Showing posts with label billboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label billboard. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2018

October's Very Own Becomes 1st Artist with 1 Billion Streams in Single Week







October's Very Own, Aubrey Graham aka Drake is succeeding all expectations for his latest album Scorpion. Drake is now the 1st artist to have 1 billion streams in a single week. Before Drake, Post Malone came pretty close with his latest album Beerbongs & Bentleys with just under 700 million streams. These numbers are crazy. Hands down he should have the No.1 album on the Billboard Hot 100 once all the numbers come in. This has me wondering is 1 Trillion streams possible? Time will tell.

Monday, June 25, 2018

Nas Claims Another Top 10 Album on Billboard Top 200









On June 15th, Nas dropped Nasir, his 12th studio album. This 7-track Kanye Produced album debut on #5 of the Billboard Top 200 Charts. This is his 12th Top 10 album. Which means all of his albums have been in the Top 10 for the 1st week sales. Nasir sold 77,000 equivalent album units. 44,000 of those were traditional album sales according to Billboard. Stream Nasir below via Apple Music.





Sunday, January 21, 2018

Billboard Top Charting Songs All Share A Common Quality

To reach the top of the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, a song has to be unique — but it can't be too unique or divergent from the norm, according to a new study. 
Business school researchers at Columbia and INSEAD analyzed 26,000 Billboard hits between 1958 and 2016 and found that the highest-charting singles reached a mathematical "sweet spot" between familiar trends and a novel sound. 
The study, published in the American Sociological Review,broke down each hit song by attributes like key, tempo, mode, and time signature. It then assigned each song a "typicality" score — a measure of how similar the track was to other songs released around the same time.
The songs that had a "somewhat below average typicality score" tended to do better on the Hot 100 chart, according to the study's co-author, Michael Mauskapf.
"To have the best chance of reaching the very top of the charts, a song needs to stand out from its competition, but not so much as to alienate listeners,” Mauskapf wrote in a release about the team's analysis.
The study cites Adele's music as an example of "perfect typicality," in that she has found massive success with a "little bit of differentiation" from popular-music norms.
"What becomes popular next is likely to be slightly differentiated from the last round of hits, leading to a constant evolution of what is popular," wrote study co-author Noah Askin. "Popularity is a moving target, but the context always remains relevant. This is at least as much art as it is science."

Source: BusinessInsider.com