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K-pop album sales surge 37% on-year in 2021 despite pandemic

K-pop superstars BTS (Big Hit Music)
K-pop superstars BTS (Big Hit Music)
The K-pop music industry saw a surge in accumulated album sales last year despite the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic, thanks to top-tier artists such as BTS, EXO and aespa.

According to a year-end report from the South Korean music chart tracker Gaon Chart on Wednesday, the nation’s top 400 albums sold 57.09 million copies in and out of the country in 2021, up by 36.9 percent from the previous year’s 41.71 million.

After exceeding the 20 million mark for the first time in 2018, the number has since jumped drastically each year, surpassing the 25 million mark in 2019, the 40 million mark and the 57 million mark, respectively, in 2020 and 2021.

The sharp increases were attributed mainly to growing demand by K-pop music fans to soothe their disappointment in the wake of far fewer in-person performances after the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020, according to local music industry officials.

The top artists’ albums released by the two K-pop powerhouse labels Hybe and S.M. Entertainment dominated last year’s album sales, the data showed. Hybe subsidiaries include Big Hit Music, Belift Lab, Source Music, Pledis Entertainment, Koz Entertainment and Hybe Labels Japan.

Of the 400 albums tracked, 26 albums by Hybe artists were on the top 100 list -- all from K-pop acts and soloists. Their combined album sales came in at 15.23 million copies, which accounted for 33.5 percent of the total.

They included albums by BTS, Seventeen, Tomorrow X Together and Enhypen. Hybe’s main artist BTS topped the list, selling the most albums with its second English-language single “Butter,” which sold nearly 3 million copies last year. 

K-pop boy band NCT (S.M. Entertainment)
K-pop boy band NCT (S.M. Entertainment)
Based on S.M. Entertainment’s independent count, its K-pop artists sold a total of 17.62 million copies, nearly doubling the previous year‘s record. Its boy group NCT-related album sales accounted for about 62 percent of sales.

“When bringing back live in-person concerts, the soaring physical album sales may experience a slow down for a while, but the upward movement is likely to continue in the mid- to long-term,” Kim Jin-woo, head researcher at Gaon Chart, said in a note.

Contrary to album sales, digital music sales were sluggish in 2021.

The cumulative sales of the top 400 songs went down by 10.3 percent on-year in 2021, which also represented a 23.8 percent drop compared to 2019 before the pandemic hit the market.

The industry says that not only the COVID-19 pandemic but also the diversification of music streaming services and platforms have impacted sales figures.

People tended to use music streaming services during their commute before the pandemic, but the increase in the number of people working from home reduced the hours of use.

Fewer releases of new songs also affected the result.

By Jie Ye-eun (yeeun@heraldcorp.com)
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