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S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
Saint John wrote:S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
It was a 2 disc set and moved about 750,000 units. Multiply that by 2 and you've sold 1.5 million discs. What's so hard to figure out about that?Besides, worldwide, I'm sure it has moved over a million physical units, though I'm aware that those wouldn't count toward the RIAA's certification. At any rate, it was a highly successful album and put a lot of loot in everyone's pocket that had writing credits on the album. Everybody wins.
Saint John wrote:S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
It was a 2 disc set and moved about 750,000 units. Multiply that by 2 and you've sold 1.5 million discs. What's so hard to figure out about that?Besides, worldwide, I'm sure it has moved over a million physical units, though I'm aware that those wouldn't count toward the RIAA's certification. At any rate, it was a highly successful album and put a lot of loot in everyone's pocket that had writing credits on the album. Everybody wins.
Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
S2M wrote:Saint John wrote:S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
It was a 2 disc set and moved about 750,000 units. Multiply that by 2 and you've sold 1.5 million discs. What's so hard to figure out about that?Besides, worldwide, I'm sure it has moved over a million physical units, though I'm aware that those wouldn't count toward the RIAA's certification. At any rate, it was a highly successful album and put a lot of loot in everyone's pocket that had writing credits on the album. Everybody wins.
Still fuzzy math. It is a package deal. Does a 12-disc boxset achieve platinum status in 1/12 the time as...say....Frontiers? It is a package. All the discs are packaged together. I'm sure the bill of lading at the local music store shows units ordered as each copy of Revelation, not each disc included separately. For RIAA to have different standards is ghey...they just do it to spark sales. "WOW, that disc is already gold?! It must be good!"
S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
Saint John wrote:Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
Wow ... I guess that begs the question; Do you know if they have any intention of certifying it Double Platinum?
Don wrote:Saint John wrote:Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
Wow ... I guess that begs the question; Do you know if they have any intention of certifying it Double Platinum?
Would probably depend if all those that were shipped have been sold.
Saint John wrote:Don wrote:Saint John wrote:Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
Wow ... I guess that begs the question; Do you know if they have any intention of certifying it Double Platinum?
Would probably depend if all those that were shipped have been sold.
If you take GH, Escape, Revelation and Eclipse, it seems like they're probably moving well above 10,000 units per week. The Schon, Cain and Perry royalty checks have to be pretty substantial. Then add in about 15k per show, or about 60k per week, for Schon and Cain. These guys are cashing monstrous checks.
I just can't imagine with Revelation selling that well why they don't dump La Do Da for Never Walk away. That was a fan favorite for the Revelation tour and even opened the show for a good amount of the tour. And it always went over really well. Hell, try Like A Sunshower! That's easy on the vocals. La Do Da? Seriously?!?
Saint John wrote:This should spark some discussion:
Original Foreigner singer Lou Gramm isn't a big fan of the current version of the band.
Like Journey, when Foreigner lost its original voice they eventually replaced it with a virtual sound-alike; exit Gramm, enter Kelly Hansen.
In a new interview with Spinner, Gramm sounds off on the subject of having his voice, and vocal style, replicated. "It is [strange]. It totally is," says Gramm. "But what's stranger to me is that, as I've learned talking to people who see those shows, is that in many cases the audience, especially if they're younger, don't even know it's not the original lead singer."
"In Foreigner's case," continues Lou, "as I understand it, the singer was actually trained to deliver pretty much exactly everything as I did it, note for note. If I were in the audience and learned that while I was there, I'd get up and leave. I think when the band name remains the exact same, but something as important as the lead vocal is different, it's misleading. It's like false advertising."
Saint John wrote:This should spark some discussion:
Original Foreigner singer Lou Gramm isn't a big fan of the current version of the band.
Like Journey, when Foreigner lost its original voice they eventually replaced it with a virtual sound-alike; exit Gramm, enter Kelly Hansen.
In a new interview with Spinner, Gramm sounds off on the subject of having his voice, and vocal style, replicated. "It is [strange]. It totally is," says Gramm. "But what's stranger to me is that, as I've learned talking to people who see those shows, is that in many cases the audience, especially if they're younger, don't even know it's not the original lead singer."
"In Foreigner's case," continues Lou, "as I understand it, the singer was actually trained to deliver pretty much exactly everything as I did it, note for note. If I were in the audience and learned that while I was there, I'd get up and leave. I think when the band name remains the exact same, but something as important as the lead vocal is different, it's misleading. It's like false advertising."
S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
Don wrote:I think the only band that could REALLY benefit from having their lead singer back is Styx. Dennis is out there with a product that is just as good or maybe even better. Both him and Styx are far from enjoying the resurgence in popularity that Journey and even Foreigner to a smaller extent are enjoying (Foreigner has many songs that continue to chart well around the world on iTunes and Amazon rock charts and they are a good concert draw in Europe to boot).
Don wrote: To be honest, I've never been able to verify if Lou did indeed having anything positive to say about Kelly but I didn't really look very hard either.
Onestepper wrote:Actually kind of a refreshing interview about stuff we normally don't hear a lot about. I know the Shirley thing had been reported previously, but I liked the non talking points material that he thew out there about the process. Good interview.
S2M wrote:Saint John wrote:S2M wrote:I'm still amazed that they are still following the fuzzy math of Revelation's sales figures...platinum? Yeah, ok.
It was a 2 disc set and moved about 750,000 units. Multiply that by 2 and you've sold 1.5 million discs. What's so hard to figure out about that?Besides, worldwide, I'm sure it has moved over a million physical units, though I'm aware that those wouldn't count toward the RIAA's certification. At any rate, it was a highly successful album and put a lot of loot in everyone's pocket that had writing credits on the album. Everybody wins.
Still fuzzy math. It is a package deal. Does a 12-disc boxset achieve platinum status in 1/12 the time as...say....Frontiers? It is a package. All the discs are packaged together. I'm sure the bill of lading at the local music store shows units ordered as each copy of Revelation, not each disc included separately. For RIAA to have different standards is ghey...they just do it to spark sales. "WOW, that disc is already gold?! It must be good!"
S2M wrote:Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
My bad. Just looked in the Thesaurus. Shipped is a synonym of sold. Sorry.
Saint John wrote:Don wrote:Saint John wrote:Jeremey wrote:Nomota just shipped another 50,000 units of Revelation last quarter so by whatever standards you want to count, either the single package math or the official RIAA accounting status, at this point it has shipped 1 million physical units.
Wow ... I guess that begs the question; Do you know if they have any intention of certifying it Double Platinum?
Would probably depend if all those that were shipped have been sold.
If you take GH, Escape, Revelation and Eclipse, it seems like they're probably moving well above 10,000 units per week. The Schon, Cain and Perry royalty checks have to be pretty substantial. Then add in about 15k per show, or about 60k per week, for Schon and Cain. These guys are cashing monstrous checks.
I just can't imagine with Revelation selling that well why they don't dump La Do Da for Never Walk away. That was a fan favorite for the Revelation tour and even opened the show for a good amount of the tour. And it always went over really well. Hell, try Like A Sunshower! That's easy on the vocals. La Do Da? Seriously?!?
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