Arts and Entertainment
Meat Loaf’s streams jump by 4,650% following death
Los Angeles, Jan. 25 (IANS): Rock icon Meat Loaf’s streams and sales jumped by a whopping amount in the immediate wake of his passing.
His 1977 ‘Bat Out of Hell’ album is a solid candidate to re-enter the top 10 next week as a result of the resurgent interest in his catalog, statistics from the last few days show, reports variety.com.
According to MRC Data, on January 21, the day most of the public learned of Meat Loaf’s death the day before, his on-demand streaming rose 4,650 per cent from the baseline established since the beginning of the year.
But many fans really, really wanted to own a piece of Meat Loaf, as the jumps in sales were particularly impressive. Album sales went up 18,684 per cent, and individual digital track sales rose a whopping 33,793 per cent.
The percentage increases are remarkable especially considering that this was not a typical example of an artist that was only racking up minimal streams before he died; Meat Loaf’s 45-year-old hits were still being consumed in sizable numbers even prior to his passing.
On the day before the news broke, Meat Loaf had 205,666 on-demand audio streams — a number that a lot of artists who’ve just put out a new album would be happy to achieve.
But that figure was, of course, blown out of the water the following day, as his songs were streamed 9,344, 181 times.
Actual sales, on the other hand, had fallen to a mere trickle prior to his death, as they have for nearly all artists. The day before the news broke, he sold just 54 full albums and 95 individual tracks, per MRC.
But the following day, a sizable number of fans went on digital buying sprees. Meat Loaf’s catalog sold 12,675 albums on January 21, and 36,346 tracks.
It wasn’t just a one-day phenomenon. Although consumption wasn’t nearly as rabid Saturday as it was on January 21, and the drop-off in sales was particularly steep a day later, Meat Loaf’s on-demand streaming remained solid going into the weekend.
His audio streaming total for Saturday (not including video streams) was down just a little over half from January 21-22, the latest day for which figures are available from MRC Data.
Audio streams amounted to 3,140,805 on Saturday, still 23 times the amount he would have gotten on a normal day in January, suggesting that the hunger for songs like ‘Bat Out of Hell’, ‘Paradise by the Dashboard Light’ and ‘I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That)’ was far from sated by just a single day of grief-streaming.
Both sales and streaming will be major factors when Meat Loaf presumably makes his re-entry on the Hot 100 and Billboard 200 charts. Those chart positions won’t be seen for another week, though, as the singer’s death coincided with the end of a chart reporting period.