VINYL records enjoyed a staggering renaissance in 2016, with sales jumping to their highest level in 25 years as Millennials continued to discover the delights of listening to their favourite artists on 12-inch.
In what will be music to traditionalists’ ears, more than 3.2 million LPs were sold last year, a rise of 53 per cent on 2015 and the highest annual total since 1991, when Simply Red’s Stars was the best-selling album.
David Bowie’s untimely death last January led to him becoming the best-selling vinyl artist of 2016, with five albums posthumously featuring in the top 30.
His Blackstar album, which was shortlisted for a Mercury Prize, was the most popular-selling album of the year, while Bowie fans kept his music alive by buying The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust, Hunky Dory, Nothing Has Changed and Changesonebowie.
It marks the ninth consecutive year that vinyl sales have grown, a far cry from the meagre 200,000 LPs sold in 2007.
While still niche products, LPs now account for nearly five per cent of the albums market, according to the British Phonographic Industry.
At least 30 titles sold more than 10,000 copies in 2016, compared with just 10 the year before, boosted by events such as “record store day” and a bigger audience among younger fans.
Streaming services have also rocketed 500 per cent since 2013 to an astonishing 45 billion audio streams in 2016 alone through digital services such as Spotify, Apple, Deezer and Tidal, equating to over 1,500 streams for every household in the UK.
December saw the milestone of one billion audio streams in a single week for the first time.
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