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Guest Post by Roy Trakin on MediumShopping for the latest album releases used to be so easy. Physical product would be delivered to national retail chains, heralded either by hit singles on the radio, ads in the local circulars, a late-night TV appearance, and maybe even a larger-than-life billboard looming over Sunset Boulevard or Times Square.The wireless wonder of the Internet was just a sci-fi fantasy when the rock & roll revolution was fueled on the relatively low-cost ability to cut 45s, whose instant messages — whether it was “Hound Dog,” “Eve Of Destruction,” “Like A Rolling Stone,” or “Ohio” — were the adolescent CNN of their day, beamed directly into the brainwaves of teen consumers, thanks to the jukebox, then the car radio and home stereo.These days, a new album needs a lot more than a billboard or hit single to galvanize the public’s attention; it takes a nonstop barrage of social media and news headlines to force a commensurate Skinner box nibble by the masses, just as surely as 1,500 streams equal an album sale, according to Billboard.With that dizzying kind of competition for attention, it’s no “surprise” that artists ranging from David Bowie, Beyoncé and Drake to Kanye West,Kendrick Lamar, Rihanna, and Radiohead have employed a new album release model built upon various surprise elements, to varying degrees of success.Bowie’s Blackstar, released Jan. 8 on his 69th birthday, became the artist’s first No. 1 album, though his death just two days later surely launched it into the media zeitgeist. The fact that Bowie had kept the recording of the album a secret up until he released its first two singles was more the source of amazement — with both the title track and “Lazarus,” in retrospect, forming eerie, meticulously planned farewells — as the media-savvy, always futurist provocateur managed to successfully hijack the Internet and Google searches. It was almost as if he worked his own mortality into the marketing ofBlackstar, reinforcing his sharpened sense of how theatricality and art intermingled with life and death.“Release dates is played out. So the surprise is gonna be a surprise,” declared West during a radio interview prior to the release of The Life Of Pablo. West’s much-anticipated album premiered for a celebrity-packed Madison Square Garden during a fashion show for his Yeezy Season 3 collection on Feb. 11, only to crash Tidal’s servers the next day.


Still, what about the beleaguered brick-and-mortar retailers? Bob Say, proprietor of Sherman Oaks, Calif., vinyl-heavy indie retailer Freakbeat Records, says he had to wait two weeks after Lemonade’s April 23 release to receive his shipment of the CD and accompanying DVD. Acknowledging his store’s indie demo isn’t exactly Beyoncé’s audience, Say ultimately ordered a half-dozen copies of the album. He says he received a single call about the album, and ended up selling just one copy.



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