Sarah Barlow
In the final tracking week of 2014, '1989' surpassed 'Frozen' as year's top seller
Leave it to Taylor Swift to spoil Disney's Frozen party.
It came down to the wire, but in the final week of 2014, Swift's 1989
finishes 2014 as the year's top selling album. After only nine weeks on
sale, Swift's set stole the title away from Walt Disney Records' Frozen soundtrack in the very last tracking frame of the year.
1989 -- released through Big Machine Records -- sold 3.66 million
copies in 2014, according to Nielsen Music, while the Frozen album
shifted 3.53 million. (Nielsen's 2014 tracking year ran from Dec. 30,
2013 through Dec. 28, 2014.)
The Frozen soundtrack was the year-to-date top selling album of 2014
in every single tracking week of the year, except for the final frame
(ending Dec. 28). In the week previous (Dec. 21), 1989's tally stood at 3.34 million, while Frozen was at 3.46 million. But, with one final week left on the calendar -- the most recent tracking week -- it seemed 1989 would overtake Frozen. And, it did.
In the week ending Dec. 28, 1989 sold 326,000 copies, while Frozen moved 64,000, thus easily securing Swift the year's top seller.
This is the second time Swift has earned the top selling album of a
calendar year. She did it previously back in 2009 with her second studio
album, Fearless, which moved 3.22 million that year.
Since Nielsen's first full year of music sales data (1992), there has
been no other instance where an album was the year's top seller in
every week, only to have the rug pulled out from under it in the final
frame. The closest comparable is 20 years ago, when Ace of Base's The Sign
was the top seller of 1994 from the week ending May 15 all the way
through to the next-to-last week of the year. Then, in the final frame
of 1994 (which was actually the week ending Jan. 1, 1995), Disney's The Lion King soundtrack overtook The Sign (4.93 million versus 4.92 million).
1989 and Frozen are the only two albums to sell more than 3 million copies in 2014. (Frozen was released in late 2013, and has sold 3.86 million in total.)
A year ago, no albums sold more than 3 million -- 2013's top seller was Justin Timberlake's The 20/20 Experience with 2.43 million.
However, 2013 tallied 45 albums that sold at least 500,000 copies,
with 13 of those selling more than a million. Comparably, in 2014, there
were just 31 titles that sold 500,000, with only four of them reaching a
million.
Sam Smith's In the Lonely Hour is 2014's No. 3 seller (1.13 million), followed by Pentatonix's That's Christmas To Me (1.02 million).
Disney Music Group has a second album among the year's top 10 sellers, as the Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack (released through Disney's Hollywood Records division) is 2014's No. 5 seller (817,000).
Thus, two soundtracks are among the year's top five -- the first time that's happened in Nielsen history.
Beyonce's self-titled album is 2014's No. 6 best seller (860,000), followed by Barbra Streisand's Partners (811,000), Lorde's Pure Heroine (827,000), One Direction's Four (714,000) and Eric Church's The Outsiders (800,000).
Pure Heroine is the oldest release among the top 10, as it was issued on Oct. 1, 2013. The youngest title is 1989 (released on Oct. 27, 2014).
Smith's album is the year's highest-selling full-length debut, while
Pentatonix's holiday effort is 2014's best-seller by a group.
With Partners, diva Streisand finishes among the year's top
10 sellers for the first time in Nielsen history. The album debuted at
No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in September, becoming her 10th chart-topper. It also made her the first artist with No. 1 albums in each of the past six decades.
Overall album sales continued to erode, as their volume fell by 11
percent in 2014, compared to 2013. In total, there were 257 million
albums sold in the past year, versus 289.4 million in 2013.
Digital album sales also fell, for only the second time, by 9 percent
(106.5 million compared to 117.6 million in the year previous). Digital
album sales declined for the first time in 2013, when they were off by 1
percent.
41 percent of all albums sold in 2014 were downloads, the same as in
2013. The top selling digital album of 2014 is Taylor Swift's 1989, with 1.41 million downloads. Frozen
is the No. 2 digital seller, with 1.26 million. It is the first time
two albums have sold more than a million downloads in a calendar year.
In total, just 13 albums have sold more than a million downloads, led by Adele's 21, with 3.1 million digital copies. Frozen is the fourth-biggest digital album of all time, with a total of 1.43 million downloads, while 1989 is the No. 5 seller with 1.41 million.
