- 82,610
- 117,984
The sales talk got crazy with 50. At least with Pac or Jay they would talk about being better than other rappers. 50's whole thing was "I generate more interest..." "my actual numbers are better...".
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I posted a Billboard article about how misleading Drake's sales were. Fader also had an article about how phony these numbers are.
Sales talk started with Pac and Bad Boy. Then carried on with No Limit. It's been around for a long time.
Tracks are .99-1.29.
The fact that you can count 10 single sales as an album sale is dumb as hell to me. So Hotling Bling had sold mad singles and was streamed like crazy. That **** made up more than half of Drake's first week numbers according to billboard.
I think Drake is still gold right now, approaching platinum if you took away streams. He would be platinum regardless. Tiller barely sold any albums and his **** is already platinum, which is dumb. Big Sean's album is like double or triple platinum now because of streams. He's never been a big seller. It takes away from those that actually sold mad albums. I bring up sales because like I said, I was fascinated when I seen it in The Source years ago. Thought it was real interesting to see who sold what. Sales doesn't mean **** to me when it comes to buying or checking out new music. I bought four CDs so far this year and they're all under 100K sold but they're quality music and they earned my money.
no debateWayne GOAT
Broski, seriously? You keep saying Drake is gold or maybe plat without steams! He SOLD 852k (hard copies) and over a million (with steams) first week. He sold over a million HARD COPIES in 2 weeks! As I post earlier, he's at 1.34 million HARD COPIES. Again, sold 1.34 million HARD COPIES (not including steams, the old fashion way). With steams he's over 2 million.I posted a Billboard article about how misleading Drake's sales were. Fader also had an article about how phony these numbers are.
Sales talk started with Pac and Bad Boy. Then carried on with No Limit. It's been around for a long time.
Tracks are .99-1.29.
The fact that you can count 10 single sales as an album sale is dumb as hell to me. So Hotling Bling had sold mad singles and was streamed like crazy. That **** made up more than half of Drake's first week numbers according to billboard.
I think Drake is still gold right now, approaching platinum if you took away streams. He would be platinum regardless. Tiller barely sold any albums and his **** is already platinum, which is dumb. Big Sean's album is like double or triple platinum now because of streams. He's never been a big seller. It takes away from those that actually sold mad albums. I bring up sales because like I said, I was fascinated when I seen it in The Source years ago. Thought it was real interesting to see who sold what. Sales doesn't mean **** to me when it comes to buying or checking out new music. I bought four CDs so far this year and they're all under 100K sold but they're quality music and they earned my money.
The sales talk got crazy with 50. At least with Pac or Jay they would talk about being better than other rappers. 50's whole thing was "I generate more interest..." "my actual numbers are better...".
Whichever 1 had started from the bottom on it, his best song.lol which one is his best album will? which one you like ?
Nothing was the same, which drake albums have you listened to?Whichever 1 had started from the bottom on it, his best song.
No point.....Yes, I am extremely mad Blockbuster is out of business and has been for like five years. I download HD movies in less than ten minutes, stream shows through websites and download albums illegally in less than a minute. Yes, I prefer spending $3 on a movie for one night.
If you believe drake sold over 800K through Apple his first week, then good for you. It's nice living in a fairy tale world where we believe everything we read. Selling over 800K digital albums doesn't happen, especially on just one platform. He has a deal with Apple, of course they're gonna do what they need to do so his numbers are huge.
Son goes from 450-650 in first week sales with every album, including hard copies in stores and websites and other digital retail stores. Then he sells over 800 on itunes. Yes, that all makes sense. That's just the times changing and his fanbases doubling, especially when people don't buy albums anymore.........right?
Take care, views from the dumpster, WATTBA, NWTS are the only ones I could get thru
Lol you couldn't get through tml and iyrtitl?
Last October, Drake’s “Hotline Bling” just missed topping the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart because of an unusual technicality: The viral clip was initially released exclusively on Apple Music, whose video-streaming data was not shared with Billboard. Now, Drake’s label, Republic Records, is relying on another unusual technicality to skew the numbers regarding the Toronto star’s new LP, Views — this time in Drake’s favo(u)r. Per Republic:
The album, including digital tracks and streaming album equivalents, has crossed the 1 million mark in U.S. sales and nearly 1.2 million globally, and is expected to bow at #1 on the Billboard Top 200 in North America.
