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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2020 22:06:59 GMT -5
I do think we are gonna get a huge dance boom in the COVID fall-out, I expect lots of upbeat tracks becoming hits in the next few years as the lowkey stuff will kind of fall out of style. Cuz, you know. Once everyone is vaccinated and back on track, people are gonna wanna party all the time. As long as we get more Roses, I will be happy I think we'll see more disco and 80's synth pop influenced hits, because we don't already have enough of those. And we'll probably see more throwbacks to the late 00's/early 10's era of music, I honestly wouldn't be shocked if Pitbull or Flo Rida made a comeback next year. I'm predicting that the period after the vaccine becomes widespread and Covid fades away will be a transitional period from the downbeat, Trap-dominated Late 2010s and Early 2020s to the Pop-dominated Mid-2020s (2022-2026 or so). Disco and Synthpop throwbacks are a proven formula for hits (just look at Blinding Lights, Say So or most of Bruno Mars' career), and I concur that artists will tap into the Gen-Z Late 2000s-Early 2010s nostalgia well (although I'd wanna see more 90s throwbacks in the 2020s). Beside, the charts tend to oscillate between Pop and Hip-Hop, and I think the pendulum is swinging back towards Pop now (just look at the success of Dua Lipa for example). I don't know what this will mean for artists that got big off of downbeat, moody music (Billie, Posty, any number of Trap rappers), but I think they have enough clout to make it. Either way, the next two years will prove pivotal for the direction of Popular Music in the 2020s. As for Pitbull and Flo Rida making comebacks, imagine if LMFAO released Party Rock Anthem Part 2.
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singingrulebritannia
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Post by singingrulebritannia on Dec 27, 2020 22:26:33 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right
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kingvavis
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Post by kingvavis on Dec 27, 2020 22:29:55 GMT -5
^^ I disagree that the pendulum is swinging back towards pop. I would argue that 2019 was more pop oriented compared to 2020. Most of the big hits this year we're hip hop, The Box, Life Is Good, WAP, ROCKSTAR, Toosie Slide, Savage, What's Poppin, Blueberry Faygo, etc. The pop hits of the year significantly relied on radio which is gonna continue to lose audience throughout the decade where as streaming is gonna persist to the benefit of hip hop.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2020 22:34:43 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right Well it can't be that many years, as it hasn't been that many years since pop last dominated. Like maybe half a decade.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2020 22:40:04 GMT -5
^^ I disagree that the pendulum is swinging back towards pop. I would argue that 2019 was more pop oriented compared to 2020. Most of the big hits this year we're hip hop, The Box, Life Is Good, WAP, ROCKSTAR, Toosie Slide, Savage, What's Poppin, Blueberry Faygo, etc. The pop hits of the year significantly relied on radio which is gonna continue to lose audience throughout the decade where as streaming is gonna persist to the benefit of hip hop. Seven of the top ten and 13 of the top 20 for the year were not hip hop. as those radio listeners transition to streaming, its likely they will demand the same type of music they demanded at radio, rather than suddenly All becoming hip hop fans. I expect all other genres to continue to grow significantly at streaming as radio and sales continue to die. Whereas most hip hop genre listeners already made the transition over the past few years.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2020 23:54:37 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2020 23:56:36 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right Well it can't be that many years, as it hasn't been that many years since pop last dominated. Like maybe half a decade. Yeah, I'd say that Hip-Hop eclipsed Pop in Late 2015, so it's been exactly five years.
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iHype.
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Post by iHype. on Dec 27, 2020 23:57:51 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. I'd say in 1993-1996 and 2002-2007 it was R&B that was more represented than Hip-Hop. But yes, it's been a washing machine between R&B/Hip-Hop and Pop the past decades. Although I'd say in the 2000s even Rock/Alternative could be argued as more popular than Pop too.
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atg
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Post by atg on Dec 27, 2020 23:59:58 GMT -5
If we get more songs like "ROSES" I'll probably never listen to the radio again. Its funny that ily followed the exact same structure as roses, and it worked..
