Arab Times

Drake, Malone rule mid-year charts

Ella Mai makes first Essence Festival appearance

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LOS ANGELES, July 7, (Agencies): Drake and Post Malone had the highest volume of on-demand streams and Ed Sheeran has the top song in Nielsen Music’s mid-year report for the six-month period ending June 28, 2018, which was released Friday morning.

“The first half of 2018 has shown robust growth for the music industry, building upon the successes of the business in recent years,” said David Bakula, SVP of Industry Insights for Nielsen Music, in a statement. “Fans have never before had access to music on the scale that we see today, and we expect even more gains for the industry in the six months ahead.”

Total album equivalent consumptio­n — which includes physical and digital album sales, song sales and on-demand audio and video song streams — is up 18%, passing 400 billion streams for the first time. On-demand audio streaming volume is up 45%, having already exceeded 268 billion so far in 2018, and on-demand video streaming volume is up 35% year-over-year, according to the report. (The report notes that total album equivalent audio consumptio­n — albums + track equivalent albums (TEA) + on-demand audio streaming equivalent albums (SEA) — is up 13.8% year-to-date over 2017, while total album equivalent consumptio­n — albums + TEA + on-demand audio/ video SEA — is up 18.4%.)

Drake and Post Malone had the highest volume of on-demand audio streams in the US, with 3.3 billion and 3.1 billion, respective­ly, but higher album sales put Post Malone on top of all artists in total album equivalent consumptio­n. Drake’s “… Plan” is the year’s biggest song thus far, in terms of total song consumptio­n (digital song sales with streaming equivalent on-demand audio); it has clocked 5.3 million units, including 655 million on-demand audio streams. It is followed by Post Malone’s “Psycho” and BlocBoy JB’s “Look Alive.”

Post Malone’s “bongs & Bentleys” is the leading album in total album equivalent audio consumptio­n this year with total activity of 1.8 million units (albums + TEA + on-demand audio SEA), although that number is likely to be eclipsed by Drake’s “Scorpion,” which broke Malone’s one-day streaming records upon its release last Friday, one day after the Nielsen mid-year mark. It is followed by “The Greatest Showman” soundtrack with 1.6 million units and Cardi B’s “Invasion of Privacy” with 1.1 million units.

Ed Sheeran leads all pop artists at the mid-year mark, as his song “Perfect” is the top pop single for streaming and radio airplay spins; it is also the year’s most-downloaded song, with just over 1 million units. Imagine Dragons held down three of the top five rock songs with “Thunder,” “Believer” and “Whatever it Takes.”

The report noted that three genres in particular have helped drive the year’s gains: Latin (+39% over last year), R&B/Hip-Hop (+26%) and Pop (+19%) all saw increases in total album equivalent consumptio­n.

Latin has grown to 7.7% of total industry volume (albums + TEA + on-demand audio/video SEA), up from 6.5% at the same time last year. R&B/Hip-Hop continues its growth as the industry’s most-consumed

that he was representi­ng Lee.

Superior Court Judge Pro Tem Ruth Kleman refused to consider the motion, saying it appeared Lallas was not employed by Lee. (AP)

LOS ANGELES:

US singer Chris Brown was arrested in West Palm

Leads

Beach, Florida, late on Thursday on a felony battery warrant issued by Tampa police, police said.

Brown, 29, whose previous legal troubles include assaulting singer Rihanna in 2009, was released after posting a $2,000 bond, the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office said.

Local news media reports said genre, with 31.2% of total volume (album + TEA + on-demand audio/ video SEA). That genre’s lead over the next-biggest genre, Rock, has increased from 3.8% last year (28.6% vs. 24.8%) to a whopping 8.1% this year (31.2% vs. 23.1%). R&B/Hip-Hop now represents 36.4% of all song streams and 37.5% of all audio song streams this year.

Vinyl sales continue to climb at an impressive clip, up 19.2% year over year. Other album sales formats continue to decline, with CD sales down nearly 20% and sales of digital albums declining by 21.7%. Digital track sales continue to fall faster than all other formats, with sales down 27.4%.

R&B singer-songwriter Ella Mai’s meteoric rise up the charts and in fans’ hearts brings her to the 2018 Essence Festival in New Orleans.

The 23-year-old London-born singer has never attended the festival, which for 24 years has celebrated all aspects of black culture, but she says she’s “super excited to attend and perform” at the coveted event.

Her performanc­e was scheduled for 7 pm CDT Saturday in one of the Superloung­es — an intimate club-like space set up inside the cavernous halls of the Superdome.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Ella Mai said she’s still wrapping her head around the success of her platinum hit single, “Boo’d Up,” which is currently No. 7 on the Billboard Top 100 and has since been remixed with collaborat­ions by rappers Nicki Minaj and Quavo of the Migos.

“I think going platinum is something every artist dreams about their whole life,” said Mai, who signed with DJ Mustard’s 10 Summers label about two years ago. “Everyone wants to reach the top and share the best of their abilities. I didn’t know it would be this song, which has been out for over a year. That kind of caught me off guard, but I’m super grateful and glad that my fans can relate to it.”

Mustard came across one of Mai’s 15-second video posts on Instagram in which she covered Tupac’s “Keep Ya Head Up.”

“He saw it and he (messaged) me and asked about my situation,” she recalled. “I told him I didn’t have a ‘situation’ at the time. I was working in retail. After that he told me he was in Philadelph­ia but was coming to New York and wanted to know if I wanted to come to the studio. Of course, I said ‘Of course!’ So me and three of my friends went there and we ended up recording three songs that night.”

Mai said she grew up in the church — her grandmothe­r’s a minister — with music all around her. Her parents — of Jamaican and Irish descent — were big jazz fans and named her after Ella Fitzgerald and her brother after Miles Davis. She attended a performing arts school and realized as she got older that “singing was what I was really passionate about.”

Mai said Mustard “seemed genuinely interested in me” after their impromptu recording session and wanted to get her to Los Angeles. “When I arrived there, I was in the studio all week and we ultimately produced three EPs together — ‘Time,’ ‘Change’ and ‘Ready.’ It’s just so crazy to think about. It’s almost so unbelievab­le — it’s like a fairy tale.”

Brown was arrested after a show on his Heartbreak on a Full Moon tour in West Palm Beach.

A police spokesman in Tampa, 170 miles (275 km) northwest of West Palm Beach, said that department had issued a warrant for Brown’s arrest over an incident in April 2017 when he allegedly

punched a photograph­er at a nightclub.

The photograph­er has told police Brown told him to move away at a nightclub, where he was hired to take pictures of the crowd. The photograph­er said he moved away but that Brown punched him in the mouth before leaving with his entourage, police said. (RTRS)

NEW YORK:

The principal flutist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra has filed a lawsuit saying she has been paid less than male peers, as she highlighte­d persistent gender bias in classical music.

Elizabeth Rowe, who was hired for the prestigiou­s position in 2004, said that she is paid less than the principal players of oboe, viola, trumpet, timpani and horn, who are all men.

In a complaint filed this week in a Massachuse­tts court, Rowe requested a jury trial to recover more than $200,000 in what she considers unpaid wages from the top-tier orchestra.

“The BSO knowingly discrimina­ted in compensati­on by relying upon tainted criteria known to exist in the orchestral field,” the lawsuit said. The orchestra did not immediatel­y offer comment. (AFP)

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