monkeydluffy
Gold Member
R.I.P. Nipsey Hussle | R.I.P. Juice WRLD | R.I.P. Pop Smoke | R.I.P. King Von
Joined: July 2017
Posts: 534
|
Post by monkeydluffy on Jan 12, 2019 2:34:47 GMT -5
So when is Ariana's next album coming out? I still think its far too early for the follow up to Sweetener. And it's not like Sweetener was a flop either, it did very well from the get go, so why rush all the subsequent singles at the risk of them sabotaging each other? (yes TUN did well, but it's rise at radio and prospects for #1 at pop are seeming to be more of a challenge). If TUN did so well right away, they could have waited a bit and it could easily do just as well, and it seems to have affected Breathin's chart placement, probably costing it top ten (which in turn probably thwarted GIAW, as it was released too soon after that as well); it just seems very unwise; pop artists are still very different from hip-hop artists, you can't just blitz them all at once and release 10 singles and expect them to all do well. It doesn't make economic sense either - the tried and true formula I think still stands for pop artists: release one single at a time with reasonable intervals in between to promote the album and maximize revenue from both singles and the album, and one album can last well over a year. It seems like the industry figured this out over forty years ago: why put out the expense of releasing 2 or 3 albums a year when you can release just one a year, or even more infrequently, save some production and marketing costs, and bring in just as much revenue, and in many cases securing higher chart placements. It seems like it was a bold try where she wanted to buck this trend, but it doesn't quite seem to be working. She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 2:59:24 GMT -5
So when is Ariana's next album coming out? I still think its far too early for the follow up to Sweetener. And it's not like Sweetener was a flop either, it did very well from the get go, so why rush all the subsequent singles at the risk of them sabotaging each other? (yes TUN did well, but it's rise at radio and prospects for #1 at pop are seeming to be more of a challenge). If TUN did so well right away, they could have waited a bit and it could easily do just as well, and it seems to have affected Breathin's chart placement, probably costing it top ten (which in turn probably thwarted GIAW, as it was released too soon after that as well); it just seems very unwise; pop artists are still very different from hip-hop artists, you can't just blitz them all at once and release 10 singles and expect them to all do well. It doesn't make economic sense either - the tried and true formula I think still stands for pop artists: release one single at a time with reasonable intervals in between to promote the album and maximize revenue from both singles and the album, and one album can last well over a year. It seems like the industry figured this out over forty years ago: why put out the expense of releasing 2 or 3 albums a year when you can release just one a year, or even more infrequently, save some production and marketing costs, and bring in just as much revenue, and in many cases securing higher chart placements. It seems like it was a bold try where she wanted to buck this trend, but it doesn't quite seem to be working. She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal. She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye.
|
|
jarhys
Gold Member
Joined: March 2014
Posts: 958
|
Post by jarhys on Jan 12, 2019 3:01:58 GMT -5
Could it renter then if it gets above 26? Yes, as it is already behind the 25-52 week rule. And given the featured artist in it, the streaming gonna be huge, but I got no idea for sales and airplay. It will be epic for Believer reenter the chart. A song that already charted two year end charts.
|
|
𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿
Diamond Member
Unsteady Weirdo
𝓪 𝓽𝓸𝓻𝓽𝓾𝓻𝓮𝓭 𝓹𝓸𝓮𝓽
Joined: December 2016
Posts: 10,804
My Charts
|
Post by 𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿 on Jan 12, 2019 3:09:26 GMT -5
Yes, as it is already behind the 25-52 week rule. And given the featured artist in it, the streaming gonna be huge, but I got no idea for sales and airplay. It will be epic for Believer reenter the chart. A song that already charted two year end charts. And to think they almost got to have Radioactive get on 3 year-end charts, let's see if Believer can make it a possibility.