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Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2020 0:42:03 GMT -5
I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. I'd say in 1993-1996 and 2002-2007 it was R&B that was more represented than Hip-Hop. But yes, it's been a washing machine between R&B/Hip-Hop and Pop the past decades. Although I'd say in the 2000s even Rock/Alternative could be argued as more popular than Pop too. I was thinking of including R&B to make it Hip Hop/R&B, but I decided against it, but yes, R&B was huge in the 90s and much of the 2000s.
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gabe
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Post by gabe on Dec 28, 2020 0:47:00 GMT -5
^^ I disagree that the pendulum is swinging back towards pop. I would argue that 2019 was more pop oriented compared to 2020. Most of the big hits this year we're hip hop, The Box, Life Is Good, WAP, ROCKSTAR, Toosie Slide, Savage, What's Poppin, Blueberry Faygo, etc. The pop hits of the year significantly relied on radio which is gonna continue to lose audience throughout the decade where as streaming is gonna persist to the benefit of hip hop. I mean sure, if you only list hip hop songs and ignore all the huge pop songs then yeah maybe hip hop dominated. But if you look at the 2020 year end, pop songs are at #1 (Blinding Lights), #2 (Circles), #4 (Don't Start Now), #6 (Adore You), #8 (Memories), and #10 (Someone You Loved) while hip hop only has The Box at #3, Rockstar at #5, and Life is Good at #7. This extends even further down the chart too: from 11-20, there's 5 pop songs, 1 country song, and 4 hip hop songs.
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singingrulebritannia
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Post by singingrulebritannia on Dec 28, 2020 1:07:57 GMT -5
I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. I know all about the cycles. What I'm criticizing is the impatience of popheads who can't stand when rap is dominant, so they leap as soon as possible at anything (or even nothing) they can use to say the next year is going to be when pop comes back and shoves everything else into the corner. I've been hearing the same thing every Winter since 2018. And I don't think Rap and R&B fans complain as much when Pop is dominant. And I'm not saying you (or kcdawg) are the most guilty of this, you just happen to be the people opening the discussion this time. Others on this forum in the past have been more clearly disdainful while making their proclamations.
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fridayteenage
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Post by fridayteenage on Dec 28, 2020 1:13:21 GMT -5
I wonder how long it'll take for the #1 seller to be sub-10k. I thought it would happen this year, but totc is predicting last week was topped by dynamite with 15k.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2020 1:16:55 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. I think there's another way to look at that breakdown. That seems to follow the changing consumption methods quite closely. Hip hop seems to thrive when there's a dramatic change in consumption patterns, until such time as things level out again and pop dominates the change. Rinse and repeat. if pattern follows look for pop fans to adopt streaming over radio. Hip hop won't die off but will simply be outpaced by pop. Until the next consumption format comes along.
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gs
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Post by gs on Dec 28, 2020 1:23:32 GMT -5
I wonder how long it'll take for the #1 seller to be sub-10k. I thought it would happen this year, but totc is predicting last week was topped by dynamite with 15k. This week would take it under normal circumstances, but I think DYN/LGO might be above 10K again since they're trying to re-peak it
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jthentic
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Post by jthentic on Dec 28, 2020 1:52:49 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. Corrections (w.r.t influence & ww success) : 80s- 96 : hair metal, heavy metal, grunge (yes, hiphop had the edge in US but WW? not even close) 96-05: rock~pop : the rise of alt, nu-metal, pop-punk, hard rock 2020- Age of crossovers : the genre veil is getting thinner with the hits like mood, ily, ex's bf, tracks from billie eilish, halsey, taylor, ajr, dua even jb charting in diff radio charts.
