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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0It used to be that you’d have to wait for the music industry reports from the previous year to be released in late February or early March, but our wonderful new digital music world has turned that around. Nielsen Music’s latest annual report is now available, and it helps us gauge the health of the current recorded music business. To put it simply, the report tells us that it was much better than 2017 and looks like it will be even healthier this year too.The report centers on the fact that total album equivalent audio consumption was up 23% over 2017, mostly thanks to a 49% increase in on-demand streams from services like Spotify and Apple Music, among others. I take some issue with the “album equivalent” metric (where 1,500 streams from an album is equivalent to one album sale) as it can be gamed and doesn’t accurately depict how the songs on an album are being consumed, but that’s all we have right now so it will have to do.That aside, there’s a lot to be excited about if you’re active in the industry today. According to Nielsen:- “Music streaming volume continued to rise, with the total number of on-demand audio song streams reaching 611 billion in 2018, a sizable 49% increase over the same time period in 2017.
- Overall on-demand music streaming volume, including video, surpassed 900 billion streams, an increase of 43% over the same period last year.
- Vinyl continued to soar, up 15% over the same period last year with record-breaking sales during the week of the 11th annual Record Store Day.
- Despite sharp declines in Digital purchasing, Digital Audio consumption (digital albums + track equivalent albums + on-demand audio streaming equivalent albums) was up a healthy 34%.
- Four songs surpassed 1 billion on-demand streams this year, including Drake’s “God’s Plan”, Juice WRLD’s “Lucid Dreams (Forget Me)”, Drake’s “In My Feelings” and XXXtentacion’s “Sad.”