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Retailers Foresee a Sweet Week for Music
02/06/2004 9:04 PM, Reuters Margo Whitmire
Cupid is taking aim at music
lovers.
For the past three years, music sales during the week of
Valentine's Day have been second only to the boffo weeks
leading up to Christmas. Last year, 13.9 million albums were
sold during Valentine's Day week, according to Nielsen
SoundScan. In 2002, the tally was 14.5 million; in 2001, 15.5
million.
With the Feb. 8 Grammy Awards preceding the holiday for the
first time this year -- and Presidents Day falling two days
after Valentine's Day -- the industry is predicting that
holiday sales will be bigger than ever.
"The traffic coming in to find Grammy winners could easily
translate to shoppers asking themselves what they can buy for
other people," says Richie Gallo, senior VP of sales and
marketing for Universal Music Enterprises. "So it's a wonderful
opportunity that becomes even more important this year."
Last year's Grammy darling Norah Jones is expected to be
the top seller of the week with her Feb. 10 sophomore effort,
"Feels Like Home" (Blue Note).
"It's the perfect record for that week," says Carl Mello,
music buyer for Boston-based Newbury Comics. He expects to see
a lot of couples coming in to buy the album.
Jones' project is just one of many albums from
multi-platinum performers in stores that day. In a heavy
release slate that shows the importance of the day as a sales
peg, new records from Kylie Minogue , Courtney Love and Melissa
Etheridge are also arriving Feb. 10.
"It was an intentional decision to release Courtney around
Valentine's Day. Especially with an album named 'America's
Sweetheart,"' says Randy Miller, executive VP of marketing for
Virgin Records.
It's a good week for new releases, Trans World executive
VP/CFO John Sullivan notes, because "everyone's got to buy
something for their sweetheart, and is an ideal gift for
Valentine's Day."
Trans World will act as cupid for shoppers with a "Gifts
From the Heart" display in its stores, with Jones as the key
feature.
Labels also recognize the holiday week as a big selling
point for relevant catalog reissues and romantic compilations.
Universal's Gallo says it has special promotions running
with Trans World, Tower and Best Buy that will highlight
collections by Quincy Jones , Isaac Hayes , Donny & Marie Osmond ,
Vanessa Williams , the Temptations and Engelbert Humperdinck .
Inviting couples to get in the mood, Universal also
released "Let's Get It On," a compilation of favorites such as
the Marvin Gaye classic of the same name.
EMI Music has new collections by Teddy Pendergrass and Al Green in stores, as well as "Midnight Soul," which features
songs by romantic soul crooners like Barry White , Gaye and
Freddie Jackson.
Sony Music will release its annual "Love Songs" collection
-- which started in 1996 with Billie Holiday -- featuring Andy Williams ; Rosemary Clooney ; Earth, Wind & Fire and country duo
George Jones and Tammy Wynette .
Virgin Entertainment Group senior VP of product and
marketing Dave Alder says that adding an edge to the
merchandise has helped bring Valentine's Day awareness to its
stores. "We're featuring everything from Josh Groban and Norah
Jones to Kama Sutra massage cream and a strip chocolate board
game," he says. "The straight, cliched approach doesn't work at
Virgin. We've added a twist, and that's what has worked for
us."
Also putting a spin on the holiday, Shout Factory's Jan. 20
"Wonderland" series features romantic compilations with
pulp-romance-novel covers from the '50s. The three-volume set
features classic pop and jazz love songs by such artists as
Ella Fitzgerald , Sarah Vaughan , Peter Cincotti and Carly Simon .
Humperdinck, who has made a career of romancing his fans,
is confident that music will always be an important part of the
holiday. "Romance makes the world go 'round," he says. "So many
people tell me they've made babies to my music. It's quite a
compliment to hear that somebody has brought a new life to this
world while listening to your music."
Reuters/Billboard
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