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lazer
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Post by lazer on Dec 28, 2020 1:54:49 GMT -5
How many years in a row have people been predicting Pop will overtake Hip Hop and it still hasn't happened? keep up the wishful thinking, I guess someday you'll be right I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. Tbh, 2001 was mostly R&B and hip hop than pop.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2020 2:18:59 GMT -5
I mean, there has been kind of a pattern since the 90s of the pendulum swinging back and forth between Pop and Hip-Hop being more represented on the Hot 100. 1980s-1992: Pop 1993-1996: Hip-Hop (Peak: 1995) 1997-2001: Pop (Peak: 1999 or 2000) 2002-2007: Hip-Hop (Peak: 2004) 2008- 2015: Pop (Peak: 2010) 2016-Present: Hip-Hop (Peak: Likely to be 2018) Now, that's not to say that the other genre is completely dead during the time where one genre dominates, but it either takes a back seat (Pop in the Mid 2000s) or incorporates more elements from the dominant genre (Hip-Hop in the Early 2010s). Keep in mind, this is only what I've noticed, so I could be wrong. Tbh, 2001 was mostly R&B and hip hop than pop. Rock, in various forms (pop rock, alt rock, etc) was very big in 2001 on the hot 100.
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jthentic
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Post by jthentic on Dec 28, 2020 3:00:06 GMT -5
Tbh, 2001 was mostly R&B and hip hop than pop. Rock, in various forms (pop rock, alt rock, etc) was very big in 2001 on the hot 100. Even to this day that era rock hits are big on streaming & yt views
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Normi
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Post by Normi on Dec 28, 2020 5:02:42 GMT -5
For 2020 Pop and Hip-Hop was almost equally impactful with some songs having elements of both (like Say So) I think Pop will become more dominant in the next years
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ry4n
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Post by ry4n on Dec 28, 2020 5:14:56 GMT -5
34+35 is #1 on US Spotify (with a new record low of 766k...). Mariah tumbles to 95. Brenda down to 103.
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Dec 28, 2020 5:40:34 GMT -5
Aren't all the rappers doing pop songs now? Like The Kid Laroi, Without You is basically a pop punk ballad. Post Malone is full HD pop artist these days. DaBaby features on Dua Lipa single. And what about all those Marshmello collabos?
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Post by thegreatdivine on Dec 28, 2020 5:54:09 GMT -5
Aren't all the rappers doing pop songs now? Like The Kid Laroi, Without You is basically a pop punk ballad. Post Malone is full HD pop artist these days. DaBaby features on Dua Lipa single. And what about all those Marshmello collabos? And that's "all the rappers" to you? Post Malone has never made RAP music so I wouldn't call him a rapper. He's a pop singer who incorporates hip-hop elements in his music sometimes. DaBaby featuring on a Dua Lipa single doesn't mean he's now making pop songs, not when 99% of his music is still rap-oriented.
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π‘πππππ€
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Post by π‘πππππ€ on Dec 28, 2020 6:08:25 GMT -5
34+35 is #1 on US Spotify (with a new record low of 766k...). Mariah tumbles to 95. Brenda down to 103. How tf is Siaβs βSnowmanβ the highest Christmas song?!?! Also, shoutout to βWhyβd You Only Call Me High?β appearing. Miley REALLY needs to put her cover on streaming, sheβs make bank.
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kingvavis
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Post by kingvavis on Dec 28, 2020 6:39:54 GMT -5
^^ I disagree that the pendulum is swinging back towards pop. I would argue that 2019 was more pop oriented compared to 2020. Most of the big hits this year we're hip hop, The Box, Life Is Good, WAP, ROCKSTAR, Toosie Slide, Savage, What's Poppin, Blueberry Faygo, etc. The pop hits of the year significantly relied on radio which is gonna continue to lose audience throughout the decade where as streaming is gonna persist to the benefit of hip hop. I mean sure, if you only list hip hop songs and ignore all the huge pop songs then yeah maybe hip hop dominated. But if you look at the 2020 year end, pop songs are at #1 (Blinding Lights), #2 (Circles), #4 (Don't Start Now), #6 (Adore You), #8 (Memories), and #10 (Someone You Loved) while hip hop only has The Box at #3, Rockstar at #5, and Life is Good at #7. This extends even further down the chart too: from 11-20, there's 5 pop songs, 1 country song, and 4 hip hop songs.Β Like I mentioned, a lot of the big pop songs this year relied a lot on radio for its popularity. If you look at the most streamed songs in the US like here m.hitsdailydouble.com/streaming_songs you will see that 7 of the 10 most streamed songs are hip hop. Not to say there were no big pop songs, but hip hop songs are more dominant in the future of the charts which is streaming where as radio is not the future.
