Wizkid This is how much “Sounds From The Other Side” sold in its first week The numbers are in. Here's how much Wizkid's album sold in its first week.
Wizkid This is how much “Sounds From The Other Side” sold in its first week
The numbers are in. Here's how much Wizkid's album sold in its first week.
Wizkid performs at his sold out show at the Royal Albert Hall
Wizkid is leading the charge to legendary status with his work in the UK and US projecting sounds from Africa and beyond.
And
while social media carries the pictorial evidence that his campaign is
successful and his music is crossing over into non-traditional audiences
for African music, we haven’t enough numbers to back it up and truly
give Nigerians an insight into how much the music is moving.
Numbers
are important because it is what truly determines the success of an
artist. Wizkid has a relatively new deal with Sony Music Entertainment
and RCA Records who are truly experimenting with the singer to convert
his cultural relevance into numbers and market share for their company.
That’s why they are taking a punt on him, and the numbers would have to
reflect that.
To check the numbers, we
have to rely on his body of work – “Sounds From The Other Side. The
highly promoted global release from Nigerian singer/songwriter Wizkid
was made available via Starboy/RCA Records/Sony Music International. The
project features collaborations with Drake, Major Lazer, Chris Brown, Ty Dolla $ign, Trey Songz and Bucie, along with production by Sarz, Diplo, Picard Brothers, Spellz, DJ Mustard and more.
According
to information gotten from Chart Data, a music statistics company in
the US which collates data from various sources to provide figures from
album sales, Wizkid’s “Sounds From The Other Side” didn’t fare too well
in the US.
According to data
gotten from Chart Data, “Sounds From The Other Side” sold a meagre 6,286
units in its first week in the US. That’s broken down into 2,672 pure
album purchase, 6,079 song downloads, 4,510,897 song streams. All of
these make up the first week sales for Wizkid.
How
important are an album's first-week sales? In the first calendar year
of an album's release, first-week sales accounted for 24.5% of an
album's sales in 2010, according to Nielsen. That was up from 22.8% in
2009, 22.1% in 2008, 20.4% in 2007 and 18.6% in 2005.
First-week
sales ratios have been rising in recent years because digital sales are
even more heavily skewed toward first-week sales. What this means is
that first week sales makes a fourth of an album’s total sales in a
year, and a strong start means a strong finish for most cases.
First-week
sales are greatly impacted by digital pre-sales and the online
marketing push leading up to release date. The better the label and
retailer does at those two things, the bigger an album's second-week
fade. And that's not necessarily a bad thing; it's just a reality of
digital purchasing behaviors. Digital retailers show off a new batch of
album releases each week, whereas physical retailers tend to run
multi-week price-and-positioning deals that keep titles in their
customers' eyes for a longer period of time.
Does
this mean Starboy isn’t selling properly? Not necessarily. This figure
only accounts for the US in the first week. “Sounds From The Other Side”
was released globally, with streaming numbers in various continents not
accounted for. Europe, Australia and Africa are strong markets that
just might justify Wizkid’s position on a global scale where he has more
influence than in the US
Comments
Post a Comment