The Guardian
ran an article on the dwindling value of Elvis merchandise, suggesting that much of Presley’s fan base was dying out and not being replaced by new audiences. For a figure never far from the popular conscious since the 1950s, this has been a difficult thought to process, yet one that makes sense when we consider the break with the past we are seeing in the music industry.Legacy formats and streaming are almost different industries: If we look towards the previous pillars of success in music (chart positions and physical sales) Presley remains a force to be reckoned with. Whilst Elvis is still very successful in this sphere — his 2016 compilation album ‘The Wonder of You’ going to number one in the UK and selling 1.6m albums worldwide, metrics gauging streaming success indicate he is falling behind other artists. However, it was back in 2002 that Dutch DJ Junkie XL’s electronica remix of ‘A Little Less Conversation’ gave Presley his most recent dose of heavy mainstream radio play and the accompanying high chart positions across Europe. Indeed, the last time Elvis appeared in the UK singles charts was 12 years ago, following re-issues of Love Me Tender amongst others that were likely propelled in the charts by the merchandise factor, meaning original fans of Elvis would buy the physical copies as collectables and perhaps seldom play them. In an increasingly post-sales world based more on continual engagement with music rather than one-off sales, this model is less effective.Streaming is not as kind to Elvis: In 2016, Elvis’s songs clocked 382 million streams on Spotify — a respectable play count, but one that pales in comparison to David Bowie and Michael Jackson (600 million+) and The Beatles (1.3 billion). Additionally, Elvis’s popularity on YouTube is a further indictment of his seemingly less visceral impact of younger audiences.
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