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BERLIN, Germany — The German music market is doing wunderbar. It grew 6.1% in 2022 over the previous year, to 2.07 billion Euros ($2.19 billion), according to the BVMI, the country’s recorded music trade organization. That’s the fourth consecutive year of growth for the market, as well as the first time in 20 years that the business – valued on retail revenue, including VAT – exceeded two billion Euros.
Although Germany came late to streaming, which didn’t overtake the country’s physical sales until 2018, digital accounted for a full 80.3% of retail revenue in 2022, and streaming came in at 73.3%. Total physical sales accounted for 19.7% of revenue.
The CD is still much healthier here than in most other markets, accounting for a full 12.9% of revenue, which makes it the industry’s second most important product after streaming.
Downloads, which never took off in Germany to the extent that they did in most other European markets, accounted for just 2.2%. Other digital revenue, including video streaming, added up to 4.8% of revenue.
Streaming is gaining fast, too: it grew by 14% compared to 2021, while CD sales declined 17.1%.
Within the physical market, vinyl still lags behind CDs, at an even 6%. That’s a significant difference from the U.S., where vinyl sales revenue long since surpassed that of CDs. (Music DVDs and Blu-ray videos accounted for half a percent of revenue, while other physical products accounted for 0.3%.) As in the U.S., vinyl sales are still growing — they were up 6% by revenue — but not as much as in 2021, when they grew 20.1%.
“The fact that the German music industry has taken the 2 billion Euro mark for the first time in two decades is good news of far more than symbolic value,” said BVMI chairman and CEO Florian Drücke. “Looking at streaming, it will be exciting to see how the price increases we have seen recently from the first providers will now play out in the wider market and also how short form videos will be able to monetize even more.”
TOMORROW X TOGETHER aren’t so much the next big thing in K-pop. They’ve already arrived.
The five members wrote their names in the record books with The Name Chapter: TEMPTATION, which blasted to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart earlier this month, their first leader.
Spanning five tracks, the EP is the South Korean vocal group’s third top 10-charting effort, following Minisode 2: Thursday’s Child (No. 4 in 2022) and The Chaos Chapter: Freeze (No. 5 in 2021).
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Everything would appear to be headed in the right direction, and with their first chart crown, TXT was anointed the top musical act in the U.S. by leading the Billboard Artist 100 chart for the first time. With that feat, TXT joins some heady company. The other K-pop acts to top the Artist 100 are BTS, BLACKPINK, SuperM, TWICE and Stray Kids.
Late night TV viewers just caught the rush. On Monday night (Feb. 27), the lads stopped by The Late Late Show With James Corden for a performance of “Sugar Rush Ride,” lifted from TEMPTATION.
If proof was needed that TXT is hot, James Corden’s intro was drowned out by the wall of sound created by the studio audience. The screams didn’t stop there.
Watch TXT’s debut U.S. TV performance below.
Spotify is putting emerging U.S. songwriters under the RADAR.
The streaming giant this week launches RADAR Songwriter in the United States, its development program which promises a leg-up for its songwriter participants.
Grammy Award-winning songwriting and production team Beach Noise is the first U.S. act to join the program, which is activated following a soft launch last year in several international territories.
Hailing from Stockton and Los Angeles, Beach Noise is the trio of Matt Schaeffer, Johnny Kosich, and Jake Kosich. The creative team has worked with the likes of Kendrick Lamar, Bakar and Baby Keem, and is credited with producing and writing six of the tracks on Lamar’s Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, which bowed at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in 2022. One of those numbers was “The Heart Part 5,” which collected a brace of rap categories at the 2023 Grammy Awards.
Beach Noise and other songwriters selected for RADAR Songwriters should benefit from a raft of spotlights and promotional pushes across Spotify’s considerable network.
Those selected will appear on a bespoke cover of the RADAR Songwriters playlist (and their recent releases are added to the playlist); they’re featured in both local and global Spotify creative marketing campaigns; participants will receive promotion on Notable, Spotify’s home for songwriters and producers, by way of a dedicated blog post or interview and social support to amplify the news; and their recent releases will be included on the Noteable Releases Playlist.
Also, explains a rep for Spotify, songwriters tapped for the campaign will receive a dedicated “Written By” playlist that will should earn prominent placement in global spots featuring emerging talent such as RADAR and the Songwriters Hub.
Previous international rising talents celebrated by the program include Natali Noor (Sweden), Alessandro La Cava (Italy), Nathan Galante (Mexico), and Chiiild (Canada).
Spotify unveiled RADAR in March 2020, its global emerging artist program that unites the streaming service’s various domestic and international programs under a single name.
