CMT/MTV/VH1 Debut Opportunities for Artists Pages

Artist-PagesCMT/MTV/VH1 have announced the launch of an artist opportunities hub, where for the first time artists can opt into a selection fan engagement opportunities across CMT Pure, MTV, VH1, CMT, MTV Hits, MTV Jams, VH1 Soul, and Palladia.

Beginning yesterday (April 18), artists having claimed or created an account are able to be selected by fans to receive on-air, editorial and partnership opportunities among the site’s affiliates.
“For the first time, we’re opening our gates and providing artists with a massive entry point to have their music spotlighted and heard across and beyond all of our channels and screens,” said Van Toffler, President of MTV, VH1, CMT and Logo. “We’re handing the power over to the fans and their rallying cries and artist support will help decide which artist’s breakthrough.”
Inaugural offerings include selection as Hunter Hayes’ opening act; all-expense-paid performances at Hangout Festival for two artists with recording opportunities; videos/track submission for editorial features across CMT/MTV/Vh1 networks; and on-air music video rotation during 1200 hours of weekly music video programming in addition to potential MTV/VH1/CMT shows features, Palladia, and advertiser sponsorships. Evaluations will be based on fan engagement on each artist’s page.
More than 100 million potential homes are reached by these artist sites (Artists.CMT, Artists.MTV, Artists.VH1), which launched less than one year ago as part of Viacom Music and Logo Group’s Connected Content Network.
In the coming months, CMT/MTV/VH1 will introduce a mobile app, an artist commerce tool and more.

Weekly Register: Country Sales Move Into The Wheelhouse

bradBefore we peer at the past week’s sales, please note that consumers change formats slowly. Buyers are finally moving from physical CD sales to digital downloads, but the lethargic process has taken 10 years and is still unfinished. And did you know that iTunes will celebrate its 10th Anniversary on April 28, 2013?
Many industry observers believe that access or subscription music is the next big thing, streamed to user’s across multiple hardware channels. Yes, streaming dominance appears inevitable as bandwidth becomes ubiquitous throughout our lives. But don’t expect to see it gain critical mass overnight. As a recent NPD Group study of digital behavior shows, the transition will likely take years.

According to NPD’s “Annual Music Study 2012,” 44 million Americans bought at least one song track or album download last year. That number has remained relatively stable over the past three years, despite the rapid growth of Pandora and other music-streaming options. “There’s a belief that consumers don’t need to buy music because of streaming options,” says NPD Group’s Russ Crupnick. “When in fact streamers are much more likely than the average consumer to buy music downloads.” In addition NPD estimates that, thanks mostly to purchases by teens, average per-buyer spending on music downloads increased 6% Y/Y, and the number of consumers purchasing both single tracks and full albums increased.

weeklygrid4-14-13Grid And Bear It-Albums
Country album sales and the Top current country album chart received an upward lift into positive territory this week with the release of album debuts from Brad Paisley (No. 1; 100k; 40% digital) and Eric Church’s live set Caught In The Act (No. 3; 61k; 43% digital). Paisley’s last album This Is Country Music debuted the week ending 5-29-11 also at No. 1, but with sales of 153k units.
For comparisons, here is a list of other 2013 country album debuts that arrived in the 100k+ units range:
1/27/13; Gary Allan; 106k
2/10/13; Tim McGraw; 107k
3/10/13; Luke Bryan; 150k
3/31/13; Blake Shelton; 199K
4/7/13; The Band Perry; 129k
Also impacting sales was the ACM Awards which gave renewed energy to albums from artists like Miranda Lambert (No. 15; 12k; up 61%), Eric Church (No. 7; 19k; up 28%), Little Big Town (No. 9; 16k; up 32%), plus others such as Jason Aldean and Luke Bryan. ACM performer gains were also evident in the tracks department.
weeklygrid4-7-13Grid And Bear It—Tracks
Florida Georgia Line or FGL continues to rule the country tracks list as “Cruise” added 179k more downloads for an impressive RTD total of over 2.7 million. YTD Country track sales are ahead ahead of the same period last year by 6.4% while all genre tracks sales lag last year, -2%. Downloads for Hunter Hayes’ new single “I Want Crazy” leapt up 495% to almost 110k units for the week. Luke Bryan’s single, “Crash My Party” logged 164k downloads an increase of 526% for the week. Also benefiting from the TV spotlight was Tim McGraw’s stunning duet with Taylor Swift and Keith Urban on guitar, “Highway Don’t Care” which increased W/W by 40% with sales of over 115k units.
The Spring rush is on with upcoming new albums from Kenny Chesney and LeAnn Rimes the week of April 30; then Lady Antebellum and Pistol Annies the week of May 7. Find a complete list upcoming albums here.
Stay tuned to the Weekly Register which is starting to ring loud.
• • •
I’d also like to take a moment to grieve and show solidarity with the people in Boston who have suffered a great loss this week at the city’s famed Marathon. Let’s pray for the speedy recovery of those injured and for the hearts of their loved ones who are also going through a terrible ordeal. Their bravery in the face of evil is an inspiration to us all.