|
|
monkeydluffy
Gold Member
R.I.P. Nipsey Hussle | R.I.P. Juice WRLD | R.I.P. Pop Smoke | R.I.P. King Von
Joined: July 2017
Posts: 534
|
Post by monkeydluffy on Jan 12, 2019 4:42:16 GMT -5
She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal. She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. I agree it’s a risk, but she seems willing to risk that to change how pop music is made and viewed. I’m behind her on it. I hope she succeeds.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 5:47:15 GMT -5
She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. I agree it’s a risk, but she seems willing to risk that to change how pop music is made and viewed. I’m behind her on it. I hope she succeeds. To make it viewed as disposable and only appealing for a short time? If she succeeds, it'll lead to the death of pop hits among the general public, making fanbases and music as a whole more insular.
|
|
|
Post by Golden Bluebird on Jan 12, 2019 9:13:50 GMT -5
kworb.net/airadio/*** = Dropped or added a format Overall AI (Top 20) - 2019/01/12 1. (=) PANIC! AT THE DISCO - High Hopes (165.672) (-0.365) 2. (=) MARSHMELLO - Happier f/Bastille (139.078) (-0.652) 3. (=) HALSEY - Without Me (132.166) (+1.669) 4. (=) ARIANA GRANDE - thank u, next (124.707) (+1.027) 5. (=) ARIANA GRANDE - Breathin (121.973) (-0.663) 6. (=) MAROON 5 - Girls Like You (109.682) (-0.898) 7. (=) BENNY BLANCO, HALSEY & KHALID - Eastside (92.728) (-0.720) 8. (=) TRAVIS SCOTT - Sicko Mode (87.680) (+0.205) 9. (=) 5 SECONDS OF SUMMER - Youngblood (85.266) (-0.629) 10. (=) KHALID X NORMANI - Love Lies (75.465) (-0.376) 11. (=) POST MALONE & SWAE LEE - Sunflower (74.619) (+1.424) 12. (=) POST MALONE - Better Now (71.704) (-1.178) 13. (=) BAD BUNNY - MIA f/Drake (67.532) (-0.482) 14. (=) ELLA MAI - Trip (66.115) (+0.114) 15. (=) DJ SNAKE/SELENA/OZUNA/CARDI B - Taki Taki (62.238) (-0.239) 16. (+1) TAYLOR SWIFT - Delicate (59.430) (-0.094) 17. (-1) DAN + SHAY - Speechless (59.256) (-0.299) 18. (+1) DUSTIN LYNCH - Good Girl (59.065) (+0.920) 19. (+3) KODAK BLACK - Zeze f/Travis Scott & Offset (57.862) (+0.369) 20. (=) DAN + SHAY - Tequila (57.651) (-0.017) Others: 28. (+1) JASON ALDEAN - Girl Like You (51.751) (+0.832) 36. (=) LIL WAYNE - Uproar (44.909) (-0.754) 39. (+2) FLIPP DINERO - Leave Me Alone (42.542) (+0.537) 41. (-2) KIP MOORE - Last Shot (41.900) (-2.136) 45. (+5) CARDI B - Money (37.957) (+0.962)
|
|
owenlovesmusic
4x Platinum Member
Always 100
Joined: December 2017
Posts: 4,994
|
Post by owenlovesmusic on Jan 12, 2019 13:23:07 GMT -5
Lost In the Fire debuts at #7 on US Spotify, Dancing With A Stranger at #10
|
|
djkelly1
Charting
Joined: July 2007
Posts: 48
|
Post by djkelly1 on Jan 12, 2019 13:52:05 GMT -5
Several of the 1990's Hot 100 Y/E charts are so bizarre. For example, let's take 1990. • Nothing Compares 2 U - Sinead O' Connor: #1 for 4 weeks / Top 10 for 10 weeks / YE #3 • Vision of Love - Mariah Carey: #1 for 4 weeks / Top 10 for 8 weeks / YE #6 • Hold On - Wilson Phillips: #1 for 1 week / Top 10 for 9 weeks / YE #1 "Vision of Love" & "Nothing Compares 2 U" were the longest running #1's of 1990, which had two of the longest runs in the top 10 that year also, and yet "Hold On" was the YE #1? Even Madonna's "VOGUE" and Bel Div Devoe's "Poison" had longer runs at #1 and in the top 10 (although the latter peaked at #3). How did BILLBOARD calculate the YE charts during these times? Did songs that spent more time in the top 20 or on the chart overall weigh more because the above doesn't make sense to me. I always wondered that myself. I remember this vividly because it was the first year I actively followed the charts, and I was shocked that Hold On was #1 for the year.
