How Much Money Do POP Stars Actually Make?

Magic

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“I didn’t know how bad the music industry had got in those four years I was out,” Lily Allen confessed during an interview earlier this week. Having taken a break to bring up her children, a returning Allen was dismayed when she was greeted with a new and far more frugal pop landscape.

As the UK Telegraph write, a look at last year’s entertainment industry sales charts would have told Allen everything she needed to know. According to the Entertainment Retailers Association, the top-selling product of 2013 was Grand Theft Auto V, followed by the DVD of Skyfall. Music doesn’t make it into the list until ninth place with the compilation Now That’s What I Call Music! 86 at 1 million units.

While some hailed digital sales as the next vanguard of the music industry, they’ve done little to compensate for a huge fall in the sale of CDs. Sales for albums and singles in the UK alone last year saw a 0.5 per cent decrease on the year before and a 7 percent decrease over three years.

So where are pop singers’ mansions and cheetahs-on-leashes coming from? Well, firstly we have touring, which not only provides ticket revenue, but offers opportunities for the stars to sell merchandise and push their brand – Taylor Swift alone has three different perfumes to her name.

“For a lot of these pop acts, the music is just another piece in their product range,” one music agent told the Telegraph. Just ask Pharrell Williams and Daft Punk, whose 2013 hit spawned a brand of Get Lucky condoms.

This includes tour sponsorship, like Rihanna‘s last tour, technically titled the ‘Budweiser Rihanna 777 Tour’. The “ancillary” earnings also include endorsements and appearances, such as Kanye West’s performance for Kazakhstani President Nursultan Nazarbayev‘s grandson’s wedding.

Even more surprising is how much stars can make just to show up at an event — recall the stink that was kicked up after it was revealed that celebrities were paid to attend Coachella — with even Z-listers reportedly taking home £2,000 for an appearance, with £200,000 or more for real stars.

But experts say stars ought to be cautious with such ancillary earnings. “I get these offers coming in quite often,” says one agent. “They are fine for a pop act, who have only a few years to milk it for all it is worth. But for a proper music star, you can forget it. Their fans would never forgive them.”

How Much Do Pop Stars Actually Make? - Music News, Reviews, Interviews and Culture - Music Feeds
 

LG

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Not surprised by any of that news, musicians started off playing for food or a place to sleep by the fire,,,could be many of them will be doing that again if the industry continues down the road it's headed now.

Considering we value astute businessman who successfully manage companies etc. it's actually astonishing the lack of intelligence and foresight that put the record companies in the predicament they find themselves in now. i-tunes was never the answer, Jobs only mandate was to make as much money for his company as possible, not to help musicians.

I would roll back the clock and release vinyl albums only, I know that sounds preposterous but many real fans would buy them...the question is the new generation and what they would do if that happened.
 

Mr. Shadow

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Didn't the Stones take in about a billion dollars a few years ago while touring?
 

Aero

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Not surprised by any of that news, musicians started off playing for food or a place to sleep by the fire,,,could be many of them will be doing that again if the industry continues down the road it's headed now.

Considering we value astute businessman who successfully manage companies etc. it's actually astonishing the lack of intelligence and foresight that put the record companies in the predicament they find themselves in now. i-tunes was never the answer, Jobs only mandate was to make as much money for his company as possible, not to help musicians.

I would roll back the clock and release vinyl albums only, I know that sounds preposterous but many real fans would buy them...the question is the new generation and what they would do if that happened.

How about keeping iTunes but making customers buy the entire digital album on there. But as a bonus, when you buy the album, you get the actual vinyl album sent to you, with album art of course.

That's my wish anyway...
 

Soot and Stars

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Not surprised by any of that news, musicians started off playing for food or a place to sleep by the fire,,,could be many of them will be doing that again if the industry continues down the road it's headed now.

Considering we value astute businessman who successfully manage companies etc. it's actually astonishing the lack of intelligence and foresight that put the record companies in the predicament they find themselves in now. i-tunes was never the answer, Jobs only mandate was to make as much money for his company as possible, not to help musicians.

I would roll back the clock and release vinyl albums only, I know that sounds preposterous but many real fans would buy them...the question is the new generation and what they would do if that happened.

How about keeping iTunes but making customers buy the entire digital album on there. But as a bonus, when you buy the album, you get the actual vinyl album sent to you, with album art of course.

That's my wish anyway...

Aero, i would love if that happened. I hate cherry picking off an album. You can't grow with loving an album if you just go by one listen impulses when you hear a song.

LG, I would likely stop putting my money into music which is an exorbitant amount if that were my only option. I'm just not a vinyl fan. CD will always be my main media for music until I have no choice.
 

Migmagnific

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Funny how you can compare it to the food industry, once you start producing food in a factory it loses quality.
They might start as musicians but they quickly become just another product..
 
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Khor1255

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Make bars hostile to 'amateur' musicians you end up with corporate schills making 'music'.

Who knew?





















Pro tip: Anyone who was paying attention.
 

Migmagnific

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Not surprised by any of that news, musicians started off playing for food or a place to sleep by the fire,,,could be many of them will be doing that again if the industry continues down the road it's headed now.

Considering we value astute businessman who successfully manage companies etc. it's actually astonishing the lack of intelligence and foresight that put the record companies in the predicament they find themselves in now. i-tunes was never the answer, Jobs only mandate was to make as much money for his company as possible, not to help musicians.

I would roll back the clock and release vinyl albums only, I know that sounds preposterous but many real fans would buy them...the question is the new generation and what they would do if that happened.


I think the problem is that they are not adapting fast enough for the social changes. The way people consume music as changed and labels haven't made much effort to evolve from it..

This is a debate that can go on and on :heheh:
 

Jet

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How about keeping iTunes but making customers buy the entire digital album on there. But as a bonus, when you buy the album, you get the actual vinyl album sent to you, with album art of course.

That's my wish anyway...

I like that idea too, but as Sooty said, no cherry picking. For me, that means don't put one great song on an album and the rest are average at best. I think that artists need to tour to push their new album. But I also think that something should be done about the outrageous prices you have to pay to see a big act in concert. Something should be done about that life-force sucking Ticketmaster and ticket brokers. I paid over $4000 grand for two people to see Paul McCartney, but that is it for me as far as concerts go. It would be nice to get a free CD or album with the tickets, but then again that is never going to happen. :uh:

As far as Taylor Swift having three perfumes that is just plain greed. I'll never buy that crud. If Paul comes out with a men's cologne, I believe that would be sign the world is coming to an end. However, Paul does make money in the music publishing business which to me is smart.
 

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