Last year, music sales increased for the first time since 2004, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.
By Gil Kaufman
<P>It's been a bleak decade for the American recording industry, with sales dipping nearly every year since the pop explosion lead by 'NSYNC, Britney Spears and the Backstreet Boys. But there was finally a sliver of good news this week when the Recording Industry Association of America announced that total U.S. music sales grew in 2011 for the first time since 2004.</P><P>Don't get too crazy: Sales were only up 0.2 percent to just more than $7 billion. But to an industry that has been moving in the wrong direction for the past seven years, it was reason enough to celebrate.</P><P><center><embed src="http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtv.com:731111/cp~id%3D1678505%26vid%3D731111%26uri%3Dmgid%3Auma%3Avideo%3Amtv.com%3A731111" width="460" height="260" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowFullScreen="true" allowScriptAccess="always" base="."></embed></center></P><P>It was a good news/bad news situation, though, as physical sales, which are mostly made up of CDs, were down by 7.7 percent. That was a narrower dip than in recent years but a dip nonetheless. That was more than made up, though, by a 9.2 percent rise in digital sales, which made up more than half of the industry's revenues for the first time in history.</P><P><a href="/news/articles/1681858/black-keys-sean-parker-feud.jhtml">Black Keys drummer Patrick Carney</a> can complain all he wants, but the amount of cash being made from subscription services like Spotify, MOG and Rhapsody was up nearly 14 percent to $241 million, with total subscribers growing by 300,000 to 1.8 million.</P><P>In a year when <a href="/news/articles/1679672/adele-breaks-record-sales-grammy.jhtml">Adele became the first artist</a> to go double-platinum on iTunes — while her massive breakthrough, <I>21,</I> helped goose digital <i>and</i> physical sales numbers by collectively topping more than 8 million in 2011 — digital sales were huge. Both unit sales (105 million) and revenue ($1 billion) were up more than 20 percent. Single downloads were up nearly 11 percent to 1.3 million.</P><P>And even as downloads gained ground on physical CD sales (more than 240 million sold, totaling $3.1 billion), the kids were still digging that old-school vinyl. Sales of records and revenue from that category were both up more than 30 percent to $119 million and 5.5 million copies.</p>
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