|
|
jebsib
Platinum Member
Joined: September 2004
Posts: 1,925
|
Post by jebsib on Jan 12, 2019 14:06:27 GMT -5
You also have to really factor in weeks on the Hot 100, not just top 10. Hold On was on the chart for 25 weeks… That is nothing in today's age, but was still pretty unusual back then. These are the days when 4 years would go by between songs that spent 10 weeks in the top 10 or 7 years went by with a song spending more than a month at #1. Crazy to contemplate these days.
|
|
Envoirment
Diamond Member
Joined: December 2009
Posts: 13,698
|
Post by Envoirment on Jan 12, 2019 14:42:14 GMT -5
I don't see anything wrong with Ariana releasing so much music - like many other rap/hip-hop artists do. People in the 50s/60s would release multiple albums a year. Given how big she is, it'll likely benefit her.
|
|
kindofbiased
Platinum Member
Rough surf on the coast
Joined: May 2017
Posts: 1,759
|
Post by kindofbiased on Jan 12, 2019 15:07:33 GMT -5
Not sure if anyone can answer this but does anyone know what happened to Billboard making videos for the top 10? It's not that big of a deal but I've noticed that they haven't released one since the December 1st chart, which is kinda weird to me since they've been a (mostly) weekly thing for over 4 years now.
|
|
Au$tin
Diamond Member
Pop Culture Guru
Grrrrrrrrrr. Fuckity fuck why don't you watch my film before you judge it? FURY.
Joined: August 2008
Posts: 54,621
My Charts
Pronouns: He/his/him
|
Post by Au$tin on Jan 12, 2019 15:20:00 GMT -5
Not sure if anyone can answer this but does anyone know what happened to Billboard making videos for the top 10? It's not that big of a deal but I've noticed that they haven't released one since the December 1st chart, which is kinda weird to me since they've been a (mostly) weekly thing for over 4 years now. This was brought up a few pages back. The general agreement seems to be copyright issues. YouTube and record labels are getting asinine in their take down of videos that use copyrighted material (despite in this case it literally being only 15 second clips at most), and it's likely affecting Billboard's videos.
|
|
iHype.
4x Platinum Member
Joined: October 2014
Posts: 4,714
|
Post by iHype. on Jan 12, 2019 16:06:07 GMT -5
You also have to really factor in weeks on the Hot 100, not just top 10. Hold On was on the chart for 25 weeks… That is nothing in today's age, but was still pretty unusual back then. These are the days when 4 years would go by between songs that spent 10 weeks in the top 10 or 7 years went by with a song spending more than a month at #1. Crazy to contemplate these days. And not to mention, the old way Year-Ends were compiled just put more emphasis on overall weeks charting. The modern year-end/all-time charts way essentially places emphasis on songs with most weeks top 10/top 20. If I'm not mistaken, pre-Soundscan the formula for year-ends was like #1 = 100 points, #2 = 99 points, etc. So a song charting two weeks at #50 would equal 1 week #1. Today, on the all-time/decade-end formula, 20 weeks at #50 is equal to a single week at #1. And also with the year-end, using real points accumulated weekly, you'd need multiple months of charting in lower positions to equal 1 week in higher positions. In a pre-Soundscan methodology, songs like Radioactive/I'm Yours would be heavily favored for just charting long whether or not they were in higher positions for awhile. In a post-Soundscan methodology, songs like God's Plan are favored over them, songs which spend a huge amount at #1/top 10 even if they fall like a rock after. However Shape of You/Uptown Funk! songs which spend a crazy amount of time at the top and a crazy amount charting overall are favored the ultimate most.
|
|
mackattack
Charting
Joined: November 2018
Posts: 221
|
Post by mackattack on Jan 12, 2019 16:42:44 GMT -5
She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal. She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. Girlie started the My Everything just a few months after Yours Truly came out and that went on to be her most successful era at the time. And I mean Ari’s been a relevant name in pop for a while now so I don’t know if she can truly fall off unless her next album is trash.
|
|
iHype.
