Business World

Music streaming keeps booming in US

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NEW YORK — The boom in streaming shows no signs of slowing down in the United States, with music consumptio­n soaring nearly 10% so far this year, an analytical firm said Wednesday.

BuzzAngle Music, in a report for the first half of 2017, said listeners in the world’s biggest music market streamed an average of 10.8 billion songs each week, after never crossing the 10 billion point a year earlier.

Audio streams were up 58.5% from the first half of 2017. In welcome news for the industry, a growing number of listeners paid for services such as Spotify, Apple Music, and Tidal, with subscripti­ons now accounting for 78.6% of audio streams.

Overall music consumptio­n — which includes streams, downloads and physical sales — grew by 9.9% from the same period last year. That growth outpaced the 6.5% growth charted for the first half of 2016.

The music industry has enjoyed several years of fast-growing revenue thanks to streaming — which brings listeners unlimited, on- demand choices online — after two decades of decline or stagnation.

But while streaming’s growth has boosted the bottom line for now, two other major formats are facing decline. Digital downloads on platforms such as iTunes tumbled nearly 25% in the first half of 2017, while CD sales slipped 3.9%.

Sales of vinyl — which has seen a rebirth thanks to hardcore music fans — jumped by more than 20%, although the historic format remains a sliver of the industry. English songwriter Ed Sheeran’s

Divide has been the year’s top-selling album to date, followed closely by two hip-hop works that benefited strongly from streaming — Kendrick Lamar’s

DAMN. and Drake’s More Life. —

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