USA TODAY US Edition

Drake enjoys ‘Views’ at the top of sales

Streaming activity pushes rapper past Adele’s ‘25’ overall

- Patrick Ryan

If you want to paint a picture of the ever-shifting music landscape, look no further than Views.

Drake’s latest is the top-selling album of 2016 so far with 2.6 million equivalent album units sold since April, according to Nielsen Music’s midyear report. The colossal haul reflects a tracking metric adopted by the Billboard 200 albums chart in 2014, which counts 1,500 song streams as one album sale and 10 digital track sales as a single album sold. Views accumulate­d 1.5 billion streams, 3.2 million song downloads and 1.3 million traditiona­l album sales.

That most people are choosing to stream Views — in a year when digital sales are down — shows that streaming platforms such as Apple Music, Spotify and Tidal are fast becoming the go-to methods for music consumptio­n.

“The growth of (streaming) is exploding,” says David Bakula, Nielsen Entertainm­ent’s senior vice president of analytics. With Drake, “it’s one of those things where you’ve got the right artist, the right fan base that is very active on streaming platforms and the right partner in Apple (Music),” which premiered Views exclusivel­y on its service.

But how impressive is Drake’s reign? When it comes to pure albums ( both physical and digital), Adele actually tops midyear sales with last year’s 25, which sold 1.4 million copies between Jan. 1 and June 30, 2016, and hit streaming services only in midJune. And although Drake’s One Dance is the year’s most “consumed” digital song when you factor in its 286.4 million streams, Flo Rida’s My House easily bests it in sales (1.9 million downloads vs.

Dance’s 1.4 million). Overall, album sales dropped 14% from the first six months of last year (100.3 million), while digital song sales plunged 24% (404.3 million). The latter is partly because one song hasn’t captured the zeitgeist quite like Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars’ Uptown Funk!, which amassed 4.9 million downloads in the first half of 2015 alone. “We’re not even in the ballpark of coming up against that,” Bakula says. “Unless you get a song that goes viral and is used everywhere, we’re going to have a very tough time coming back in digital tracks.”

But there are still some bright spots among the buying masses: Vinyl sales rose 3% to make up 12% of all physical music business, led by David Bowie’s Blackstar (57,000 copies sold). And while Taylor Swift’s 1989 was the only album to sell at least 1 million copies in the first half of 2015, 2016 already has laid claim to three platinum sellers: 25, Views and Beyoncé’s Lemonade, which has sold 1.2 million physical and digital copies since April.

The real test of sales will come in the second half of the year, Bakula says. Despite releasing 25 in late November, Adele managed to score the top-selling album of 2015 in just a matter of weeks.

“You look at the artists ‘due’ for an album, and you say, ‘Hey, is there going to be a new Eminem record? A Taylor record? A Katy Perry record?’ Which of these superstar artists are going to come with something in the fourth quarter that’s going to help us in our struggle to (match) last year?” Bakula says. “Last year ended very strongly; the Adele numbers were out of this world. It’s going to be very difficult to come up against that this year.”

 ?? MICHEL PORRO, GETTY IMAGES ?? But Adele tops in pure album sales with 1.4 million for 25.
MICHEL PORRO, GETTY IMAGES But Adele tops in pure album sales with 1.4 million for 25.
 ?? SAMIR HUSSEIN, WIREIMAGE ?? Streaming has pushed Drake’s Views past 2.6 million sales.
SAMIR HUSSEIN, WIREIMAGE Streaming has pushed Drake’s Views past 2.6 million sales.

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