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GP
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Post by GP on Dec 28, 2020 6:44:44 GMT -5
If we get more songs like "ROSES" I'll probably never listen to the radio again. well jay you definitely are getting more like that
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Dec 28, 2020 6:44:59 GMT -5
Aren't all the rappers doing pop songs now? Like The Kid Laroi, Without You is basically a pop punk ballad. Post Malone is full HD pop artist these days. DaBaby features on Dua Lipa single. And what about all those Marshmello collabos? And that's "all the rappers" to you? Post Malone has never made RAP music so I wouldn't call him a rapper. He's a pop singer who incorporates hip-hop elements in his music sometimes. DaBaby featuring on a Dua Lipa single doesn't mean he's now making pop songs, not when 99% of his music is still rap-oriented. Ok fair enough. But, the US haven't had a rap song at #1 on Spotify since late October regardless (Lemonade), and there have been 8 #1 songs since.
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GP
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Post by GP on Dec 28, 2020 6:50:03 GMT -5
I mean sure, if you only list hip hop songs and ignore all the huge pop songs then yeah maybe hip hop dominated. But if you look at the 2020 year end, pop songs are at #1 (Blinding Lights), #2 (Circles), #4 (Don't Start Now), #6 (Adore You), #8 (Memories), and #10 (Someone You Loved) while hip hop only has The Box at #3, Rockstar at #5, and Life is Good at #7. This extends even further down the chart too: from 11-20, there's 5 pop songs, 1 country song, and 4 hip hop songs. Like I mentioned, a lot of the big pop songs this year relied a lot on radio for its popularity. If you look at the most streamed songs in the US like here m.hitsdailydouble.com/streaming_songs you will see that 7 of the 10 most streamed songs are hip hop. Not to say there were no big pop songs, but hip hop songs are more dominant in the future of the charts which is streaming where as radio is not the future. Yes, but it's definitely not as dire as perhaps 2017 or 2018.
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kingvavis
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Post by kingvavis on Dec 28, 2020 6:54:49 GMT -5
^^ I disagree that the pendulum is swinging back towards pop. I would argue that 2019 was more pop oriented compared to 2020. Most of the big hits this year we're hip hop, The Box, Life Is Good, WAP, ROCKSTAR, Toosie Slide, Savage, What's Poppin, Blueberry Faygo, etc. The pop hits of the year significantly relied on radio which is gonna continue to lose audience throughout the decade where as streaming is gonna persist to the benefit of hip hop. Seven of the top ten and 13 of the top 20 for the year were not hip hop. as those radio listeners transition to streaming, its likely they will demand the same type of music they demanded at radio, rather than suddenly All becoming hip hop fans. Β I expect all other genres to continue to grow significantly at streaming as radio and sales continue to die. Β Whereas most hip hop genre listeners already made the transition over the past few years. The songs I mentioned were the most streamed songs of the year which is the important metric to look at regarding the future of the charts since radio and sales will continue to decline throughout the decade. I will agree that there is portion of the pop audience that will transition over to streaming, but the question is if it will allow pop to eclipse hip hop in the next few years which I'm not convinced it will.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Dec 28, 2020 6:56:46 GMT -5
