heh
― #illuminati (crüt), Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:30 (twelve years ago)
yeah -- unlike "Roar" or "Monster," it never got higher than the teens on the Radio Songs chart (One Direction really have only had one big U.S. radio hit, everything else has been driven by iTunes/YouTube).
― some dude, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:30 (twelve years ago)
Why does US radio not play stuff thats actually selling then?
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:33 (twelve years ago)
in the case of an act like one direction, it's not that the singles are selling a ton and not getting played -- it's that they have hugely frontloaded but ultimately moderate sales. looking at the first-week sales of a new one direction or justin bieber single has almost always been misleading, so it's not a huge surprise to me that radio is reluctant to hop on board fully w/ these songs. the bieber songs that actually got real radio support (the first 3 singles from believe) managed it partly b/c the sales managed to hang on decently even after the initial surge.
― dyl, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:43 (twelve years ago)
Also, U.S. commercial radio usually only plays what's been actively promoted by record labels. "Get Lucky" put up huge streaming/sales numbers after its release, but the radio stations around here (Chicago) didn't touch it until its radio add date, which was at least a month later, IIRC. (That said, plenty of other stations in the U.S. did recognize the song's popularity and started playing it earlier.)
― jaymc, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:45 (twelve years ago)
Chris Molanphy wrote a good thing last year about how radio has always been reluctant with teen pop: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2012/06/carly_rae_jepsen_justin_bieber_charts.php
― some dude, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:46 (twelve years ago)
Yeah, I hadn't seen that before, but that's a good piece.
― jaymc, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:52 (twelve years ago)
the One Direction album is actually not bad -- the best boy band album since 2000.
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:53 (twelve years ago)
yeah i enjoy it, but then i was always into "What Makes You Beautiful."
― some dude, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:54 (twelve years ago)
as far as the #1-debut phenom coming to an end... maybe. it seems like promotional schedules are shifting accordingly now that streaming is a big thing for the charts -- more and more singles debuting simultaneously w/ their music videos and so on, or only separated by one week. of course "best song ever" did the simultaneous single/video thing and could only manage #2 despite huge sales numbers and streams, but i think it's only inevitable that some of these will go #1 at some point. like hell, "wrecking ball" was able to jump from #22 to #1 well before it had actually established much radio support.
― dyl, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:55 (twelve years ago)
Chris' article reminds me of how surprised friends get when they learn NSync's biggest Hot 100 hit is "It's Gonna Be Me" and not "Bye Bye Bye" or "Girlfriend."
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:55 (twelve years ago)
I was just listening to "Little Black Dress" on repeat as a Bey palate cleanser earlier this morning.
― Murgatroid, Saturday, 14 December 2013 17:55 (twelve years ago)
right now the songs on Beyonce's album are all "album only" on iTunes and can't be bought individually, so until they get un-bundled sales won't really effect how her songs do on the Hot 100. she seems to be after proving that something like this can lead to big album sales.
― some dude, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:00 (twelve years ago)
wrecking ball also had miley cyrus naked which is sort of gaming the system in a unique way
― maura, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:10 (twelve years ago)
just saying
Are there any good articles on why there are so many 'charts' in the US?
Here in the UK its always been sales based. That way its [been seen as] not been decided by pluggers ,labels or stations what gets in a chart. Obviously there's been cheating done in the past.
The public woudnt have it anyother way. It's also why weird songs can sometimes top the chart. I cant imagine commercial radio playing 'o superman' for instance but it sold loads.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:12 (twelve years ago)
re: nsync, "bye bye bye" and "girlfriend" weren't released as cd singles in the u.s. (this was common for teenpop acts like nsync, bsb and britney -- wasn't true for christina, tho). in 2000, cd singles were the only physical format that actually made an impact on the charts from retail, and in 2002 (when "girlfriend" was out), even those were so negligible in sales that the hot 100 basically parroted the airplay chart every week. "it's gonna be me" did have a cd single (it might have been a limited release), which allowed it to jump up to the top for a couple weeks.
― dyl, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:14 (twelve years ago)
i thought "o superman" did become a hit partly thru radio play? at least that's how the popular story goes
― dyl, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:16 (twelve years ago)
U.K. has never factored radio play into the Official Charts, afaik. But radio play (John Peel) probably *influenced* sales.
― jaymc, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:21 (twelve years ago)
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Saturday, December 14, 2013 1:12 PM (9 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
we have lots of different radio formats and regional differences and different cultures/ethnicities, and our media isn't controlled by a centralized BBC-type entity?
― some dude, Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:23 (twelve years ago)
BBC doesnt control any of the commercial radio stations though.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:26 (twelve years ago)
Also, as I understand it until very recently the single format has always been a much better seller in the UK than in America.
