Moderators: kingofskiffle, seattleboy, arab, AutomaticBR
We'll see... Of course I can't say that you are totally wrong as I can't predict the future but in the early 80s, people said that Madonna will disappear soon and in the mid-2000s, people doubted a 2nd album to come from Rihanna...xjant77 wrote:I like Janelle Monae, but Fun is going to be one hit wonder for sure.
omg timmy, who hacked your account?!Timmy94 wrote:We'll see... Of course I can't say that you are totally wrong as I can't predict the future but in the early 80s, people said that Madonna will disappear soon and in the mid-2000s, people doubted a 2nd album to come from Rihanna...xjant77 wrote:I like Janelle Monae, but Fun is going to be one hit wonder for sure.
So let's see, what the future holds.
Because you sounded very optimisticTimmy94 wrote:Why?
Did I? For me it was rather realistic...Play wrote:Because you sounded very optimisticTimmy94 wrote:Why?
arab wrote:Over on the Digital Songs chart, fun.'s "We Are Young" (featuring Janelle Monae) claims a sixth week at No. 1, selling 387,000 downloads (up 11%). That is the best sales week for a non-debuting song since LMFAO's "Sexy and I Know It" sold 417,000 downloads in the week after Christmas.
Most songs see a huge sales week either in their debut week, during Christmas time or right after the Grammy Awards. However, "We Are Young" saw its massive 387,000 sales frame without any of those aids. Since SoundScan began tracking download sales in 2003, only one song has had a larger week that wasn't caused by a debut, Christmas or the Grammys. That was when Flo Rida's "Right Round" sold 460,000 in its second week on the chart -- March 7, 2009.
Finally, "We Are Young" is now the year's top selling song with 2.39 million sold. It has surpassed 2011's No. 2-seller, Kelly Clarkson's "Stronger (What Doesn't Kill You)" (2.25 million).
http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/industry ... 2152.story
Holy shit!
Agreeing with you though I'm not too sure about No. 3.danbarj wrote:I love how the song is a proper hit! It has the following:
1. Massive airplay
2. Massive sales
3. Impact on the album's sales
While I actually understand everything you just said (strangely), I must say that everything is not compared to the extreme. Some things are simply relative... not too far to the right or left. They're album increased to what is now stable sales in the top 20... that's a hit! They didn't have to start outside of the top 100 for it to be a "phenomenom."Timmy94 wrote:Agreeing with you though I'm not too sure about No. 3.danbarj wrote:I love how the song is a proper hit! It has the following:
1. Massive airplay
2. Massive sales
3. Impact on the album's sales
It reached No. 1 before the album was out and while both sales and airplay of We Are Young are still increasing, Some Night's sales already fell... Considering they haven't had a huge fanbase before We Are Young, the album could still sell around the same amount it did in the debuting week (interest in the single is bigger than ever before, so interest in the album could be relatively big, too, as Fun is an album-selling type of band and while most albums are being bought by fans at first and so post bigger declines in the next few weeks after the release, Fun is starting from almost zero as their first album didn't receive much attention).
A single that really sells an album is if an album is rather low and a single can make it climb high all up mainly due to this... Like Rihanna's Loud in France after the success of Man Down.
Or Gotye's Making Mirrors: It debuted at No. 120 in the US and Somebody made it climb steadily and eventually made it reach the top 10, which seems to be the perfect example of such a phenomenon.