Lady Gagaâs âBorn This Wayâ sags in sales
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Lady Gagaâs âBorn This Wayâ had a blockbuster first week, spurred by Amazonâs 99-cent sale, but since then sales have fallen more than expected. Why?
On a trip through Londonâs Heathrow Airport earlier this week, Lady Gaga tumbled off the impossibly high heels she was wearing and took a nose dive onto the linoleum floor. She quickly righted herself and continued on her way; her new album, however, isnât showing the same resilience.
Five weeks after posting the biggest first-week sales figure for any album in more than six years â spurred by a two-day sale during which Amazon.com sold the album for 99 cents â âBorn This Wayâ has slipped to No. 8 on Billboardâs Top 200 Albums chart on sales last week of just 49,000 copies â thatâs only slightly ahead of âAlpocalypse,â the latest from novelty artist âWeird Alâ Yankovic, with a single parodying Gaga.
Most in the record industry had expected âBorn This Wayâ to show a steep drop in its second week of release, although perhaps not as steep as the 84% plunge it saw after the stellar first week. But the slowdown for âBorn This Wayâ has continued to be more pronounced than many anticipated. Gaga spent just two weeks at No. 1 before Adele returned to the top of the chart.
âI canât remember that ever happening like this -- selling so much and then going down to so little, so quickly,â said Brad Sheldon, music buyer at the Amoeba Music store in Hollywood. âI had to look really hard to find it on our bestseller list. Weâre stuck with a lot of copies now.â
Music industry analysts say there are probably multiple reasons for the swift decline of Gagaâs album. Among the potential problems: Amazon.comâs bargain-basement sale price devalued it in the minds of potential subsequent buyers; Gaga fans are more interested in singles than albums; her so-called âlittle monstersâ are more likely to share or illegally download her music than other artistsâ fans are.
The full effect of Amazonâs 99-cent âBorn This Wayâ sale, a promotion for its new cloud service, has yet to be determined authoritatively. But it didnât endear her or her record company -- even though the decision was Amazonâs, which took a multimillion-dollar loss on the deal -- to other merchants who found themselves stuck trying to sell downloads and physical CDs for much higher prices.
âWe definitely werenât a fan of them doing that,â Amoebaâs Sheldon said. âIt sort of devalues everything after that, and it raises the question of whether sheâs going to have to do that again on her next record.â
Meanwhile, British soul singer Adeleâs â21,â the album that âBorn This Wayâ displaced at No. 1 upon selling 1,108,000 copies during its first week of release, sold more than double what Gagaâs album did last week â more than 101,000 copies -- keeping it at No. 3 behind new releases from R&B singer-songwriter Jill Scott and alt-rocker Bon Iver. Adeleâs album has sold 2.4 million copies since its release in February, making it the biggest-selling album of the year so far.
The Lady Gaga albumâs sales arc to date also is in striking contrast to Taylor Swiftâs âSpeak Now,â which last fall logged first-week sales of 1,047,000 upon release. By its fifth week, âSpeak Nowâ had sold more than 2 million copies, compared with âBorn This Wayâsâ five-week sum of 1.5 million. (Lady Gagaâs previous album, âThe Fame Monster,â has sold 4.2 million copies in the U.S., according to Nielsen SoundScan.) âSpeak Nowâ yielded the No. 1 slot to new albums from Susan Boyle and Kanye West before returning to the top of the chart for four more weeks at the end of 2010 and the beginning of 2011. It has sold more than 3.5 million copies in eight months.
One big difference: Swiftâs album came out at the height of the holiday sales season, when music sales are traditionally at their peak. But another factor may be more relevant: Swift and Adele have been embraced by middle-aged and older listeners as well as the youth audience that typically determines whoâs on the pop charts.
Swift âalso has the country fans who actually still believe in buying an album,â said Keith Caulfield, associate director of charts for Billboard. âShe appeals to consumers who still buy albums and who still buy a number of them.
âItâs the same with Adele -- sheâs still being discovered by people who really want someone they consider to be a âtrue artist,â someone who really resonates as honest and true, who has a wonderful voice thatâs appealing to older people and younger people, kind of like Norah Jones and Amy Winehouse.â
Caulfield said that today the anomaly isnât Gaga but Adele and Swift, who buck the trend of ever decreasing shelf life for pop albums.
Thereâs also the matter of hit singles to drive album sales. âEdge of Glory,â the current single from âBorn This Way,â peaked at No. 3 on Billboardâs Hot 100 chart and has dropped to No. 6 this week. Without a major hit to sustain sales, album sales typically suffer.
But the story may not be over yet: Caulfield noted that fans of an artist such as Gaga frequently download a new single immediately, pushing it high on the chart out of the gate, but it can take weeks for radio to catch up and expose it to a broader swath of listeners.
Still, the overall effect of album sales is no longer what it once was.
âWhatâs most important to Gaga is that fans are familiar with and excited by her new material,â Billboard editorial director Bill Werde wrote recently. âThat way she can make money leveraging those fans, be it through a partnership with a brand that wants to reach said fans or concert ticket sales.
âIt isnât inconceivable to think of a day soon when Gaga and other superstar acts will use radio and social networks and giveaways to create massive international hits -- not defined by sales but by the number of fans that are familiar with and excited by the music.â RELATED:
Lady Gagaâs âBorn This Wayâ: The path to the 99 cent album
Criticâs Notebook: Adeleâs quiet power amid the pop girl riot
Lady Gaga tops the 1million mark in first-week album sales
-- Randy Lewis