Pistol Annies Embark on Promotional Annies Adventure

AnniesThe Pistol Annies are inviting fans to join them on a interactive experience leading up to the launch of their new album Annie Up on May 7.

Over four consecutive weeks, new chapters will be revealed to fans through an interactive online graphic novel titled Pistol Annies and the Case of the Stolen Gear.
Dubbed The Great Annies Adventure, the narrative begins today (April 17) when the trio realize their gear, merchandise and new music has been stolen by Cassius Banks, the CEO of Vanilla Records, and his band The One Tones, seeking to strip the Annies of musical abilities.
Each week, fans will work together to discover clues hidden in the storyline and disclosed on social media (via Twitter, Instagram, Vine, Facebook, Tumblr, Foursquare, Path, Pinterest, etc.).
Every time an item is recovered, new merchandise opportunities and content are unlocked for the entire online community, including vinyl records, custom guitars, designer clothes from their photo shoot, personal notebooks, exclusive video content and more.
Each member of the online community, known as The Henhouse, that finds a missing item will receive the actual autographed one-of-a-kind item they found, such as a flyaway opportunity to celebrate the Pistol Annies release in a secret location.
To join the adventure, visit www.PistolAnnies.com.

Brad Paisley's 'Wheelhouse' Debuts At No. 1

braidpaisleyBrad Paisley‘s eighth studio album and first self-produced project, Wheelhouse, sold more than 100,000 albums according to Nielsen SoundScan, making it the top-selling country album this week. The release marks Paisley’s seventh consecutive studio album to debut as the nation’s best-selling country release.
The project features 14 tracks and three interstitials; each of the album’s full songs were written or co-written by Paisley. The singer-songwriter enlisted his band The Drama Kings to perform on the entire album, which was recorded at a renovated farmhouse turned studio at his home near Nashville.
Paisley’s current single, “Beat This Summer,” is currently in the Top 10 on MusicRow‘s CountryBreakout chart.
 