Through the pandemic, Spotify’s numbers continued to grow. According to its earning report published earlier this year, the Sweden-based business ended 2022 with 205 million paid subscribers, up 5% from 195 million in Q3. At the same time, Spotify’s total monthly active users (MAUs) reached 489 million, up 7% from 456 million in Q3.
BRISBANE, Australia — Ed Sheeran’s current stadium tour of Australia is now a record-setter, smashing the attendance mark at the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground.
The English singer and songwriter enters the history books by selling more than 107,000 tickets for his concert Friday night (March 3) at the MCG, according to Frontier Touring, which is producing the domestic leg of his + – = ÷ x Tour.
There’s a chance he can break it again. Sheeran will also play the 170-year-old venue on Thursday night, for which he has sold more than 100,000 tickets with a final batch now up for sale.
“Ed loves to break a record and he’s smashed this one,” comments Matt Gudinski, CEO of Mushroom Group, parent of Frontier Touring. “It’s phenomenal that more than 200,000 people will see this amazing show at our iconic MCG. Melbourne is set for two incredibly special nights with one of the greatest performers ever.”
The MCG is hallowed turf, a multi-purpose space that has hosted countless sporting matches and concerts since it was constructed on its current site in 1853.
The G, as it’s affectionately known here, hosted the opening and closing ceremonies for the 1956 Olympic Games, it’s the spiritual home of AFL, a Test cricket ground, and its presented concerts by the biggest names in music, from David Bowie to U2, Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, the Rolling Stones, Madonna and many others.
Every stadium act is looking for a unique stage configuration. #EdSheeran nails it with his Lazy Susan setup, his bandmates isolated at four points. Birthday bloke gave us a sweet moment Friday night with his tribute to MG, “Visiting Hours.” Many sniffles where we was stood… pic.twitter.com/krbPByxLLO— Lars Brandle (@larsbrandle) February 18, 2023
Sheeran and Gudinski celebrated the achievement with a toast to the company’s founder, the late Michael Gudinski, father of Matt Gudinski. The pair flanked the permanent statue of MG outside of Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena, and shared a bottle of Penfolds.
“Toasting a 707 to the big man ahead of playing the biggest ticketed shows ever in Australian history this weekend,” writes Sheeran on his social channels.
“We miss you, you finally got me playing MCG in the round.”
When Sheeran completes his two-night stand at the MCG, his + – = ÷ x Tour of Australia and New Zealand moves on to Adelaide Oval (March 7) and climaxes March 12 at Perth’s Optus Stadium, the final in a 12-date trans-Tasman trek.
History is often made when Sheeran and Frontier Touring team up.
When Sheeran last toured Australia with Frontier Touring, in 2018, more than 1 million tickets were sold, a feat that sunk Dire Straits’ record for a single trek (950,000) that had stood for more than 30 years. Sheeran’s Divide tour that year also set a new record of 18 stadium dates across Australia and New Zealand, beating AC/DC’s old mark (14).
Paul Williams will receive the Icon Award at the 2023 Guild of Music Supervisors Awards, set for Sunday March 5 at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles. The Legacy Award will be posthumously presented to Pilar McCurry, who served as a music supervisor and senior vice president at Sony Pictures Entertainment.
“We are thrilled to honor Paul Williams and Pilar McCurry at our 13th Annual Awards,” Madonna Wade-Reed, vice president of the Guild of Music Supervisors, said in a statement. “Both have contributed immensely to the entertainment industry through their songs and supervision.”
Williams said, “There is a strange, beautiful alchemy that occurs when the perfect song placement transforms both the scene and the song. I have been graced with many opportunities to write music for picture in my career, and it feels like magic every single time. Thank you to the Guild of Music Supervisors for this incredible recognition.”
Williams won an Oscar in 1977 for best original song for co-writing “Evergreen (Love Theme From A Star Is Born)” with Barbra Streisand. He has won three Grammy Awards and has been nominated for two Primetime Emmys. He was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2001 and received that organization’s top honor, the Johnny Mercer Award, last year. Williams is also president and chairman of the board of ASCAP.
Singer/songwriter Joshua Radin is set to perform in tribute to Williams. Previous recipients of the Icon Award include Diane Warren, Quincy Jones, Burt Bacharach, Kenny Loggins and Marc Shaiman.
The Legacy Award is bestowed to a music supervisor who has made an impact within the industry. Previous recipients include Mitchell Leib, Maureen Crowe, Bob Hunka, Joel Sill, Gary Lemel, and Chris Montan.
McCurry, who died in March 2018 at the age of 53, was music supervisor for such films as Love Jones, Stomp the Yard, Set It Off, Gridlock’d and Men in Black. During her tenure with Sony, she managed 50-plus projects while music supervising more than 20 films. In addition to the aforementioned Stomp the Yard, that slate included You Got Served, Takers, The Gospel, Lakeview Terrace, This Christmas, The Karate Kid, Pursuit of Happyness and Hitch.
