Class316
October 2nd, 2003, 02:46 AM
The battle-weary music industry surveyed the wreckage of another dismal six months on Wednesday as global data showed music sales tumbled 10.9 percent, piling more pressure on music companies to do deals to survive.
DESPITE BIG HITS from pop queen Christina Aguilera and rapper 50 Cent, Internet downloading and CD-burning continued to ravage the industry, dragging music sales down to $12.7 billion in the first half of this year, a leading industry body said.
The figures are likely to turn the heat up on a series of negotiations between top music companies as they scramble to cut costs after three years of declines.
Berman said the United States, Japan, France and Germany —the world’s biggest music markets — showed dramatic declines.
There have been bright spots however, the IFPI said.
A string of hits in a traditionally thin release period included Aguilera’s “Stripped,” 50 Cent’s “Get Rich or Die Tryin,”’ Coldplay’s “A Rush of Blood to the Head,” Celine Dion’s “One Heart” and Avril Lavigne’s “Let Go.”
Sales in Austria, Finland and Russia rose while UK album sales posted gains and Hong Kong and Australia made a recovery.
DVD music took off, accounting for more than five percent of sales, and legitimate online music broadened its reach.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/974303.asp?vts=100220030917
DESPITE BIG HITS from pop queen Christina Aguilera and rapper 50 Cent, Internet downloading and CD-burning continued to ravage the industry, dragging music sales down to $12.7 billion in the first half of this year, a leading industry body said.
The figures are likely to turn the heat up on a series of negotiations between top music companies as they scramble to cut costs after three years of declines.
Berman said the United States, Japan, France and Germany —the world’s biggest music markets — showed dramatic declines.
There have been bright spots however, the IFPI said.
A string of hits in a traditionally thin release period included Aguilera’s “Stripped,” 50 Cent’s “Get Rich or Die Tryin,”’ Coldplay’s “A Rush of Blood to the Head,” Celine Dion’s “One Heart” and Avril Lavigne’s “Let Go.”
Sales in Austria, Finland and Russia rose while UK album sales posted gains and Hong Kong and Australia made a recovery.
DVD music took off, accounting for more than five percent of sales, and legitimate online music broadened its reach.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/974303.asp?vts=100220030917