Launching An Idea And Making It Populr

Nicholas Holland

Nicholas Holland


The dazzling world of startup investors and the entrepreneurs that entice bets on success has been exploding in Music City.
Nicholas Holland, who describes himself as, “an avid supporter of the Nashville entrepreneur ecosystem,” created his first company at 23, then sold it at 26. Next he started the highly successful CentreSource, an Interactive Agency which he recently stepped down from to helm his latest venture full time—Populr.
Populr is all about creating published one-pagers online or Pops. CEO Holland and his group of investors, which includes music industry notables such as Joe Galante, Mark Montgomery and Paul Schatzkin, are convinced Pops will take root and eventually occupy an essential place in every marketer’s toolbox.
Also featured in the following interview is Populr’s Senior Communications Strategist, Heather McBee, who previously served as VP, Marketing and Web Initiatives for Sony Music in Nashville. McBee’s unique perspective creates a strong understanding of how the new product can interface with the entertainment community.
In the following discussion we asked Holland and McBee about Nashville’s entrepreneur community, how they characterize the new company and the colorful journey which has brought Populr into existence.
BossRoss: Nashville, with its traditional roots and Bible belt values seems an unlikely place to birth a technology/entrepreneurial hotbed. How did this happen?
Nicholas Holland: Back-to-back recessions across America created an environment where people’s primary source of wealth collapsed—their homes. At the same time we all have email addresses, interface with a variety of social and virtual connections and have become comfortable interfacing through computers and mobile to a larger world. Finally, Nashville is experiencing a much stronger economic vibrance than many other cities across the country. The result is that individuals have lost trust in corporate America and their personal finance vehicles and have found themselves wanting to build wealth outside that system.
BossRoss: And these changes created a group of wanna-be investors and entrepreneurs?
Holland: Yes. Overall, the changes have created situations where access to capitol is no longer restricted to brick and mortar ideas. You can actually start a business with just a computer and smart phone. As we’ve moved from a blue collar to a services society the exchange of goods has become more fluid because it’s really just information. So you have a reason to become an entrepreneur, access to become an entrepreneur and finally a city which very much supports it. The overall impact of entrepreneurship is sometimes small, but the irony is that it makes a huge splash in terms of its allure and appeal. Ninety-five percent of startups fail but they still gather fans who want to cheer for the underdog. I hear people saying all the time, “If I didn’t have two mortgages and four private school kids I’d love to do what you are doing.” And that creates the investor ecosystem which makes it all possible. Over the last 7 years in Nashville we saw the Entrepreneur Center and various funding groups emerge. Media publications then began attributing more of their pages to these efforts. The culture of entrepreneurship is on fire across the country. But Nashville is three degrees hotter than everywhere else, which makes it such a great place to be.
Populr Logo - MedBossRoss: When was Populr born?
Holland: It started officially in Nov. 2011, but really began a few years earlier. My agency, CentreSource, required a lot of high touch communications. I wanted to step up our sales efforts with something more than email and attachments, something on the web. Our clients were immediately drawn to the idea of being able to easily create pages online. The web is active, visual and live vs. email which goes out of date as soon as it’s done. People wanted to use it for sales, internal communication, training and customer on-boarding. Unfortunately, our first and second prototypes simply didn’t work and we put our plans on the back burner. When we came into 2011 my team wanted to try again. I told them, “Anything above expenses and taxes up to $10k per month I will give back to the team. So if you build a recurring business model and it brings in $10k a month you guys can buy iPads, Kindles, beer whatever you want.” We named the project “10k.” Two weeks later they returned wanting to build Upopper! By the end of February the name evolved to Populr. We got the .me domain, built the logo, established some branding and the team promised a June delivery.
BossRoss: This sounds easy. Everything went according to schedule, right?
Holland: No. First we missed June, then July and it still wasn’t ready. I thought, “this is going to kill me.” But I remembered something my family said, “If your business doesn’t run without you it isn’t really a business.” I began to toy with the idea of stepping down from CentreSource to build Populr as a separate company, full time. Bullpen, a Nashville microfund accepted me, so I stepped down from CentreSource, recruited two team members and we began building Populr full time in Nov. 2011. We moved into the Entrepreneur Center a month later and by April our first version was ready. My mentors insisted we formalize the business model immediately so we added a slew of features such as collaboration, team sharing and security. It took us another four months to get that done, but amazingly by late August 2012, but we had arrived squarely in the Alpha stage.
BossRoss: What about the financing?
Holland: It wasn’t a cinderella story. I put in about $125k of my own money and then raised another $450k in a convertible note. At our current burn rate that should take us through the end of this year. We’re being capitol efficient and making money, but it is still a big chunk of cash. We have nine employees.
Heather McBee