4x Platinum Member
Joined: October 2014
Posts: 4,714
|
Post by iHype. on Jan 12, 2019 16:51:49 GMT -5
Justin Bieber had Where Are U Now, What Do You Mean, Sorry, Love Yourself, Let Me Love You, Cold Water, Despacito, I'm the One back to back. And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries.
Ariana will be fine.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 17:03:16 GMT -5
Justin Bieber had Where Are U Now, What Do You Mean, Sorry, Love Yourself, Let Me Love You, Cold Water, Despacito, I'm the One back to back. And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries. Ariana will be fine. I'm pretty sure "2U" and "Friends" did far worse than most of what he's done, but that's not comparable as a lot of those are one-off features he did.
|
|
iHype.
4x Platinum Member
Joined: October 2014
Posts: 4,714
|
Post by iHype. on Jan 12, 2019 17:36:39 GMT -5
Justin Bieber had Where Are U Now, What Do You Mean, Sorry, Love Yourself, Let Me Love You, Cold Water, Despacito, I'm the One back to back. And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries. Ariana will be fine. I'm pretty sure "2U" and "Friends" did far worse than most of what he's done, but that's not comparable as a lot of those are one-off features he did. 'And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries.' Friends reached #2 in UK, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and Austria. Reached top 5 in Canada, Germany, and peaked top 10 in various other countries. 2U reached top 5 in UK, Australia, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, Germany, France, and other countries.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 17:42:17 GMT -5
I'm pretty sure "2U" and "Friends" did far worse than most of what he's done, but that's not comparable as a lot of those are one-off features he did. 'And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries.' Friends reached #2 in UK, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and Austria. Reached top 5 in Canada, Germany, and peaked top 10 in various other countries. 2U reached top 5 in UK, Australia, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, Germany, France, and other countries. For reaching Top 5 in all of those countries, it had a pretty piss-poor year-end position in most of those. Same with "Friends". For being #2, only making #93 on the year-end is pathetic.
|
|
renaboss
Platinum Member
I don't want to miss a thing.
|
Post by renaboss on Jan 12, 2019 18:10:22 GMT -5
'And 2U + Friends throughout several other countries.' Friends reached #2 in UK, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and Austria. Reached top 5 in Canada, Germany, and peaked top 10 in various other countries. 2U reached top 5 in UK, Australia, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, Germany, France, and other countries. For reaching Top 5 in all of those countries, it had a pretty piss-poor year-end position in most of those. Same with "Friends". For being #2, only making #93 on the year-end is pathetic. You're quite a negative person, aren't you? New year new life, my friend. Let the light shine through!
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 18:12:00 GMT -5
For reaching Top 5 in all of those countries, it had a pretty piss-poor year-end position in most of those. Same with "Friends". For being #2, only making #93 on the year-end is pathetic. You're quite a negative person, aren't you? New year new life, my friend. Let the light shine through! Sorry, I don't believe in that "new year, new life" crap. I was simply arguing numbers. Those songs did far worse than the other songs at the time. He was overexposed.
|
|
Au$tin
Diamond Member
Pop Culture Guru
Grrrrrrrrrr. Fuckity fuck why don't you watch my film before you judge it? FURY.
Joined: August 2008
Posts: 54,621
My Charts
Pronouns: He/his/him
|
Post by Au$tin on Jan 12, 2019 18:14:50 GMT -5
You're quite a negative person, aren't you? New year new life, my friend. Let the light shine through! Sorry, I don't believe in that "new year, new life" crap. We been knew.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 12, 2019 19:24:03 GMT -5
She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal. She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. Her songs has never had longevity, most pop songs don't so she not really risking anything
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 19:35:13 GMT -5
She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. Her songs has never had longevity, most pop songs don't so she not really risking anything A lot of pop songs have longevity due to the radio on the charts. And I meant in the public eye. A lot of these hip-hop "hits" won't be remembered in 10 years, but a lot of the big radio hits will. Because streaming is mainly fanbase and playlist driven, not general public driven.