Prior to joining Sony, McCurry served as VP of film music & soundtracks at Will Smith’s Overbrook Entertainment from 1999-2001. Over the course of her nearly 25-year career, McCurry also worked with such artists as Beyoncé, Chris Brown, Questlove, Aaliyah, Enrique Iglesias, Lauryn Hill, 2Pac and En Vogue.
Performing at this year’s event are Guild of Music Supervisors Award nominees Gaby Moreno and Ruth B. Moreno will perform “A Song In My Heart” from The Valet, while Ruth B. will perform her song “Paper Airplanes” from Jazzman’s Blues.
Presenters include Sharon Stone, Debbie Allen, Pamela Adlon, Lindsey Blaufarb and Odeya Rush. Further information and details about tickets can be found at www.gmsawards.com
Noise Pop, the long-running San Francisco showcase for independent bands and music launched in 1993 by Kevin Arnold and later Jordan Kurland, officially turns 30 years this year. What began as a $5 show at the city’s Kennel Club (now called the Independent), rapidly grew into a citywide celebration of the city’s lesser known venues including the Bottom of the Hill, the Great American Music Hall and rooms across the Bay in Oakland and Berkeley.
What has followed are thousands of bands, decades of nurturing the Noise and an enduring legacy that embraces San Francisco’s unique past as one of the best live cities in the world.
This year’s festival features more than 100 independent bands and artists, an accompanying independent film festival and the grand opening of the Noise Pop Gallery at the new Noise Pop offices in the Mission District.
With the festivities now wrapped up, Billboard sat down with Arnold and Kurland to discuss the history of the citywide festival and what challenges lay ahead as Noise Pop enters its third decade.
Billboard: Congratulations on 30 years of Noise Pop. What are you doing to celebrate the big anniversary?
Arnold: We really made an effort to dig up some old favorites and pay tribute to some of our influences and heroes. For the last five years we’ve tried to double-down on emerging talent to push boundaries for our audience at large. We’ve got a film festival and a new office that’s right in the heart of the Mission District and we’re hosting a gallery there that shows the history of Noise Pop through design, topography and posters. And we’re reopening the Kilowatt, which is a San Francisco venue that was legendary. We had so many shows there in the nineties and it’s been gone to the live music world for quite a while. It just reopened with Noise Pop promoting some of its first shows.
What were your expectations for Noise Pop in Year 1?
Arnold: Certainly not anything close to what it’s become. It all happened very last-minute and it was very serendipitous and magical. I got a call in December from the booker at the Kennel Club. I’d been promoting shows on campus at UC Berkeley and had been tour managing Overwhelming Colorfast and the booker asked me to put together a show for January, which is usually a slow time for venues. There’s nobody on tour then and so you look to create new stuff or create stuff locally and pull together what you can.
In San Francisco, indie rock wasn’t a scene yet, it was just weird underground rock and punk rock offshoots and stuff like that. So with all these bands in town who often play, but not necessarily together, we decided to bring five of them all together at once, charge $5 and shine a light on what the city had been up to. And that was really it.
As far as aspirations go, I can say I certainly never thought I’m gonna start an annual thing. But at the same time, I didn’t just call it a show, I called it a festival, which has some implications that it might go again.
Jordan, when did you get involved?
Kurland: I came in Year 5, working with Noise Pop in the fall of 1997 for the festival in 1998. And it was already a multi-venue event prior to that. We added a lot more shows that first year, for the first few years I worked on it, we avoided any competing shows.
If there was a show at the great American Music Hall on a Wednesday night, there wasn’t another show at the Bottom of The Hill at the same time. It was basically one or two shows a day, you know, but they didn’t compete.
What brought you out to San Francisco?
Kurland: I was working for David Lefkowitz at the time. Primus was his big client. They’re a platinum-selling act that just headlined Lollapalooza. He had the Melvins and Charlie Hunter and some other stuff. I was doing some freelance journalism and I wrote an article for the San Francisco Examiner on Noise Pop and I interviewed Kevin for that. And then a few months later, a band named Creeper Lagoon hired me to manage them. And Kevin and the guitarist of that band had been former roommates, we started to get to know each other and then I offered to help out. And Kevin graciously just brought me in as a full partner from the onset.
In 2000 you expanded it to Chicago. Why didn’t it work outside of San Francisco?
Kurland: I grew up outside Chicago and saw an opportunity for a small festival. I wish that we had stuck with because it was a pretty great couple of years there. We didn’t do it to try and copy someone else. We never wanted to be South by Southwest or CMJ. We were the music festival without all the pesky music industry folks. I think we just launched at the wrong time, right as the dotcom bubble was bursting.
