. "They never started out great, and they've stayed at some mediocre level," Mr. Nardone says. Acts that earlier in the year seemed ready to break out, such as Los Lonely Boys, a Texas blues-rock trio, have had second singles that stalled. Others see mixed signals in expectations of strong sales for videogames and digital music players. Music companies stand to benefit from strong sales of music players, as people who get the devices as gifts spend money to load them with content. But probable hit DVDs, including the most recent Harry Potter film and "Seinfeld"TV episodes, and videogames such as "Grand Theft Auto San Andreas," may hurt music sales, as customers are distracted from music.

Nonetheless, there still are some optimists. "We're expecting a good quarter," says John Sullivan, executive vice president and chief financial officer of TransWorld Entertainment Corp., which operates the FYE, Coconuts and Wherehouse music chains
in the Northeast. "When the year's over, I think we'll beat 2003." Heavier-than-usual
discounting is a factor, too. Many mass merchants have dropped prices on a growing
list of new releases to $9.99 and $8.99, fueling unit sales for the top 10 but
potentially cutting profitability. Virgin and other specialty chains have struggled to compete. Virgin's Mr. Alder says his stores are offering shoppers who spend $50 a booklet of coupons valued at $1,000 in discounts at Virgin stores and related outlets, such as Virgin Atlantic Airways.

Billboard's Mr. Mayfield predicts that 2004 sales will end up ahead of last year's, but only by a margin of two to three percentage points. "While that's not as good as the 8%, we were ahead in the middle of the year, being ahead at all is still something to celebrate after three years of declines," he adds.


User Comments

Intermediatewet1
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 4:17 PM
Everyones looking at the bottom line. No accounting for the economy, no looking deeper to see what they are doing wrong. They are offering a product, in their minds isn't any reason for people not to be flocking to the stores to buy that product. Can't be what they are doing, can't be the methods, can't be a fault of the product; must be the people are doing something illegal. The music majors have this same tunnel vision. When they sue enough customers and turn them away from buying, wonder what the excuse will be then?
DMemberJohnCarlton02
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 4:37 PM
wow, 711,000 absolute dumb@sses wasted their money on Eminem's new POS album.... amazing.

Let see, don't buy CDs, but I spend plenty of $$$ (my spouse says TOO much) on DVDs, PlayStation 2 games, etc.

Case in point: the GTA games. When the product is consistently good (GTA 3, GTA Vice City, & now GTA San Andreas), its amazing how quickly I'll part with $50. The record industry could take a lesson from Rockstar Games about how to make consistantly good products that people will shell out top dollar for.

Until then, the music company's can kiss my motherf**king @ss, cause I ain't spending a dime on their junk.
Advancedpepe512000
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 5:03 PM
This would account for another round of their lawsuits gone out today...again, to the sitting duck University folks.... Merry Christmas guys! From the RIAA
DMembermtekk
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 5:09 PM
i downloaded the 'Encore' CD and it sucked major cock, i am reccommending to everyone that i know no to get it. it has only one good song, just loose it, and the rest all suck for the most part.

Fuck getting me media or software this Christmass, last year was the year of software, this x-mass is the year of hardware, *caugh* creative labs Nomad Zen touch *caugh*, *caugh* parts for a new box *caugh*, *caugh* cable modem *caugh*

I download all the music and video entertainment i need, and Fuck the Media
DMemberIn-Flames
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 5:14 PM
speaking of... whatacrappypresent.com needs to be updated or something. heh.
RockgdZiemann
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 6:26 PM
I got M&Ms for Halloween. I was not dazzled.
Advancedawehr
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 6:42 PM
we dont swap presents on hanukkah, we operate on a deficit year round, and barely pay the bills as is.

when we get free money (or space in which to expand debt) we utilize it. Its a better way to live i think, not being a slave to the marketing.
DMemberstilltrying
Date: November 19, 2004 @ 11:35 PM
Quote" I can't put my finger on it" meaning why are sales beginning to lag????? Do the words Lawsuit's mean anything to you!!!!!! What a bunch of Dumbass's
DMemberTemjin
Date: November 20, 2004 @ 12:52 AM
Stilltrying, I have no idea which group of people you're trying to talk to, here. Learn to speak proper english, and then try again.




Fuck the Recording Industry Assholes of America. I pity all those poor, misguided fools who bought Eminem's album, because Eminem fucking sucks. Sorry, I'll take a nice 'ol independant Machinae Supremacy album over some mass produced, sellout shit.
DMemberMajorTreat
Date: November 20, 2004 @ 3:46 AM
I am doing my part to bring them down.
Please do your. They will dy faster this way and artists and fans can get their business back faster. Anyway they will dy but it could take a longer time if we don't do any thing.
Advancedgoldenpi
Date: November 20, 2004 @ 11:53 AM
Christmas is a strange time. The effect of piracy is, I predict, minimal. You can download for yourself, but giving another a CD-R with an inkjet-printed case label would be potentially insulting. So, if christmas sales are poor, we *know* piracy is not to blame. And if the industry says otherwise, we know they are just trying to justify their campaign.

Another factor is that the quality of music sold does not matter. For once the RIAA is not trying to convince potential customers that they would like music. It must convince potential customers that people they know would like the music instead. Hence the sudden increase in sales of childrens songs - last year, Bob the Builder - being purchased by parents and relatives.
AdvancedDeadMan2003
Date: November 20, 2004 @ 1:56 PM
I advise everyone to buy an MP3 player without DRM for their friends and relatives this xmas. Then point them to Soulseek etc.

I just bought myself an iRiver 40GB jobby which also acts as a portable USB2 hard disk. No DRM and I can copy stuff to it and take it and copy it back to wherever I want to.

Show the music industry the finger.
DMemberlimefan913
Date: November 22, 2004 @ 3:54 PM
DeadMan, I recommend trying a PocketPC. But, on another note, I like seeing this. I have to agree, X-Mas gifts on CD-Rs w/ even worse, marker labels are not good gifts. I don't do it. And I'm happy to say, that on Christmas, it will be the 1 yr mark since I got RIAA CD (it was a gift from my mom). But hopefully between lacking CD sales, Sherman Networks, and things of the such, it will take em' down to a whole new lvl of missing money.
Advancedgoldenpi
Date: November 23, 2004 @ 5:14 AM
I dont doupt sales will be down a little - competition from DVDs and games is still growing.
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