Adele’s long-awaited album is leading a flurry of major releases in the coming weeks that could determine whether this year marks a rebound for a slow-growing recorded music industry.
Two acts with ecstatic young followings, Justin Bieber and One Direction, are both to put out albums on Friday next week, and more established chart-toppers Coldplay and Rihanna have hinted at releases in time for holiday shoppers.
Industry watchers expect Adele to be this year’s crucial artist when 25, her first album in nearly five years, goes on sale globally on Nov. 20.
Photo: Reuters
The album’s first song, piano ballad Hello, has already smashed records, making the biggest US debut for a single since Candle in the Wind, Elton John’s 1997 tribute to Princess Diana.
The English singer’s last album, 21, which featured heartache anthem Someone Like You, was the top-selling album for two consecutive years in the US and, by a comfortable margin, the biggest album in Britain so far this century.
Adele, a rare artist with passionate fans across the age spectrum, has described 25 as a reflection on the now 27-year-old’s entrance into adulthood.
True to her anti-rock star persona, Adele is rolling out the album through no-drama television appearances including a concert to be taped at New York’s Radio City Music Hall.
The recording business, devastated by the advent of online music in the late 1990s, has stabilized in recent years, but has struggled to post net growth.
Online streaming and, on a smaller scale, vinyl have brought in new revenue, but the number of blockbuster albums, traditionally a driver of the industry, has been dwindling.
Country-turned-pop sensation Taylor Swift’s 1989 was the only album released last year to go platinum in the US, defined as selling more than 1 million copies — and industry watchers believe Adele may outdo her.
“I think it [Adele’s album] is certainly going to make a mark on the year, it’s going to make a mark on the fourth-quarter selling season, and I think it will make a mark on the way people look at the future of albums,” said James Donio, president of the Music Business Association, a US-based trade group.
“Granted, every artist isn’t Adele, every artist isn’t Taylor. They are exceptions, but they do underscore the fact that for the right artist at the right time, people do embrace a work of art [in] totality,” he said.
Only one album released this year has gone platinum so far in the US — Canadian rapper Drake’s mixtape If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late.
The US music industry’s profits were flat in the year’s first half, although several countries saw growth, including Britain, Germany and Italy.
Adele’s return has risked overshadowing Bieber’s Purpose, the first album by the 21-year-old Canadian in three years, during which he has drawn more attention for his personal travails than his music.
Hello quickly crushed a record for first-week streams set by Bieber for What Do You Mean?, his album’s first single that is notable for its smooth tropical-house beat.
Bieber previously sensed greater competition from One Direction, accusing the British boy band of releasing its new album on the same date to piggyback on his publicity.
One Direction has churned out an album every holiday season without fail since 2011 after the young men won fame on television contest The X Factor.
However, the band has said it will take a hiatus after Made in the A.M., its first album without founding member Zayn Malik, whose departure helped sully the group’s squeaky clean image.
Coldplay’s frontman Chris Martin said last year that the English rockers were recording an album called A Head Full of Dreams that would be the finale for one of the defining bands of the 2000s.
While Coldplay has not confirmed the release date, it posted rainbow-colored rings on its social media pages on Tuesday. Without commentary, posters with an identical image have appeared around London with the date Dec. 4.
R&B superstar Rihanna has said that her first album in three years, Anti, will be out soon, without specifying a date.
The New York Post reported that Rihanna is finalizing a US$25 million deal with South Korean electronics giant Samsung to market Anti, after rival Apple sponsored artists including U2 and Drake.
Rock legends Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen are also planning releases in the shape of box-sets of classic works with outtake tracks.
Another all-time great, David Bowie, is releasing only his second album of new material in the past decade, although it will come out in January.
Among other pre-holiday releases, Psy will put out his first album since the South Korean’s quirky viral hit Gangnam Style, while Canadian electropop artist Grimes will follow up on her breakthrough 2012 album Visions.
Former teen star Selena Gomez and Australian pop band 5 Seconds of Summer already put out albums last month that went to No. 1 on the US Billboard chart.
Stephen Garrett, a 27-year-old graduate student, always thought he would study in China, but first the country’s restrictive COVID-19 policies made it nearly impossible and now he has other concerns. The cost is one deterrent, but Garrett is more worried about restrictions on academic freedom and the personal risk of being stranded in China. He is not alone. Only about 700 American students are studying at Chinese universities, down from a peak of nearly 25,000 a decade ago, while there are nearly 300,000 Chinese students at US schools. Some young Americans are discouraged from investing their time in China by what they see
MAJOR DROP: CEO Tim Cook, who is visiting Hanoi, pledged the firm was committed to Vietnam after its smartphone shipments declined 9.6% annually in the first quarter Apple Inc yesterday said it would increase spending on suppliers in Vietnam, a key production hub, as CEO Tim Cook arrived in the country for a two-day visit. The iPhone maker announced the news in a statement on its Web site, but gave no details of how much it would spend or where the money would go. Cook is expected to meet programmers, content creators and students during his visit, online newspaper VnExpress reported. The visit comes as US President Joe Biden’s administration seeks to ramp up Vietnam’s role in the global tech supply chain to reduce the US’ dependence on China. Images on
Taiwan Transport and Storage Corp (TTS, 台灣通運倉儲) yesterday unveiled its first electric tractor unit — manufactured by Volvo Trucks — in a ceremony in Taipei, and said the unit would soon be used to transport cement produced by Taiwan Cement Corp (TCC, 台灣水泥). Both TTS and TCC belong to TCC International Holdings Ltd (台泥國際集團). With the electric tractor unit, the Taipei-based cement firm would become the first in Taiwan to use electric vehicles to transport construction materials. TTS chairman Koo Kung-yi (辜公怡), Volvo Trucks vice president of sales and marketing Johan Selven, TCC president Roman Cheng (程耀輝) and Taikoo Motors Group
New apartments in Taiwan’s major cities are getting smaller, while old apartments are increasingly occupied by older people, many of whom live alone, government data showed. The phenomenon has to do with sharpening unaffordable property prices and an aging population, property brokers said. Apartments with one bedroom that are two years old or older have gained a noticeable presence in the nation’s six special municipalities as well as Hsinchu county and city in the past five years, Evertrust Rehouse Co (永慶房產集團) found, citing data from the government’s real-price transaction platform. In Taipei, apartments with one bedroom accounted for 19 percent of deals last