US Spotify - 12/26/20
1(+3) Ariana Grande - 34+35 766,537 (+39,264) 2(+7) 24kGoldn - Mood 720,685 (+34,973) 3(+4) Bad Bunny, Jhay Cortez - DΓKITI 703,549 (+15,798) 4(+6) Internet Money - Lemonade 701,455 (+33,213) 5(+6) Ariana Grande - positions 685,401 (+37,225) 6(+7) The Kid LAROI - WITHOUT YOU 638,380 (+28,847) 7(+7) CJ - Whoopty 621,970 (+20,812) 8(-2) SZA - Good Days 616,627 (-98,742) 9(+7) Taylor Swift - willow 602,319 (+30,512) 10(+14) Cardi B - WAP 575,727 (+50,054)
Playboi Carti - Whole Lotta Red: 18(-3) Slay3r 497,566 (-103,522) 34(+3) Vamp Anthem 382,561 (-70,318) 40(-9) New N3on 371,508 (-105,357) 62(-15) M3tamorphosis 312,505 (-109761) 64(-15) Over 308,635 (-406,204) 66(-30) Go2DaMoon 308,150 (-145,491) 67(-4) Sky 307,960 (-69,567) 76(-18) Place 297,989 (-89,809) 79(-10) ILoveUIHateU 293,611 (-74,943) 100(-25) Teen X 268,325 (-86,892)
Others: 12(+7) Lil Nas X - HOLIDAY 563,112 (-53) 13(+12) Pop Smoke - What You Know Bout Love 547,945 (+4,453) 14(+12) Megan Thee Stallion - Body 537,128 (+28,864) 16(+14) Billie Eilish - Therefore I Am 507,832 (+30,855) 21(+19) Taylor Swift - champagne problems 458,195 (+23,451) 22(+23) Dua Lipa - Levitating 454,565 (+31,733) 27(+24) Kid Cudi - Tequila Shots 418,368 (+13,485) 28(+22) Juice WRLD, The Kid LAROI - Reminds Me Of You 417,144 (+11,274) 31(+35) Ariana Grande - pov 396,543 (+25,757) 32(+32) Jack Harlow - Way Out 386,513 (+12,925) 35(+33) Luke Combs - Forever After All 378,615 (+8,613) 36(+17) Ed Sheeran - Afterglow 377,559 (-22,740) 38(+35) Jack Harlow - Tyler Herro 373,040 (+14,875) 41(+39) Tate McRae - you broke me first 364,031 (+24,941) 42(+17) Lil Durk - Still Trappin' 359,711 (-24,518) 43(+34) Taylor Swift - 'tis the damn season 356,297 (+8,094) 44(+39) The Kid LAROI - SO DONE 354,220 (+19,215) 45(+37) Shawn Mendes - Monster 351,156 (+14,137) 47(+38) Taylor Swift - gold rush 346,602 (+15,205) 48(+39) Taylor Swift - no body, no crime 346,462 (+16,604) 50(+34) Pop Smoke - Hello 344,217 (+12,151) 51(+30) Kid Cudi - Show Out 343,073 (+5,124) 52(-24) Sia - Snowman 339,315 (-144,233) 54(+34) Morgan Wallen - Somebody's Problem 335,391 (+9,526) 55(+37) Justin Bieber - Lonely 334,299 (+16,482) 56(+43) Ritt Momney - Put Your Records On 332,070 (+24,641) 60(+41) Megan Thee Stallion - Cry Baby 323,975 (+20,830) 63(+48) Glass Animals - Heat Waves 311,699 (+22,923) 69(+39) Justin Bieber - Holy 306,781 (+14,605) 70(+37) DaBaby - PRACTICE 305,163 (+11,425) 75(+48) AJR - Bang! 299,661 (+26,033) 80(+38) Lil Baby - On Me 293,214 (+9,346) 83(+42) Miley Cyrus - Prisoner 290,171 (+18,922) 84(+43) Mother Mother - Hayloft 290,063 (+21,258) 92(+37) Popp Hunna, Lil Uzi Vert - Adderall (Corvette Corvette) Remix 273,222 (+5,388) 93(+47) CORPSE, Savage Ga$p - E-GIRLS ARE RUINING MY LIFE! 271,625 (+11,783) 94(+52) Ashnikko - Daisy 271,493 (+16,818) 95(-93) Mariah Carey - All I Want for Christmas is You 270,342 (-500,399) 97(+41) King Von - Took Her to the O 268,769 (+8,555)
104(+46) Brent Faiyaz - Dead Man Walking 267,559 (+14,991) 111(+43) James Arthur - Train Wreck 257,155 (+9,237) 118(+41) DDG - Moonwalking in Calabasas Remix 251,898 (+6,512) 137(+48) KAROL G - BICHOTA 237,636 (+10,639) 152(+46) Ricky Montgomery - Line Without a Hook 230,647 (+10,679)
Biggest Gains (50K+): WAP
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