OK so let’s break up that sentence real quick, because it includes two unrelated clauses that are cleverly fused to make it seem as though there is some correlation:
1. The album, including digital tracks and streaming album equivalents, has crossed the 1 million mark in U.S. sales and nearly 1.2 million globally.
2. [The album] is expected to bow at #1 on the Billboard Top 200 in North America.
Let’s start with the latter of those two statements: Views probably (maybe?) will debut at #1 on the Billboard Top 200, because Drake is a popular artist, because Views has been given a crazily elaborate and wildly expensive promotional push, and because the album’s chief competitor — Beyoncé’s Lemonade — will inevitably drop off from its own first-week numbers of 653,000 equivalent album units. So, assuming Drake does manage to beat Bey, then congrats to Drake! Well done.
Now let’s get to the ********.
The only reason Views “has crossed the 1 million mark in U.S. sales and nearly 1.2 million globally” is because of the final song on the album; a late inclusion called “Hotline Bling.” As you might recall, back in February, the RIAA changed its certification methodology to account for “streaming and download consumption patterns.” Per the RIAA’s new rules, “1,500 on-demand audio and/or video song streams = 10 track sales = 1 album sale.”
Initially, “Hotline Bling” was a loosie for Drake, but because it’s now included on Views, all those old streams are counted toward the album’s sales total. Per Forbes:
On just Spotify alone, recently released singles “One Dance” and “Pop Style” have amassed 67 million and 18 million global plays, respectively. Upon Views’ release, any of those plays that occurred in the United States will apply not only to those songs’ qualifications towards RIAA digital single certifications, but towards the album certification as well. By the RIAA’s new methodology, that amounts to potentially tens of thousands of applicable and attributable sales the second Views drops, though notably it won’t factor into its placement on Billboard’s album charts.
Furthermore, the inclusion of 2015 single “Hotline Bling” as a bonus track could send Views’ RIAA numbers skyrocketing. With well over 400 million Spotify streams worldwide and close to 700 million official YouTube plays globally on Drake’s Vevo channel, this aging hit could be the infusion that sends Views well on its way to multi-platinum status before year’s end.
Got that? It’s not that the sales numbers being bandied about by Republic are technically inaccurate; it’s that the May 2016 numbers are artificially inflated by a song released in July 2015, which didn’t even become a hit until its video was released in October 2015.
Wanna hear something funny? When “Summer Sixteen” was released this past January, some (reputable!) sources called it “the first single off Views From The 6.”
But “Summer Sixteen” wasn’t included on the final Views tracklist. So then … what was the “lead single” off Views? Let’s see what Wikipedia says…
“Hotline Bling” is a song by Canadian rapper Drake, which serves as the lead single from his fourth studio album Views. The song itself is only credited as a bonus track on Views, however the song is present on all editions of the album.
Funny, right?
Of course all this assumes Republic is using the RIAA’s formula for determining album sales. The company didn’t reveal its data’s source. It could be that they’re instead using the Nielsen formula for calculating album sales, which “utilize[/S] accepted industry benchmarks for digital and streaming data, equating 10 digital track sales from an album to one equivalent album sale, and 1,500 song streams from an album to one equivalent album sale. All of the major on-demand audio subscription services are considered, including Spotify, Beats Music, Google Play and Xbox Music.” (Notably excluding YouTube.)
Or there’s yet another option: It’s possible Republic is combining the Nielsen formula with the RIAA formula … in which case there’s absolutely no way of knowing how many people actually purchased or listened to Views during its first week of availability.
In any of these scenarios, though, the numbers being reported by Republic are wildly distorted.
So yeah, maybe Views will debut at #1 on the Billboard Top 200, but the idea that it sold 1.2 million copies in its first week (coincidentally the same number as 1989!) while limited to Apple Music subscribers and iTunes down loads is laughable — and the fact that it’s being presented to the public in this way is pretty gross.
And if it happens that Beyoncé’s numbers don’t fall off, and Drake once again fails to hit #1? Well that’ll make for some pretty sweet Lemonade … and a damn sour Apple.