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Apple on pace to become top music seller

Posted Feb 27 2008, 09:53 AM by Kim Peterson
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Apple's iTunes store has surpassed Best Buy to become the #2 music retailer in the country, second only to Wal-Mart in sales. And an analyst from the NPD Group, which tracks these sorts of things, said that Apple is on track to catch Wal-Mart this year.

Apple shares dipped less than a percentage point yesterday to close at $119.15. Best Buy shares rose 3% to $46.50, and Wal-Mart shares rose 2% to $51.40.

This news says much about the way we consume music. NPD notes that 1 million people stopped buying CDs last year, a trend most apparent in young people. In 2007, 48% of teens didn't buy a single CD -- up from 38% in 2006. So retailers like Wal-Mart, Best Buy and Target -- who mainly sell physical CDs -- are going to see music sales slide.

But what does the news say about Apple? Is the rise to No. 2 a result of its own sales savvy, or is iTunes the lucky beneficiary of the CD's decline? A closer look at the numbers sheds a little more light.

Apple said today it has sold 4 billion songs on iTunes. It hit the 3 billion song mark on July 31 of last year, so it took about seven months for iTunes to sell 1 billion songs. But guess what -- it took seven months to sell the previous billion songs (from 2 billion to 3 billion). The Los Angeles Times reads into these numbers and figures that people are buying less music than they used to. I'm not so sure. The only thing you can get from these numbers is that iTunes music sales have flattened. People could still be buying music but from other sources, such as Amazon's MP3 store.

Then there's the piracy angle. NPD says that 19 percent of U.S. Internet users were active on peer-to-peer file sharing networks last year, and that music sharing grew aggressively among teens. While the number of people on those networks appears to have hit a plateau, the number of files each user downloaded increased. 

In fact, only 10% of the music acquired in the U.S. last year was downloaded legally, through iTunes or another online music retailer. Nearly 30 million people bought music legally -- 5 million more than in 2006 -- and many of those were in the 36-to-50 age group

So Apple's music sales are flat, and illegal song-swapping continues unabated. Amazon and other competitors are moving in as well. Analysts are starting to suspect iPod saturation.

So go ahead and pat yourself on the back, Apple, but watch out. In the music business, #2 isn't what it used to be.

Comments

 

I agree with Nasferatu Dl's have limits and getting the ACTUAL CD is the real deal with liner notes, pics links to download extras etc. It's worth every penny I pay for my CD's.

99.9% of new albums only have 1 or 2 good tracks, So why spend 12-20 bucks for a CD that is one tenth of a percent good?. Having the freedom to buy 1 song that I like is the american way.

ipods r were its at@   <(^_^<)

Downloaded music does not necessarily need to be "of less than full CD quality".  Most sites provide the option (rarely the default setting) of downloading "lossless" quality, which is the same quality as a CD.  You can't "fit" as many songs on a player that way, but if you ever plan to listen to the music on a good sound system, Lossless quality is the best choice.

For those who actually care, I'm just shy of 21 years on this planet. Stop reading now if that disqualifies me from "truly liking music".

For the rest, here's my take:

1) While I would not say good music no longer exists, I would say that Top 40 music is a corporate beauty contest in which the only winners are the music executives that profit unimaginably on the labor and talent (?) of young people. If the music is about the bottom line only and artists can be dumped the minute they stop selling millions of albums, you can be bloody sure creativity and variety will suffer.

2) I agree with supporting the artist - I go to live shows, which in many cases make more money for the artist than CD sales. Downloading music from iTunes greatly cuts the expense of packaging and shipping a CD, which results in less investment on the label's part. Less up-front investment=greater willingness to take risks with artists=greater variety of music. Artists might even see more of the profits, too.

3) Downloading is better for the environment. The impact of all those jewel cases, the media itself, and shipping it all across the country is significant. Also, my iPod is better crafted than any CD player I've owned (and I owned 5 that broke, which is what prompted me to jump on iPod when Windows could support it), so it will last longer without needing replacing.

4) Ripping music is a pain only if you are computer illiterate. Which, if you are, why are you even posting on a message board? Isn't there some stone tablets that need reading? Fact is, many of my CDs have taken damage by virtue of repeated listenings, but my digital music will never get scratched by a bumpy car ride.

5) I'm a huge prog metal fan...and I'm the only one in town. Trust me - the Walmart here does not carry prog metal albums. If I want to buy ANYTHING prog rock, it's either off of Amazon or iTunes.

6) Internet-based music shopping has been an amazing resource for finding new music. While I'm the only prog metal fan i know in real life, iTunes will show me what other people who buy certains artists buy that's related. That's my equivalent of listening to a new CD at a friend's house, and is really the only way I get to hear new artists.

I agree that the quality of music has declined in recent years - just listen to what is actually being played on the radio and you'll understand. It's unfortunate that CDs are dying as a medium of music but we'll have to face the reality that digital music is the way of the future. That said, there is nothing like buying the physical product and looking at the liner notes with the pictures and stuff. I just get worried about selling all of my CDs and losing all of my MP3 files should my computer crash.

To AKalafat - Oldtimer:

Incase you did not know or haven't noticed, when you download music and burn it to a CD properly with the technology that we have you get a good quality sounding CD. As for satelite radio, PLEASE!!! Thats the worst sound quality of any source of music listened to anymore! Although you do have plenty of commercial free music and plenty of stations to choose from, the sound quality is on par with a record player at best!

Actually Nasferatu, I've purchased several CDs from Itunes and whaddya know, they include notes, lyrics and in some cases even videos formatted for my ipod. Time for you to step into the twenty first century with the rest of us. Crooks?!? Bah!! Sounds like you're an idiot that doesnt bother to research his facts.

Ipods are unreliable technology - like most apple stuff.  Itunes is the devil - get your mp3s from amazon.  They have a better selection and aren't fascist about their file coding.

i think having an ipod is the best thing, but i heard form my friends that their ipod die, so im worry about it.

itunes is so much better than go to best buy or wal mart and buy a cd.

but did the singers get money from itunes????

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