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Spears on track to exceed 1st-week sales expectations
Ed Christman
NEW YORK—Things are looking up for Britney Spears — at least on the
retail front. In what could signal a reversal of fortune, the pop
singer’s “Blackout” album, which bowed October 30 via Jive, is living up
to expectations and then some.
Based on first-day sales, “Blackout” is on track to sell between 325,000
and 350,000 units in its first week, estimate sales and distribution
executives at three major labels whose responsibilities include making
such projections. That’s better than the 300,000 units that sales
executives at Zomba Records — the Sony BMG label-group parent to Jive
Records — projected when they took orders for the album from retailers
in October.
Spears’ last studio album, “In the Zone,” released in 2003, scanned 2.96
million units, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
At Best Buy, senior entertainment officer Gary Arnold said, “Britney is
doing better than we thought. Her first-day sales are at about 135
percent of our forecast,” which means 35 percent higher than expected.
Newbury Comics head of purchasing Carl Mello, meanwhile, said her album
is doing “slightly better than I expected. I think the notoriety is
helping sales because it is creating awareness about the album. The only
instance I can think of when notoriety hurt is (with) Michael Jackson,
but has Britney been as devilish as Michael?”
The question for Britney, he said, is whether sales hold up.
Zomba senior vice president of sales Bob Anderson said that, based on
first-day sales, the album may outperform the label’s first-week
expectations. What’s more, first-week sales might have been even better
had the label not moved the release date up from November 13 to thwart
bootleggers and digital pirates. That date change caused Spears to miss
out on a couple of major Sunday circulars, Anderson said.
The label has revised its sales projection upward to 330,000-350,000
units. “We have seen a major turn of the tide,” Anderson said. “The
focus is off her personal life and on the music, and that’s where it
should be.”
Sentiment within the music industry indeed seems to be swinging that
way.
“All of her agita, issues and notoriety have some executives thinking
that people are feeling sorry for her and that she is going to have a
big record,” one senior executive at a competing label said.
Trans World divisional merchandise manager for music Jerry Kamiler said
he expected the album to do well, and that based on first-day sales, it
is. “The single, ‘Gimme More,’ is performing extremely well; she still
has a fan base and they say the quality of the music is good; and she is
getting a tremendous amount of press, not all of it good.” All of that,
he said, could add up to a big record.
Between Spears’ album and the Backstreet Boys’ “Unbreakable” album,
which also came out October 30, “I feel like I am in a time warp,”
Kamiler said.
“But if this was 10 years ago,” he added, “Jive would be looking to sell
a million units apiece in the first week”. |