Heather McBee


BossRoss: Heather, how do one-page web sites fit into the big picture of social media and branding?
Heather McBee: Your website remains the core, the home where you return. Populr becomes an extension of that home base. It offers the flexibility to quickly create and launch a page without having to call a developer and go through a multi-day or week process. Then you spread it via social media, email, all the venues. The sites are mobile optimized so they work beautifully in that space as well.
BossRoss: How do people use these one-page sites?
McBee: They are highly interactive which creates lots of possibilities. The Lost Trailers, for example, are using Populr in a variety of new ways. After a show in Detroit they’ll record a special message, add some fan photos and create a Pop. Next they publish it via social media and geo-targeted posts on Facebook. It gives them a way to go back into the market quickly and easily with custom branding and reinforce that fact they were just there. Big Machine Label Group is using Populr in another way—to contact radio and deliver assets. Instead of sending emails to station PDs with an attached MP3 file, bio and three paragraphs of information; they send a link to a highly dynamic environment. And they can track who opened it, what each programmer clicked on and how much time they spent. Leadership Music and the Americana Music are using custom themes and finding unique ways to reach their membership.
BossRoss: How do you see adoption spreading in the entertainment industries?
McBee: Right now we’re building some innovative case studies. Nashville is our core, but as it grows we’ll start reaching out to labels in New York and L.A., management companies in Austin and everyone else around the country. We know this platform is also perfect for film, TV and books. There are so many applications for these one-page sites that it just continues to grow.
BossRoss: I noticed the CMA used a password protected Pop to provide documents and information at its recent Board of Directors meeting which I attended. It was convenient having all the files (downloadable) in one place.
Heather: We’ve also suggested additional uses to them like preparing sponsor pitches for the CMA Music Fest or CMA Awards and to provide digital tools and assets for street teams.
BossRoss: What is the biggest difference between the entrepreneur space and the music industry?
McBee: It’s fast and flexible because decision making doesn’t take large committees or repeated meetings. In the music business there are expectations about royalties, systems, accounting and people you are accountable to plus multiple gate keepers that touch every artist. On the entrepreneur side you walk in every day with the feeling you can change the world, because you’re creating something no one else has done.
BossRoss: Nick, what’s next on Populr’s entrepreneurial roadmap?
Holland: We’ve already checked off the typical seed investment boxes. We’ve built and launched a product plus validated that people will naturally gravitate to the product and upgrade and pay without our involvement. Our biggest chore now is the conversation which goes, “That’s impressive. How do I use it?” People want it to replace something. They ask, “Does this get rid of email marketing? Or my website?” We’ve learned Pops are like the tablet in that it’s about expanding how you consume media not replacing a previous device.
BossRoss: Do you have other competitors in the space?
Nicholas: We haven’t seen any direct competitors. But there are some consumer-based one-page builders like www.about.me which creates online business card/bio pages. People are experimenting with the micropublishing concept, but we haven’t seen anybody on the B2B side which we believe is a much broader application.
BossRoss: How do you describe Populr?
Holland: There’s three things we say to position it. Populr is very effective at creating engaging online content quickly and easily. Then through sharing across social media, email and other channels it helps you gain attention and be heard. Finally, it helps you improve your message with its Micro-Analytic tracking tools that deliver critical insight into who is reading, opening, sharing and responding to your communications. Ultimately the question becomes, “If you can easily create and share a single page what would you do with it?”

Industry Pics: Artists.CMT Event, Songwriters Support MCTI

Last Thursday (April 4), CMT, MTV, VH1 and Topspin hosted an open event at Ruby for the Nashville music community to learn about connecting with fans on the recently launched artist platforms, Artists.MTV, Artists.CMT and Artists.VH1. Nearly 20,000 artists have already claimed or created their pages. More than 12 million fans have visited the site, and in coming months, MTV/VH1/CMT will launch a mobile app for iOS and Android smartphones.

Pictured (L-R): Bob Moczydlowsky, Topspin; Martin Clayton, VP, CMT.com; Elyse McKenna, Topspin; Parker Brooks, Topspin; Chris Carlson, Topspin; Leslie Fram, SVP, Music Strategy, CMT; Nathaniel Gravely, Manager, Digital Music Strategy, MTV Networks; Stacey Herron, VP Digital Music & Progamming, VH1. Photo: Brian Tipton

Pictured (L-R): Bob Moczydlowsky, Topspin; Martin Clayton, VP, CMT.com; Elyse McKenna, Topspin; Parker Brooks, Topspin; Chris Carlson, Topspin; Leslie Fram, SVP, Music Strategy, CMT; Nathaniel Gravely, Manager, Digital Music Strategy, MTV Networks; Stacey Herron, VP Digital Music & Progamming, VH1. Photo: Brian Tipton


• • • •
James Slater and LoCash Cowboys’ Preston Brust and Chris Lucas entertained children at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt on April 4 in support of the 40th Annual Music City Tennis Invitational 2013. The MCTI tennis tournament will be held April 19-21 at Brownlee O. Currey Jr. Tennis Center at Vanderbilt and benefits the Center for Child Development at Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.
Pictured L-R: Vanderbilt Children's Hospital Mascot Champ, Preston Brust, James Slater, Chris Lucas, Jason Duggins and MCTI Celebrity Host Kelly Sutton. Photo: Steve Green

Pictured (L-R): Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital mascot Champ, Preston Brust, James Slater, Chris Lucas, Jason Duggins and MCTI Celebrity Host Kelly Sutton. Photo: Steve Green

'Billboard' Introduces Genre-Specific Streaming Charts

Billboard has unveiled seven genre-specific charts that blend data from various streaming services into one ranking.
The data which fuels the new genre rankings will be combined with download sales and radio airplay data to compile the Billboard Hot 100, Hot Country Songs, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, Rap Songs, R&B Songs, Hot Rock Songs, Hot Latin Songs and Dance/Electronic Songs charts.
Streaming services that will be measured by Nielsen Entertainment for the charts include YouTube (including Vevo on YouTube), Spotify, Muve Music, Slacker, Rhapsody, Rdio, MySpace, Xbox Music and Guvera.

