Chart Rule changes on ACR introduced this week |
Track this thread - Email this thread - Print this thread - Download this thread - Subscribe to this forum |
Jan 3 2019, 11:33 AM
Post
#21
|
|
Buy yourself a car, and a house in Devon
Joined: 6 May 2016
Posts: 23,868 User: 23,247 |
Neither for nor against this really as it's not really that much of a drastic change. It will only affect the Rita Ora style hits really, the Post Malone tracks that stick around forever will still stick around forever since no-one actually bought them
|
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 11:53 AM
Post
#22
|
|
Mansonette
Joined: 7 March 2006
Posts: 35,259 User: 54 |
|
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 11:56 AM
Post
#23
|
|
BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 18 July 2012
Posts: 22,811 User: 17,376 |
so in other words more pointless tinkering with the chart without grasping the actual real problem (which is passive playlisting).
So it's OK for people to keep streaming a song on playlists to determine it's chart position but it's not OK to include actual bonafide sales (regardless of whether they are 59p or 99p, it's people BUYING a track as opposed to listening to it in amongst other tracks someone else chose for them) - this is insane thinking, it's prioritising Spotify power over consumer choices. The old-fashioned way of dealing with singles being discounted was to introduce a minimum price point. It's a major duhhhhhhh moment, my brain hurts, too obvious. Of course if record companies all decide to charge 59p cos the profit margin is still better on one sale than 100 plays on Spotify, then that might oops take a small bit of control of the charts out of the streaming companies hands. The ones that are causing the problem in the first place along with the Official Charts Company backing. Yes, those ones. |
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 12:56 PM
Post
#24
|
|
BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 18 February 2010
Posts: 25,006 User: 10,665 |
Labels will have to find other ways Sure they will Off the top of my head, they can be strategic with when they add/remove songs to certain playlists, to make sure that they get an increase at the right time. You could even remove a song from a big playlist on week 8 and then re-add it on the very same playlist on week 9 for example to make it increase in streams over the previous week. This post has been edited by Eric_Blob: Jan 3 2019, 12:57 PM |
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 01:00 PM
Post
#25
|
|
BuzzJack Gold Member
Joined: 24 March 2013
Posts: 2,134 User: 18,521 |
There is a minimum dealer price for downloads though.
And of course the minimum dealer prices for physical singles didn't really stop people circumventing them. |
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 01:37 PM
Post
#26
|
|
BuzzJack Regular
Joined: 12 September 2010
Posts: 448 User: 11,831 |
I wish they'd just do away with ACR and cut the problem off at the legs and introduce some rules that actually tackle the problem with streaming instead of sweeping it under the rug. Having songs falling 20-30 places most weeks is just such a mess.
|
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 01:41 PM
Post
#27
|
|
BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 13 November 2015
Posts: 33,162 User: 22,665 |
Agree, i wish they’d introduce caps instead of Acr
But doesnt seem likely So at least they are being consequent Always thought it was idiotic that itunes determined acr |
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 03:43 PM
Post
#28
|
|
BuzzJack Climber
Joined: 29 July 2014
Posts: 198 User: 21,106 |
Regarding the apparently very prompt decision to introduce the latest rule tweak to the car-crash marriage that is the streams-cum-sales combined singles chart, it seems to fit in with the pattern established in recent years, when OCC introduce changes once every six months, either taking effect the first week of January or of July. I don't know if this means they only review their rules at fixed half-yearly intervals, but it certainly implies this. Although should some kneejerk alteration suddenly be deemed necessary in between the Jan/Jul change cycle, I daresay they'd introduce it sooner without waiting until the next regular rule change point. They probably would've done so following the Sheeran debacle, but (ludicrously) it would've taken them by surprise and so they needed another three months to formulate what they and the industry agreed as a suitable solution, which essentially took them to the usual July mid-year change point anyway.
|
|
|
Jan 3 2019, 05:31 PM
Post
#29
|
|
BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 10 April 2016
Posts: 27,025 User: 23,155 |
The change should've been ACR taking place at 15 weeks as opposed to 10 weeks as Dan (?) already mentioned.
|
|
|
Jan 9 2019, 07:10 PM
Post
#30
|
|
BuzzJack Platinum Member
Joined: 20 November 2014
Posts: 12,627 User: 21,386 |
This also means that the NOW effect can no longer help songs avoid ACR?
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 12:22 AM
Post
#31
|
|
Shakin Stevens
Joined: 29 December 2007
Posts: 46,125 User: 5,138 |
What's the best me that if time before ACR can come in? 10 or 15 weeks of another?
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 12:40 AM
Post
#32
|
|
I'll just stick around and do some more damage
Joined: 14 February 2009
Posts: 115,031 User: 8,300 |
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 09:52 AM
Post
#33
|
|
BuzzJack Regular
Joined: 10 April 2017
Posts: 376 User: 29,123 |
If tracks don't go on ACR until streaming has declined for three weeks in a row with no regard to sales will that actually benefit slow burning sleeper hits because streaming takes longer to kick in for these songs meaning they could be on SCR for much longer before being affected by these rules?
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 10:21 AM
Post
#34
|
|
Shakin Stevens
Joined: 29 December 2007
Posts: 46,125 User: 5,138 |
What if their streams fall three weeks in a row early on though or does it only count after 10 weeks?
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 11:03 AM
Post
#35
|
|
BuzzJack Platinum Member
Joined: 23 June 2018
Posts: 9,511 User: 73,240 |
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 11:18 AM
Post
#36
|
|
BuzzJack Platinum Member
Joined: 16 November 2009
Posts: 7,587 User: 9,988 |
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 11:45 AM
Post
#37
|
|
BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 13 November 2015
Posts: 33,162 User: 22,665 |
I think ACR should count 10 weeks in the top 40, not in the top 100
it's ok or songs that debut high like Drake or Calvin but too soon for slow climbers |
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 02:36 PM
Post
#38
|
|
Shakin Stevens
Joined: 29 December 2007
Posts: 46,125 User: 5,138 |
Just means a song will always be restricted by how long a run at no1 it can have.
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 02:42 PM
Post
#39
|
|
BuzzJack Regular
Joined: 1 January 2016
Posts: 280 User: 22,818 |
It would be interesting if some big artist decided to manipulate the chart by removing their song from, say, Apple Music every third week before replacing it the week after to get an increase in streams. Don't know how possible that would be but you could theoretically avoid ACR forever that way!
|
|
|
Jan 12 2019, 02:51 PM
Post
#40
|
|
🔥🚀🔥
Joined: 30 August 2010
Posts: 74,517 User: 11,746 |
I think they'd rather have the revenue of a week's streams than avoid ACR for as long as the song charts, besides the fans would be very annoyed that they can't stream the song every 3rd week.
|
|
|
Time is now: 17th April 2024 - 06:58 PM |
Copyright © 2006 - 2024 BuzzJack.com
About | Contact | Advertise | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service