|
|
|
Post by Exclusive on Jan 12, 2019 19:37:19 GMT -5
Her songs has never had longevity, most pop songs don't so she not really risking anything A lot of pop songs have longevity due to the radio on the charts. And I meant in the public eye. A lot of these hip-hop "hits" won't be remembered in 10 years, but a lot of the big radio hits will. Because streaming is mainly fanbase and playlist driven, not general public driven.H How does one evaluate longevity 'in the public eye'?
|
|
85la
3x Platinum Member
Joined: July 2007
Posts: 3,902
|
Post by 85la on Jan 12, 2019 19:37:28 GMT -5
You also have to really factor in weeks on the Hot 100, not just top 10. Hold On was on the chart for 25 weeks… That is nothing in today's age, but was still pretty unusual back then. These are the days when 4 years would go by between songs that spent 10 weeks in the top 10 or 7 years went by with a song spending more than a month at #1. Crazy to contemplate these days. And not to mention, the old way Year-Ends were compiled just put more emphasis on overall weeks charting. The modern year-end/all-time charts way essentially places emphasis on songs with most weeks top 10/top 20. If I'm not mistaken, pre-Soundscan the formula for year-ends was like #1 = 100 points, #2 = 99 points, etc. So a song charting two weeks at #50 would equal 1 week #1. Today, on the all-time/decade-end formula, 20 weeks at #50 is equal to a single week at #1. And also with the year-end, using real points accumulated weekly, you'd need multiple months of charting in lower positions to equal 1 week in higher positions. I don't think that was the case. I remember reading from a Billboard source somewhere that, pre-Soundscan, each week at #1 would get a bonus 50 points, maybe similar bonuses were given once a song reached other thresholds up the chart, though it's not entirely clear, nor how many base points are given. For instance, I don't think Billboard has ever stated explicitly that position #100 gives one point, position #99 gives 2 points, position #10 gives 90 points, etc., they just say generally that "songs are awarded the most amount of points at #1 and the least amount at #100," but they don't say specifically how many points (if someone has a source where they do say this, I'd love to see it!). It also probably changed from year to year, for example in 1964 Can't Buy Me Love spent 10 weeks on the chart but 5 at #1, yet it was only #52 year-end, so maybe they didn't give very high bonuses to #1 during that time. There is a clear correlation though that the more weeks and at higher positions a song spends on the chart, especially at #1 and towards the top 10, the higher it will rank year-end and all-time, but of course this can made up for if the song spends enough weeks at lower positions, which was probably the case with Hold On.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 19:39:57 GMT -5
A lot of pop songs have longevity due to the radio on the charts. And I meant in the public eye. A lot of these hip-hop "hits" won't be remembered in 10 years, but a lot of the big radio hits will. Because streaming is mainly fanbase and playlist driven, not general public driven.H How does one evaluate longevity 'in the public eye'? Simple. Who's going to care about any of these songs/albums like they do something like "Bohemian Rhapsody", or "Thriller", or for more modern examples, albums from Adele and Taylor Swift? This is what happens when you overexpose yourself by constantly releasing material. It's just to pander to the fanbase.
|
|
mackattack
Charting
Joined: November 2018
Posts: 221
|
Post by mackattack on Jan 12, 2019 20:04:38 GMT -5
How does one evaluate longevity 'in the public eye'? Simple. Who's going to care about any of these songs/albums like they do something like "Bohemian Rhapsody", or "Thriller", or for more modern examples, albums from Adele and Taylor Swift? This is what happens when you overexpose yourself by constantly releasing material. It's just to pander to the fanbase. No correlation
|
|
|
Post by hot100predictions on Jan 12, 2019 20:38:37 GMT -5
She says she doesn’t want to abide by pop music standards. She wants to release as much music as she can and aspires to have a release schedule like rap music stars. I read in an article she will release music whenever she feels like it and not care about if it’s too much at one time, even having 2 albums in one year if she wanted to. She has such a huge fan base, that idea can work. I personally think more pop artists should follow this ideal. She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. Says the K-Pop fan no taste
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Jan 12, 2019 20:57:15 GMT -5
She's very much risking overexposure and killing longevity for any of her releases within the public eye. Says the K-Pop fan no taste I don't like K-pop.
|
|