Weekly Register: ACM Awards Boost Country Sales

TBPSunday evening’s (April 7) highly-watched ACM Awards surely stimulated some viewers to become purchasers. However, since the week’s Nielsen SoundScan tally closes on Sunday eve, any post-ACM retail bump must wait to be discovered in next week’s data. The digital download business however, is a mouse-clicking world that never closes, so we can use the iTunes charts to capture a glimpse of consumer behavior, especially impulse buys.
According to the ACMs, iTunes sales for many of its featured artists were positively impacted immediately following the program. In fact, the day before the show only three of the Top 20 country artists on iTunes were ACM nominees. But following the broadcast the number jumped to 10. Next week, with the full sales data, we’ll be able to assess individual artist numbers and overall industry impact.
With respect to ratings, the show was a huge success. The ACM Awards were the most-watched show of the evening, attracting over 15.38 million viewers and making it the event’s largest audience in 15 years and the most-watched country music event of the previous 12 months. The ACM Awards is produced by dick clark productions (dcp) which recently gained new management in the form of CEO Allen Shapiro and President Michael Mahan.
Grid Talking-ALBUMS
weeklygrid4-7-13The Band Perry rose up to the No. 1 Top Current Country spot this week as the group’s Pioneer debuted with over 129k units (26% digital). Blake Shelton’s new offering now in week No. 2 slid 59% to sit in the No. 2 position with 82k scans. Kacey Musgraves, now in its 3rd week, climbed one place to No. 6 with 18k scans and an increase of 3%. Also notable was a debut from Gretchen Wilson which landed at No. 24 with over 5k units (34% digital).
Justin Timberlake clung to the No. 1 position on the Top 200 Album list for a third consecutive week with sales of 139,285 units, edging out TBP by only 10k.
A quick glance at the weekly grids shows sales numbers oscillating based upon comparisons with the slate of releases at the same time last year. For example, during the week ended 4-8-12, we saw a debut from Rascal Flatts which shifted 130k units; Lionel Richie was in its second week with 95k units; and Nicki Minaj bested the Top 200 list with her 253k unit debut.
So as we begin the second quarter (week ended 4-7-13) the all-genre albums Y/Y deficit rides at -5.4%. Country trails last year’s pace by a scant -1.5%. Consumers continue to shift their purchasing behavior to digital albums and that format is up for buyers of both country (22.1%) and all-genre (10.1%).
weeklygrid3-31-13In stores this week are two new Nashville albums likely to set the SoundScan counters spinning. Watch for new music from Brad Paisley, Wheelhouse and Eric Church, Caught In The Act. 
Grid Talking-TRACKS
Unfortunately, the tracks chart doesn’t offer daily or hourly breakdowns that would help us determine exactly how some of the ACM Award artists fared on Sunday evening. But there are some suspiciously high W/W gains that seemingly indicate a strong show correlation. For example, look at the following artists that performed and the gains they enjoyed: co-host Blake Shelton “Sure Be Cool If You Did” (37%) and “Boys Round Here” (with Pistol Annies +27%); Tim McGraw/Taylor Swift, “Highway Don’t Care” (42%); The Band Perry, “Done” (178%); and Brad Paisley, “Beat This Summer” (115%). There are lots more.
But probably the most astounding result comes from Florida Georgia Line who topped the Digital Genre Country Chart with a combined 248k downloads of their party anthem, “Cruise.” FGL debuted a remix featuring Nelly, which scanned 186k units in addition to the original version’s 62k weekly numbers.
Country track sales are ahead of last year by a comfortable 5.3% while all-genre track sales are behind 1%. Watch for these numbers to slide around like oil on a hot griddle as the spring season gets cooking…
And while we’re at it, you might enjoy checking out socialguide.com where you see how TV shows and movies rank with respect to social media activity. Click HERE to see a graph of Sunday evening’s ACM Awards which led the evening in social media response.

