Music video sales slumping as year ends



THE BALTIMORE SUN
AS 2005 COMES TO A CLOSE, THE MUSIC INDUSTRY IS SINGING THE SAME OLD TUNE: THE SALES SLUMP BLUES.
ACCORDING TO NIELSEN SOUNDSCAN, THE INFORMATION SYSTEM THAT TRACKS SALES OF MUSIC AND MUSIC VIDEO PRODUCT THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA, SALES OF MUSIC CDS IN THE U.S. ARE DOWN ALMOST 7 PERCENT FROM LAST YEAR.
ALBUM SALES IN 2004 TOTALED 480.6 MILLION; SALES THROUGH LATE OCTOBER OF THIS YEAR REACHED 446.9 MILLION.
MEANWHILE, LEGAL DIGITAL DOWNLOADING SHOWS NO SIGNS OF SLOWING DOWN. PAID DOWNLOAD SALES GREW 175 PERCENT THE FIRST HALF OF 2005. NIELSEN REPORTED DIGITAL SALES IN 2004 OF 101 MILLION.
SPURRED BY THE IPOD REVOLUTION, THAT NUMBER GREW TO 264.4 MILLION THIS YEAR. THERE ARE MORE THAN 230 ONLINE SITES WHERE CONSUMERS CAN BUY MUSIC LEGALLY, UP FROM 50 A YEAR AGO, ACCORDING TO THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE PHONOGRAPHIC INDUSTRY (IFPI).
"I THINK CD SALES ARE GOING TO CONTINUE TO DECLINE," SAYS OWEN SLOANE, A LOS ANGELES MUSIC ATTORNEY WHO SPECIALIZES IN MUSIC AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.
"I THINK THAT THE PROBLEM WITH THE CD IS THAT THEY WERE PUT OUT WITH JUST A FEW TRACKS THAT WERE VERY ATTRACTIVE TO PEOPLE, WHICH FUELED THE SINGLE SALES FOR COMPANIES LIKE APPLE ITUNES."
THE GROWTH OF BROADBAND HAS CONTRIBUTED GREATLY TO THE SURGE IN DIGITAL SALES, INCREASING PENETRATION OF MOBILE PHONES AND IPODS. THE DIGITAL MUSIC MARKET HAS TAKEN OVER THE VALUE OF THE SINGLES MARKET.