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Digital boom helps British music sales hit record
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Mu Mu
Mu Mu
1955 posts

Digital boom helps British music sales hit record

LONDON (AFP) ? British music sales are booming as young fans increasingly buy songs online rather than illegally downloading them, the country's industry body said Wednesday.

The BPI, formerly known as the British Phonographic Industry, said big-selling releases by artists including Leona Lewis, Coldplay, the Killers and Take That also helped drive sales to record levels last year.

The industry has struggled in recent years to adapt to rapidly changing technologies, and has been hit hard by illegal downloading of music via peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing websites.

But download sales grew by 33 percent last year, while 2008 was the biggest sales year on record in terms of singles sales in all formats, with 115 million single tracks sold.

The deepening recession has hit some retailers -- notably Woolworths and high street music retailer Zavvi, formerly Virgin Megastore -- but in other ways it could even be helping the industry, said BPI boss Geoff Taylor.

"Every business and consumer in the UK is having a tough time, and these difficult trading conditions make the resilience of the UK's music market all the more notable," he said.

"During a recession, people look for purchases that are excellent value for money and bring a lot of enjoyment, and music does just this," he added.

While downloads of single tracks have soared, the market for albums has also been helped by growing online sales: some 10 million albums were sold, a 65 percent increase on 2007.

Kim Bayley, head of the Entertainment Retailers Association, said traditional high street music sales were also holding up. "Music performed better in UK stores in 2008 than anyone had expected.

"The big lesson of 2008 is that if the music is strong enough and retailers work well with suppliers to get that product in-store, music fans will respond and buy in their droves."

The upbeat British music news came a day after US technology giant Apple said that every song in its iTunes library will be available without anti-piracy software by April.

Jan 07, 2009, 17:28


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modfinger
modfinger
136 posts

Re: Digital boom helps British music sales hit record

Mu Mu wrote:

"During a recession, people look for purchases that are excellent value for money and bring a lot of enjoyment, and music does just this,"


Got to have my itunes.

Jan 07, 2009, 18:05


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cybele
cybele
736 posts

Why Is That?

Is it cheaper over there? I would gladly pay $0.99 USD per Tune (unprotected) if I had proof that a large % of that cost went to the artis(s). But, I fear that it might even be less of a % now than it ever was.

Cybele

Jan 07, 2009, 18:23


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thomas2
thomas2
1220 posts

Re: Why Is That?

No it's probably because we're such a cowering, law-abiding bunch of people that we're too scared of lawsuits to download illegally. Just a cynic's view...

Jan 07, 2009, 18:32


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calapia
calapia
205 posts

Re: Why Is That?

As addressed in a previous post, artists do get a significant amount of the money when a song is sold through ITunes. Especially if they're not connected to a huge label, and even more if they're just self-releasing.

I for one, still look forward to the day when the present music business model crumbles completely. Serves these short-sighted, money hogging, dead rock star deifying jerk offs right. These guys are just the same as those cats on Wall St, you can count on that.

Jan 07, 2009, 19:59


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MY RETURN
1963 posts

Re: Why Is That?

"I for one, still look forward to the day when the present music business model crumbles completely. Serves these short-sighted, money hogging, dead rock star deifying jerk offs right. These guys are just the same as those cats on Wall St, you can count on that."

Riiiiighht. lol Spoken like someone who wants to justify stealing. :)

Sep 03, 2010, 20:42


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Harold Bissonette
Harold Bissonette
1095 posts

Re: Why Is That?

MY RETURN wrote:
"I for one, still look forward to the day when the present music business model crumbles completely. Serves these short-sighted, money hogging, dead rock star deifying jerk offs right. These guys are just the same as those cats on Wall St, you can count on that."

Riiiiighht. lol Spoken like someone who wants to justify stealing. :)


Crap MR - the big labels have been ripping off artists big and small for decades. I don't think anyone minds paying the artists what they deserve, especially smaller acts. Hopefully the Internet is gradually creating the framework where major labels are redundant.

Sep 03, 2010, 21:29


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Hobobachang
Hobobachang
928 posts

Re: Why Is That?

calapia wrote:
Serves these short-sighted, money hogging, dead rock star deifying jerk offs right. These guys are just the same as those cats on Wall St, you can count on that.




Sep 04, 2010, 07:00


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s_lush_s
s_lush_s
5140 posts

Re: Digital boom helps British music sales hit record

That's great news. What wonderful upstanding citizens and purchasers of online music. Glad to hear it.
Me, I'm going to buy some albums and some mp3s.

Sep 04, 2010, 23:57


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Cheeso
Cheeso
636 posts

Re: Why Is That?

MY RETURN wrote:
"I for one, still look forward to the day when the present music business model crumbles completely. Serves these short-sighted, money hogging, dead rock star deifying jerk offs right. These guys are just the same as those cats on Wall St, you can count on that."

Riiiiighht. lol Spoken like someone who wants to justify stealing. :)


Way to misunderstand, you dope. Calapia is in a band that has their cds on iTunes.

Sep 05, 2010, 07:43