Ratings Report: ACM Awards Win Night

48th Annual ACM Hosts, Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton. Photo: Ethan Miller

48th Annual ACM Hosts, Luke Bryan and Blake Shelton. Photo: Ethan Miller


The 48th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards helped CBS rank No. 1 among total viewers last night (4/7), according to preliminary primetime reports from Nielsen.
The annual Las Vegas country show drew 15.38 million viewers for live and same day viewing, the highest measure since 1998. Last year’s show attracted 12.2 million viewers, down from 13 million the previous year.
Audiences for the 3-hour CBS country broadcast resulted in a 4.3 rating among adults 18-49 and a share of 11, its best deliveries for this demographic since 2001.
CBS ranked first among the major networks, followed by NBC which averaged 3.7 million viewers for its largest drawing show, The Apprentice. ABC took in 3.3 million viewers, while FOX showed an average of 2.8 million.
Last night’s more than 15 million viewers slightly bested the approximately 13.6 million who tuned in to the Nov. 1 CMA Awards on ABC.
According to BlueFin Labs, the ACM Awards raked in 1.9 million social media comments and 619.4 million impressions, up from 676,000 comments in 2012.
In addition, more than 1.1 million votes were cast for the ACM’s Entertainer of the Year and New Artist of the Year categories combined, an increase of 22% over last year’s vote.
GAC will re-air the awards event Monday, June 3, 9:00 p.m./ET.

Weekly Register: Shelton Surge And Q1 Countdown

blakeSometimes number crunching, SoundScan summin’, chart watchin’, sales analysts simply have no patience.
Take me for example. Only a few weeks ago I was complaining over the lack of fresh new product and having to endure dire sales. But today, at the close of Q1, country music sales are starting to show strength if not honest-to-goodness resilience. Might be exactly the moment to offer a tip of the hat to label marketing departments. Good job guys (and gals)
On the country chart this week we are enjoying Top 10 debuts from Blake Shelton (No. 1; 199k, 39 percent digital), Alan Jackson (No. 2; 55k, 13 percent digital) and Thompson Square (No. 4; 36k, 31 percent digital). There’s also a various artist ACM Awards Zinepak Wal-Mart Exclusive that hit No. 11 with over 15k physical-only units. And last, but not least Ms. Maggie Rose entered the chart at No. 36 with almost 2k units (69 percent digital).
weeklygrid3-31-13On country tracks there’s two guys burnin’ it up this week. Darius Rucker’s “Wagon Wheel” earns honors for rolling into the top spot with over 93k downloads for the week. But Blake Shelton has taken ownership of the Digital Genre Country list. The Voice judge has 13 tracks on the 100 song list, many of them from his above mentioned debut album.
Since fans are less genre conscious than ever these days, the full house of debuts on the Top 200 chart was also a solid source of sales momentum. Justin Timberlake topped the chart with week 2 of his 20/20 Experience that scanned over 968k last week plus almost 318k this week. Blake, Alan and Thompson Square were joined on the Top 200 by debuts from Lil Wayne (No. 2; 217k), Onerepublic (No. 4; 60k), Depeche Mode (No. 6; 52k) and Strokes (No. 10; 41k).
Grid Lock
So let’s take a look at where we are, compared to last year, as we turn the first quarter corner of 2013.
weeklygrid3-24-13Country album sales are now less than 1 percent behind 2012 YTD, and all other country “Weekly Grid” stats are leaning into positive territory. As shown, digital albums are up 21.2 percent. Digital country albums now average about 32 percent of total country album sales. (Last year at this time that percentage was 26.2 percent.) Using digital sales as a metric one can see that Alan Jackson fans very likely skew into older demographics since even on debut week his digital share of sales was lower than average at 13 percent. Also significant is that All Genre buyers opt for digital albums at a higher percentage than country buyers (43.8 vs. 32 percent).
And there’s even good news for the eternal optimists that cling to the concept that digital sales (both albums and tracks) will make up for losses in physical sales. Well, at least according to country units (not profits), this week you are correct. Note the special column on the far right of the Q1 Weekly Grid which shows “Albums with TEA” and you’ll note that country album sales including TEA are up .8 percent.
Weekly Grid stats for All Genre sales are less positive, but improving. Even albums with TEA is still in negative territory (-3.8 percent).
Over the next few weeks look for new releases from The Band Perry (April 2), Brad Paisley (April 9), Eric Church (April 9) and Kenny Chesney (April 30). See a complete list here.