Tuesday, December 10, 2019

With 2019 one for the books, the final marketshare standings are now all but set in stone. So let’s call it a lock and dive in.
In these prosperous times, the Big Three keep getting bigger, as their restocked executive teams grow increasingly adept. Each major music group has shown significant revenue growth over 2018, the bulk of it due to streaming. Revenues at
Sir Lucian Grainge’s
UMG hit $5.66b in the first nine months of 2018, a 15%+ rise. Recorded-music sales at
Rob Stringer’s
Sony Music topped $1b in consecutive quarters, while streaming revenues were up more than 21% in both quarters year-over-year. And revenue at the
Steve Cooper-led
WMG increased 11.7% to $4.475b in the company’s fiscal year, which ended 9/31, with nearly half of Warner’s income coming from streaming. Cha-ching.
Label-wise,
John Janick has been building toward a breakout year like this one since he became the sole ruler of
Interscope a half decade ago. While core acts of the
Iovine era, including
Lady Gaga (whose 2018
A Star Is Born ST is #8 this year) and
Eminem, have continued to flourish during Janick’s reign, his primary focus has been the nurturing and breaking of a new breed of artists, exemplified by the patient, perfectly calibrated setup and payoff of
Billie Eilish, whose 2m+ debut album is the second-biggest of 2019, while her previous EP is currently #20. She leads a pack of up-and-comers including the late
Juice WRLD (#17 and 25),
DaBaby (#22),
Roc Nation/Dreamville’s
Dreamville & J. Cole (#24),
LVRN’s
Summer Walker (#33) and Brit
Ella Mai (#49). A number of these acts were brought in by A&R all-star
Joie Manda.
With five of 2019’s Top 10 albums and four of the Top 10 streaming songs,
Republic has dominated the upper reaches of the charts, emphatically demonstrating once again that for
Monte Lipman, it’s all about smashes—and he’s got superstars who consistently light up the scoreboard. MVP frontrunner
Post Malone not only has the year’s #1 album but #6 and #29 as well, comprising his entire catalog, along with two of the Top 10 streaming songs and four of the Top 50. The hits keep on coming thanks to a murderers’ row of stat-sheet-fillers: #3
Ariana Grande, #4
Taylor Swift, #9
Drake, #12
Jonas Brothers, #21
Shawn Mendes (
Island) and rookie phenom
Lil Tecca (#42).
By contrast,
Atlantic’s success is volume-driven; the label had only one Top 10 album,
A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, at #10, while #15
Lizzo, #16
Ed Sheeran and #18
Meek Mill give it four in the Top 20, the same number as Interscope and two less than Republic. Where Atlantic is making hay is in recent catalog: Sheeran’s
Divide and
The Greatest Showman from 2017 and
Hamilton from 2015 are still moving units, as are
Cardi B and
Nipsey Hussle’s nearly two-year-old albums. The formula may not be sexy, but it’s been working.
Steve Barnett has built
Capitol Music Group into a powerhouse, with major contributors including
Coach K and
P’s
Quality Control and
Jacqueline Saturn’s
Caroline.
Halsey’s #7 “Without Me,”
Marshmello & Bastille’s #11 “Happier” and breakout star
Lewis Capaldi’s chart-topping “Someone You Loved” are among the company’s biggest hit singles, while QC/
Motown’s key contributors include
Lil Baby & Gunna (#23) and
City Girls (#38).
There was action aplenty elsewhere.
Ron Perry’s
Columbia made history with
Lil Nas X in a unicorn tale turned ubiquitous reality.
Khalid substantiated his superstar status at
Peter Edge’s
RCA.
Bay-Schuck and
Corson’s
Warner Records scored with
12Tone’s
Lauren Daigle, made headway with
NLE Choppa and crossed
WMG Nashville’s
Dan + Shay for
John Esposito.
Sylvia Rhone’s
Epic notched Top 50 albums from
Travis Scott (#11),
21 Savage (#26),
Future (#43) and
DJ Khaled (#48).
Luke Combs made country streaming a thing, finally, at
Randy Goodman’s
Sony Music Nashville.
Queen came to life at
Ken Bunt’s
Disney Music Group.
Mike Dungan’s
UMG Nashville rocked out with
Chris Stapleton and
Eric Church. And
Thomas Rhett paced
Scott Borchetta’s
BMLG.