― Panaïs Pnin (The Yellow Kid), Saturday, 14 December 2013 18:31 (twelve years ago)
yeah diversity, complexity, and sheer size of us market are why microfocus w/ charts are useful and necessary in a way they aren't w/ an extremely homogenized and small market like the uk. the problem that has arisen for billboard is that whereas before on the retail side they could do some very specific targeting of markets the quasi-monopolization of retail (at least w/ mp3s) has made this much much more difficult. selecting certain record stores as yr bellwether for a genre is simple enough and accuracy is easily achieved there (r&b chart effectively starts as a survey of harlem record stores iirc), doing the same thing when there's effectively only one record store and that record store is also the one record store surveyed for any other chart makes it much more difficult, you're flooded w/ noise. there's an argument that they could've just kept the old model but i can buy that the storefront market (esp when you're talking about the ones you'd target for this) has shrunk so much that the data you gathered there wouldn't be very meaningful. i've thought that if itunes/amazon were willing billboard could target markets geographically but this still wouldn't approach the effectiveness of what they had twenty years ago and would be more problematic obv. in theory they could draw data from trends, using ppl who have focused there itunes purchases on a certain genre be it country or r&b as defining that market, adjusting week by week, but you could imagine ppl freaking out that this was an invasion of privacy or something. us has pure sales based and airplay based charts and while there's the obv fun of the uk charts having surprises and anomalies topping the charts these very anomalies are due to the small size of the market in question and also probably point to some problem w/ the sampling model. us chart model (imo) an easily more accurate model of measuring actual popularity. this is reflected in radio ignoring certain sales hits that have little appeal outside of their fanbase, esp since that fanbase probably isn't listening to the radio but streaming glee/boy bands/indie rock on their phone anyway. also fwiw the uk does have more charts.
― balls, Saturday, 14 December 2013 19:17 (twelve years ago)
while there's the obv fun of the uk charts having surprises and anomalies topping the charts these very anomalies are due to the small size of the market in question and also probably point to some problem w/ the sampling model
One startling thing about the introduction of streaming to the Hot 100 is that it has now started having bigger anomalies than the UK. "Harlem Shake" and "The Fox" both charted higher in the US; Ark Music have never had a song make the UK top 40.
― Iain Mew (if), Saturday, 14 December 2013 19:50 (twelve years ago)
novelty hits /= anomalies! novelty records have been hugely popular since the dawn of billboard. i'm talking more the case of some single topping the charts thru some campaign - ratm, iron maiden. here if some fanbase decided to coordinate efforts and try to drive 'reflektor' or whatever to #1 it wouldn't work unless it was w/ a song or act that was already actually popular. something like blur vs oasis could happen but 'bring yr daughter to the slaughter' couldn't or if it did it wouldn't be a surprise or anomaly cuz it would mean 'bring yr daughter to the slaughter' was already a hit or primed to be one (airplay, etc).
― balls, Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:05 (twelve years ago)
in the case of an act like one direction, it's not that the singles are selling a ton and not getting played -- it's that they have hugely frontloaded but ultimately moderate sales. looking at the first-week sales of a new one direction or justin bieber single has almost always been misleading, so it's not a huge surprise to me that radio is reluctant to hop on board fully w/ these songs. the bieber songs that actually got real radio support (the first 3 singles from believe) managed it partly b/c the sales managed to hang on decently even after the initial surge.― dyl, Saturday, December 14, 2013 12:43 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― dyl, Saturday, December 14, 2013 12:43 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
This seems to be reaffirmed by the success of their current single. It hasn't left the itunes top 10 since release and as a result radio seems to be steadily picking it up. It's almost top ten on pop radio and already top 40 on radio over all.
as for Beyonce getting a #1 before year ends, the songs won't be available for individual purchase until Dec. 20, so radio play, streaming and/or digital sales would have to be massive, like record breakingly huge to get the #1.
― Greer, Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:15 (twelve years ago)
And Chris Molanphy brings it
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/the_music_club/features/2013/music_club_2013/the_rock_hall_of_fame_and_the_billboard_hot_100_where_were_the_black_acts.html
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 19:48 (twelve years ago)
not quite sure how this relates to the main themes of this thread, but this year a black performer had a #1 on the country chart! (#15 on the hot 100)
― Euler, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 19:54 (twelve years ago)
does he tho? his explanation for why black artists didn't chart in 2013 like they did in 2004 is pretty lackluster - i think under a little scrutiny it turns out not to be an explanation at all. He writes:
"there’s no willful racism or systematic exclusion happening" but "Music fans are playing out an unironic version of Stephen Colbert’s joke about not seeing color—we’re cool with the idea that authentic rhythmic music can now come from anyone, and yet somehow, when the data is compiled about what we’re all buying and streaming, the Timberlakes and Matherses and Macklemores keep winding up atop the stack, ahead of the Miguels and J. Coles." which seems a bit of having his cake + eating it too?
and then disavowing black artists topping the album chart by handwaving albums away bc singles are more important? idk, he's doing a lousy job selling me on this narrative.