Vinyl album sales were a bright spot in an otherwise generally bleak
sales picture, as the configuration grew by 52 percent in 2014 to 9.2
million copies (up from 6.1 million in 2013). For the seventh straight
year, more vinyl albums were sold than in any other year since Nielsen
started tracking music sales in 1991.
Shifting our attention to digital songs, 2014 was only the second
year (following 2013) where sales of the configuration fell. 1.1 billion
song downloads were sold in 2014, down 12 percent from the 1.26 billion
in 2013. Nielsen began tracking song download sales in the summer of
2013, shortly after Apple's iTunes Music Store bowed in April of that
year.
The top selling digital song of 2014 is Pharrell Williams' "Happy"
with 6.45 million downloads sold. To compare, in 2013, the top seller
was Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" (which featured Williams and T.I.),
with 6.5 million (6.498 to be more exact).
"Happy" is the 21st biggest selling download of all time, and one of
only 29 songs to sell more than 6 million downloads. (The biggest
selling download ever is The Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling" with
8.62 million.)
As for the rest of 2014's top selling download songs: John Legend's
"All Of Me" is the runner-up with 4.67 million, while Katy Perry's "Dark
Horse," featuring Juicy J, is No. 3 with 4.43 million. Meghan Trainor's
"All About That Bass" is No. 4 with 4.36 million, Iggy Azalea's
"Fancy," featuring Charli XCX, is No. 5 with 3.97 million.
Jason Derulo's "Talk Dirty," featuring 2 Chainz, was the year's
sixth-largest seller, with 3.96 million. DJ Snake & Lil Jon's "Turn
Down For What" is No. 7 with 3.45 million, Taylor Swift's "Shake It Off"
is No. 8 with 3.43 million and Idina Menzel's "Let It Go" is No. 9 with
3.37 million. Rounding out the year's top 10 sellers is Sam Smith's
"Stay With Me," with 3.34 million.
In total, 82 songs sold at least a million downloads in 2014 (down
from 106 in 2013 and 108 in 2012). 25 shifted at least 2 million in 2014
(down from 38 in 2013 and 41 in 2012).
It came down to the wire, but in the final week of 2014, Swift's 1989
finishes 2014 as the year's top selling album. After only nine weeks on
sale, Swift's set stole the title away from Walt Disney Records' Frozen soundtrack in the very last tracking frame of the year.
1989 -- released through Big Machine Records -- sold 3.66 million
copies in 2014, according to Nielsen Music, while the Frozen album
shifted 3.53 million. (Nielsen's 2014 tracking year ran from Dec. 30,
2013 through Dec. 28, 2014.)
The Frozen soundtrack was the year-to-date top selling album of 2014
in every single tracking week of the year, except for the final frame
(ending Dec. 28). In the week previous (Dec. 21), 1989's tally stood at 3.34 million, while Frozen was at 3.46 million. But, with one final week left on the calendar -- the most recent tracking week -- it seemed 1989 would overtake Frozen. And, it did.
In the week ending Dec. 28, 1989 sold 326,000 copies, while Frozen moved 64,000, thus easily securing Swift the year's top seller.
This is the second time Swift has earned the top selling album of a
calendar year. She did it previously back in 2009 with her second studio
album, Fearless, which moved 3.22 million that year.
Since Nielsen's first full year of music sales data (1992), there has
been no other instance where an album was the year's top seller in
every week, only to have the rug pulled out from under it in the final
frame. The closest comparable is 20 years ago, when Ace of Base's The Sign
was the top seller of 1994 from the week ending May 15 all the way
through to the next-to-last week of the year. Then, in the final frame
of 1994 (which was actually the week ending Jan. 1, 1995), Disney's The Lion King soundtrack overtook The Sign (4.93 million versus 4.92 million).
1989 and Frozen are the only two albums to sell more than 3 million copies in 2014. (Frozen was released in late 2013, and has sold 3.86 million in total.)
A year ago, no albums sold more than 3 million -- 2013's top seller was Justin Timberlake's The 20/20 Experience with 2.43 million.
