__________________________
Guest post by Philippe Giard of The Orchard's The Daily RindOnce upon a time, in a world where streaming wasn’t yet created, the only way to measure the success of a song or an album was to measure the number of purchases.As with many data indicators, once the information is pulled and used, the data often loses meaning. If you think about the current streaming era, you’ll see how this form of measurement has hidden/deformed a lot of valuable information and gave us a blurred vision of music consumption, especially during the last years of the CD era.During the CD era, success was measured in purchases and not what was actually listened to. This makes a big difference in several situations:Gifting
Those who have been in the industry for some time now remember the last call before Christmas, where all record labels were releasing their biggest recordings of the year to make sure they would multiply their sales with the Christmas gift surge. Many of these gifts were never listened to or even unpacked but were counted regardless. This gave an advantage to big names since consumers were just buying the number one hit of the moment for their last minute Christmas gifts.Consumption tracking
In order to be included in the single charts during the CD era, your track needed to be released as a single. This created two sub-markets, one for singles and the other for albums. Now, in the streaming era, there is only one market: tracks. For this reason, you can sometimes find all the tracks of an album in the top charts, which was just the case for Ed Sheeran‘s new music. With this new model it’s definitely the end of single albums (no more paying $20 for a full album only to discover the one good track was the radio hit). This could also be a flashback to the 50s or 60s when albums were primarily compilations of singles opposed to concept album.Over-weighting of adult music
Genre
The CD era had no alternative to genres. To find the release you wanted you needed to know the genre to find the right section and, when you were an electronic lover, you didn’t even bother looking in the pop section! Now with search engines and mood/moment playlists, rigid genre definitions are over and the hardcore metalhead can resume his love for sweet pop with the hidden listening function.Seasonality
Related articles