― Mordy , Wednesday, 18 December 2013 19:57 (twelve years ago)
I don't think anybody could sell you on the narrative anyway
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:01 (twelve years ago)
i think if someone made the case that billboard made the youtube changes to intentionally skew towards white artists i'd find that more -- idk if compelling but direct at least? now it's like very ephemeral. it seems like the argument is that it's racist, but not bc of racism.
― Mordy , Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:04 (twelve years ago)
Sure, it'd be a direct statement that's out there and that people can immediately start piling up pieces of evidence for and against
That's definitely one method of presentation but not the only one
What we have now can be classified as sort of a really broad and vague form of demographic data, where we had the opportunity of seeing the collection methodology change and now we're seeing the results
If you want a writer to come out and say that yes, there was racist intent, you'll probably find one eventually, maybe it hasn't been written yet, but I'm sure it will be soon
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:09 (twelve years ago)
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:10 (twelve years ago)
Haven't seen this posted yet, anybody have any thoughts?
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:11 (twelve years ago)
no but i did just read a link on slate that seemed relevant to this thread
― Mordy , Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:11 (twelve years ago)
singles are more important, at this point, to the cultural narrative, if maybe not to what the industry rewards. here are some No. 1 albums from 2013 no one gave a shit about: Jack Johnson, Luke Bryan, Avenged Sevenfold, Keith Urban, Wale (unless you work at complex), Queens of the Stone Age (unless you are that one guy complaining that Pitchfork left QOTSA off their singles list, who is a real person and not some guy I made up), the Josh Groban/Michael Buble one-two punch this spring...
― katherine, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:13 (twelve years ago)
Mordy might take issue with you for the Avenged Sevenfold snub
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:14 (twelve years ago)
haha I bought the Luke Bryan album twice for two different people: my bro in law for his birthday and (today!) for a friend's fiancee. They're always bemused when I say I like a couple of his tunes.
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:16 (twelve years ago)
The fact that you can get a #1 album and sell less than 100,000 copies in a week might have a little something to do with that.
― Greer, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:19 (twelve years ago)
yeah I was about to say
― katherine, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:19 (twelve years ago)
I see a lot of people complaining about Queens of the Stone Age not appearing on various year end lists, but maybe it's just one guy posting under various accounts.
― MarkoP, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:20 (twelve years ago)
My impression is that QOTSA have a kind of pseudo-radiohead like fanbase
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:21 (twelve years ago)
And on a slight tangent, I was kind of shocked to recently discover that prior to Beyonce, the only other artist to have had 5 consecutive albums debut at number one was DMX.
― MarkoP, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:22 (twelve years ago)
Somewhat embarrassing but I used to post on a video games message board in high school and the amount of people on that board talking about QOTSA rivaled the number talking about Radiohead, Rush, Tool, Opeth, and A Perfect Circle
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:23 (twelve years ago)
obv the shift towards far less black artists charting on the hot 100 has come about due to the change of billboard methodology from practically 100% airplay to including digital sales since 2005, but i'm wondering in light of that slate piece how well black artists did on the singles charts (when physical single sales were relevant) back in the 80s/90s? is there any info on that? have white artists always dominated single sales or has there been a shift w/ the itunes era?
― prolego, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:25 (twelve years ago)
i think QOTSA is in this zone now:
that stage where you think they aren't popular anymore but are actually way more popular than they were when they had "buzz"
― My Chief Keef Keef (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:54 (twelve years ago)
white artists have not always dominated singles sales and while previous billboard adjustments have take a form that definitely obv open to a charge of racism the case isn't nearly as strong w/ most recent adjustment - change in late 90s and mid 00s were tied to movements away from dominance by babyface acts and hip-hop acts, youtube factoring in (and there's no way youtube shouldn't be factored in even if billboard's actual algorithm might be off) is a movement toward something and adjusting a calculation to account for something it was missing. this can only really work w/ the hot 100 chart. also as much as ppl keep writing the same 'what's wrong w/ billboard?' and 'what's wrong w/ radio?' pieces they might want to examine what has changed w/ r&b and hip-hop - there's nobody w/ the adult contemporary chops of babyface dominant in r&b right now and there's nobody w/ the pop chops of timbaland or the neptunes or puff daddy dominant in hip-hop right now.
― balls, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 20:57 (twelve years ago)
That attributes the previous success of R&B and hip-hop on the charts to a small handful of amazing producers, which is totally not the story at all. Those genres thrived before and outside of Babyface/Timbaland/Neptunes/Puff, just like current pop isn't solely defined by Dr. Luke facsimiles. And it's not like Timbaland or Pharrell have been irrelevant in making hits this year, their big pop culture-dominating hits just seem to have only been with mainly white artists.
― Greer, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 21:07 (twelve years ago)
producers and songwriters*
― Greer, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 21:08 (twelve years ago)
confused by him saying that there's no "systematic exclusion" when it does obviously seem systematic, even if it's not "willful" as he says
― dyl, Wednesday, 18 December 2013 21:12 (twelve years ago)