However, 2013 tallied 45 albums that sold at least 500,000 copies,
with 13 of those selling more than a million. Comparably, in 2014, there
were just 31 titles that sold 500,000, with only four of them reaching a
million.
Sam Smith's In the Lonely Hour is 2014's No. 3 seller (1.13 million), followed by Pentatonix's That's Christmas To Me (1.02 million).
Disney Music Group has a second album among the year's top 10 sellers, as the Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack (released through Disney's Hollywood Records division) is 2014's No. 5 seller (817,000).
Thus, two soundtracks are among the year's top five -- the first time that's happened in Nielsen history.
Beyonce's self-titled album is 2014's No. 6 best seller (860,000), followed by Barbra Streisand's Partners (811,000), Lorde's Pure Heroine (827,000), One Direction's Four (714,000) and Eric Church's The Outsiders (800,000).
Pure Heroine is the oldest release among the top 10, as it was issued on Oct. 1, 2013. The youngest title is 1989 (released on Oct. 27, 2014).
Smith's album is the year's highest-selling full-length debut, while
Pentatonix's holiday effort is 2014's best-seller by a group.
With Partners, diva Streisand finishes among the year's top
10 sellers for the first time in Nielsen history. The album debuted at
No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in September, becoming her 10th chart-topper. It also made her the first artist with No. 1 albums in each of the past six decades.
Overall album sales continued to erode, as their volume fell by 11
percent in 2014, compared to 2013. In total, there were 257 million
albums sold in the past year, versus 289.4 million in 2013.
Digital album sales also fell, for only the second time, by 9 percent
(106.5 million compared to 117.6 million in the year previous). Digital
album sales declined for the first time in 2013, when they were off by 1
percent.
41 percent of all albums sold in 2014 were downloads, the same as in
2013. The top selling digital album of 2014 is Taylor Swift's 1989, with 1.41 million downloads. Frozen
is the No. 2 digital seller, with 1.26 million. It is the first time
two albums have sold more than a million downloads in a calendar year.
In total, just 13 albums have sold more than a million downloads, led by Adele's 21, with 3.1 million digital copies. Frozen is the fourth-biggest digital album of all time, with a total of 1.43 million downloads, while 1989 is the No. 5 seller with 1.41 million.
Vinyl album sales were a bright spot in an otherwise generally bleak
sales picture, as the configuration grew by 52 percent in 2014 to 9.2
million copies (up from 6.1 million in 2013). For the seventh straight
year, more vinyl albums were sold than in any other year since Nielsen
started tracking music sales in 1991.
Shifting our attention to digital songs, 2014 was only the second
year (following 2013) where sales of the configuration fell. 1.1 billion
song downloads were sold in 2014, down 12 percent from the 1.26 billion
in 2013. Nielsen began tracking song download sales in the summer of
2013, shortly after Apple's iTunes Music Store bowed in April of that
year.
The top selling digital song of 2014 is Pharrell Williams' "Happy"
with 6.45 million downloads sold. To compare, in 2013, the top seller
was Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" (which featured Williams and T.I.),
with 6.5 million (6.498 to be more exact).
"Happy" is the 21st biggest selling download of all time, and one of
only 29 songs to sell more than 6 million downloads. (The biggest
selling download ever is The Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling" with
8.62 million.)
As for the rest of 2014's top selling download songs: John Legend's
"All Of Me" is the runner-up with 4.67 million, while Katy Perry's "Dark
Horse," featuring Juicy J, is No. 3 with 4.43 million. Meghan Trainor's
"All About That Bass" is No. 4 with 4.36 million, Iggy Azalea's
"Fancy," featuring Charli XCX, is No. 5 with 3.97 million.
Jason Derulo's "Talk Dirty," featuring 2 Chainz, was the year's
sixth-largest seller, with 3.96 million. DJ Snake & Lil Jon's "Turn
Down For What" is No. 7 with 3.45 million, Taylor Swift's "Shake It Off"
is No. 8 with 3.43 million and Idina Menzel's "Let It Go" is No. 9 with
3.37 million. Rounding out the year's top 10 sellers is Sam Smith's
"Stay With Me," with 3.34 million.
In total, 82 songs sold at least a million downloads in 2014 (down
from 106 in 2013 and 108 in 2012). 25 shifted at least 2 million in 2014
(down from 38 in 2013 and 41 in 2012).
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