How did Noise Pop change with the growth of both Live Nation and AEG, especially in the Bay Area which was the epicenter of the consolidation and concert competition when Another Planet Entertainment came on the scene?
Kurland: Obviously competition’s a good thing and with those three companies, everyone’s bringing something to the table. We never really set out to be that type of promoter and when we kind of stuck our toe in the water to try to expand, it was a bit late. We just weren’t ready to make that move. But in all honestly, I look at us as cultural curators, not so much the typical music venue promoter. Goldenvoice, Live Nation and Gregg and Sherry at Another Planet do a great job. We can coexist doing what we do, and we’re not trying to steal anyone’s business or compete with anyone on that level.
In a way it can be more liberating.
Arnold: It’s interesting to me, and I’ve thought a lot about this over the months and years as we approached the 30 year mark. It went from a tight community of bands and labels and venues to what it is today. Part of that is just the history of music in concerts – first with Bill Graham coming to define what it is concert promoters do in their market to some of the early consolidation in the market that created SFX and what we think of today as the modern concert market.
We’re immune from some of those things because it’s not the game we play day-to-day. We’ve always kind of positioned ourselves from the very beginning to move slowly over time and react to how the market is changing and continue to cooperate with everyone involved in venues and music. We’ve always found a way to be collaborative. And we’ve gotten pretty good at diversifying our business in ways that most promoters don’t.
Give us a snapshot of what the Noise Pop Industries business footprint looks like.
We really became a business in 2006. We’ve been doing the side hustle for more than a decade and asked ourselves ‘what are we gonna do next?’ Ultimately, we formed Noise Pop Industries, took on an investment partner and hired staff and for that first time really ran it in a hands-on way. And we also tried to expand and operate year round and keep the staff on board. You know, the goal really for us at that point was to avoid having to rehire help every year and have some continuity.
We launched the Treasure Island Music Festival the following year and quickly realized that we needed more consistency with the business to sort of counter the ups and downs and seasonality of the festival world.. So DoTheBay.com, a website covering Bay Area music and liveshows, helped a lot.
We also started doing a lot of consulting work and third party production paid. Today, Noise Pop Industries is the total company, and includes the white label offerings we have and then there is Noise Pop Events, which produces Noise Pop and other businesses we promote and take the risk ourselves.
Our newest venture on the presents side is the Rock Quarry Amphitheater at U.C. Santa Cruz which we started exclusively promoting last year.
It’s been 17 long years since Gorillaz lorded over the U.K. Albums Chart. That could be about to change, with the virtual band’s Cracker Island (via Parlophone) taking pole position at the midweek point.
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Cracker Island starts at No. 1 on the Official Chart Update. Should it stay there when the national survey is published late Friday (March 3), it would mark the British act’s first leader since 2005’s Demon Days.
A creation of Blur frontman Damon Albarn and Tank Girl artist Jamie Hewlett, Gorillaz has clocked up six top 10 appearances on the national albums chart since their 2001 self-titled debut, which peaked at No. 3.
Recorded in London and Los Angeles, Cracker Island is the group’s eighth studio album, and features assists from the likes of Bad Bunny, Stevie Nicks, Adeleye Omotayo, Thundercat, Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker, Bootie Brown and Beck.
Coming in hot at No. 2 on the chart blast is Gracie Abrams‘ debut album Good Riddance (Interscope). The 23-year-old L.A.-born singer and songwriter has yet to make an impression on either U.K. charts, but will make her mark when the albums survey is published later this week.
U.S. pop star Adam Lambert could create some high drama of his own with a first top 5 solo appearance on the U.K. albums tally. The American Idol alum blasts to No. 4 on the midweek list with High Drama (EastWest/Rhino), which carries reinterpretations of songs by Duran Duran, Billie Eilish and more. Lambert’s previous best is a No. 8 for The Original High from 2015, though his Live Around The World LP with Queen went to No. 1 in 2020.
Based on sales and streaming data published by the Official Charts Company, collaborative project Obey Robots could complete the top 5 with One in a Thousand (My Big Sister Recordings), while Manchester rock act the Slow Readers Club (Knowledge Freedom Power at No. 7 via Velveteen), and Scottish singer and songwriter Callum Beattie (Vandals at No. 9 via 3 Beat/AATW) are eying top 10 bows.
Further down the chart blast, new albums from Shame (Food for Worms at No. 14 via Dead Oceans), Yeat (Aftërlyfe at No. 16 via Geffen), Hamish Hawk (Angel Numbers at No. 23 via Post Electric) and Don Toliver (Love Sick at No. 33 via Atlantic) are aiming for top 40 berths.
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