It’s not inevitable that musical dinosaurs dominate the charts. Here’s how we rescue pop in Britain | Eamonn Forde

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"UK Music Charts Struggle with Nostalgia and Streaming Influence"

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The UK music charts are facing a significant challenge, with a notable presence of nostalgic and older albums dominating the Top 40. This week, the charts were filled with compilations and studio albums from legendary artists such as Oasis, Fleetwood Mac, and Michael Jackson, many of which were released over a decade ago. This trend raises concerns about the music tastes of the public, suggesting a growing nostalgia for past hits. Additionally, the rise of streaming services has contributed to this phenomenon, as they allow listeners to access a vast catalog of music, which may lead to fewer new releases charting. The current state of the charts reflects a bifurcation: on one side, mega-acts with massive streaming numbers, and on the other, indie bands that can rally their fans for initial sales but quickly drop off the charts thereafter.

The Official Charts Company (OCC) is tasked with navigating the complexities of these changing dynamics, particularly since the inclusion of streaming data in 2014 transformed how charts are compiled. The methodology used to calculate album stream units is flawed, leading to inaccuracies in representing actual album popularity. For instance, the chart position of an album may rise due to a single song's streaming success, rather than the album as a whole. In contrast, the singles charts maintain a more fluid nature, showcasing newer tracks and a diverse range of music. To address the stagnation in album charts, the Australian Recording Industry Association has implemented a solution that limits chart eligibility to music released within the past two years, allowing older tracks to be quarantined. This approach could serve as a model for the UK charts, which risk becoming irrelevant if they do not adapt to the evolving music landscape and rekindle public interest in new releases.

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Looking at theTop 40 albumsin the UK this week, it is clear that the charts have become a mausoleum. There are solid showings from Oasis (a compilation album originally released in 2010 and two studio albums from 1994 and 1995), Fleetwood Mac (a compilation from 2018 and a studio album from 1977), Abba (1992), Michael Jackson (2005), Elton John (2017) and Eminem (2005). A quarter of the UK’s Top 40 albums were originally releasedover a decade ago.Are our music tastes becoming increasingly nostalgic? The number of people who turned out to see Rod Stewart playing the legends slot at Glastonbury certainly suggests that. But there’s also another possibility: music streaming is causing the charts to spiral backwards into the past.

The UK charts date back to 1952, when the New Musical Express, now known as NME, would phone a handful of record shops to ask what was selling best. Since then it’s become more professional: the Official Charts Company (OCC) took over the charts in the 1990s, and as of 2004,it began to factor in download sales. The biggest transformation arrived in 2014, when streaming data started to be included in chart ratings. Though streaming arguably saved the record business (artists and songwriters arguethey are not seeing much of that upside), it also suffocated the charts.

Part of this is becauseUK chartstoday reflect two very different dynamics: mega-acts with phenomenal streaming play counts that keep on snowballing (Sabrina Carpenter or Ed Sheeran, for example), alongside acts who can marshal their fans to buy a physical version of the album on release week, charting high but plummeting the next week (basically every indie band). As they currently exist, the charts paper over this unholy bifurcation, on the one hand measuring listens and on the other measuring purchases.

The problem lies in trying to perfect a formula for what the OCC calls “album stream” units. This involves counting up the 16 most-streamed tracks from any album and dividing that by 1,000, the result being the “same” as a CD, LP or download sale of that album. But since the data that the OCC receives from retailers and streaming servicesisn’t accurate enoughto tell whether someone has played Bohemian Rhapsody on Queen’s Greatest Hits album, say, or from the studio album where it first appeared, it means that the individual track streams count towards the chart position of entire albums – so Queen’s Greatest Hits moves up the charts, even if people have only been listening to one particular track.

Streaming has made listening more chaotic and less structured. Rather than just listening to a single album from start to finish, we encounter individual songs through playlists and algorithmic recommendations. Meanwhile, since every song is available to listen to, everything can theoretically count towards the charts at any time. This was not always the case. In 1994, Wet Wet Wet’s cover of Love Is All Around was at No 1 in the UK for 15 consecutive weeks. It might have been longer,but the band and their label stopped manufacturing copies to kill demand, fearing the song had become too popular and ubiquitous. That was possible in the days when only physical sales counted towards the charts.

The OCC is in a tricky position. It has to please both the record companies and the retailers and streaming services that fund it, which have very different objectives. There has always been a precarious relationship of mutual dependence and distrust between record labels and music retailers, and the OCC’s chart committee is made up of both sides. The record companies tend to favour fewer restrictions on how they market and promote records, alongside boundless support for their priority releases; the retailers and streamers, on paper at least, want less label interference in how they pick what to support. Sometimes they find consensus; other times they do not.

Yet the doldrums of the UK album charts isn’t inevitable. The UKsingles chartis more fluid, with a complex mix of risers, fallers, non-movers and new entries. Most tracks on this week’s singles charts were relatively new (with the exception of Black Eyed Peas’ Rock That Body at No 31, which was originally released in 2010). It’s fair to say that the listlessness of the UK charts is very much an album charts problem. Singles charts aren’t weighed down with records from generations ago.

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It is a similar story in many other national charts, especially where streaming is the dominant force. There is, however, a way forward. TheAustralian Recording Industry Association (ARIA)is doing something about its music charts – and the UK should take note. From September, its main album and singles charts will only include music released in the past two years, with a separate chart quarantining all the timeworn releases.

There are exceptions for those catalogue tracks that have a second chart life from out of nowhere, perhaps because they’ve gone viral on TikTok. So long as they’ve not been anywhere in the Top 100 for the past decade, they can still appear on the charts – but they can’t stay there for ever.

It is a long overdue corrective and will hopefully be something the UK chart can learn from if it is to avoid collapsing into irrelevance. The OCC already publishesa multitude of charts by genre, so separating out the fresh from the greying will not be a stretch. Like the weather, talking about the charts was once a collective British pastime. But in becoming sluggish and shackled by the past, the charts risk being the two things that pop music itself should ever be: old and boring.

Eamonn Forde is a music business and technology journalist

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Source: The Guardian