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Statistics:
•By the end of 1970 the Beatles had sold more than 500 million
records.
•Guinness reported sales of 545 million records from 1963-74.
•Let It Be (album) had the largest initial sales in US record
history up to that time. 3.7 million advance orders: $25.9 million.
•Let It Be (single) released in 3/70 sold one million in
sales in a month and later reached 1.5 million.
•The worldwide sales of 'Get Back' were estimated at 4.5
million.
•As of January '68 every Beatles' single had sold over one
million worldwide; 26 singles and LP's have sold over one million
in the U.S. alone. Total sales, converted to singles, was 225 million
(Schultheiss 201).
•New Jersey officials confiscated 30,000 copies of Two Virgins
LP having rendered them pornographic.
•Hey Jude had worldwide sales of 5 million in '68 and 7.5
million by '72.
•What It Costs to Make a Record (Business Week. 7/27/74)
Payments to publisher (2 cents per song)........................................24
Musicians union trust fund fee.........................................................08
Manufacturing cost.........................................................................35
Jacket, inner sleeve........................................................................15
Artist royalty (including recording fees) (variable)............................60
Freight to distributor.......................................................................03
Advertising.....................................................................................10
Total............................................................................................$1.55
•In the years 1963-68 the group sold an estimated $154 million
worth of records worldwide (Chapple and Garofalo. Rock and Roll
is here to Pay, p. 70).
•In addition, albums afforded a greater profit margin, were
less breakable, and cost only slightly more to handle. By 1969,
80 percent of the sales dollar was in LPs (Chapple and Garofalo.
Rock and Roll is here to Pay, p. 76).
•Paul had heard a figure from within Apple that only one
person out of a hundred bought Beatle records (Flippo, p. 239).
General Statements:
•"Double Beatle" from Newsweek. December 1968.
America could hardly wait for the new two-record Beatles album.
Capitol records sold 1.1 million copies in the first five days at
$11.58, the highest price ever asked for two pop disks. At that
price the buyer doesn't even get a handsome colorful jacket like
those enclosing the two previous Beatle records, "Magical Mystery
Tour" and "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band".
The new jacket is plain white, like a printing error, and its title...
•A proposed ad for the White Album: "You're eating
breakfast and in exactly forty-nine hours you could be the proud
owner of Beatles' album number 1. Or, of course, you might get number
3972, but that's pretty good too".
•John said he got the idea for Cry Baby Cry from an ad that
stated "Cry baby cry, make your mother buy".
•"The LP business really began with the advent of the
heavier rock acts", said Don Kirshner in 1972. Since their
singles were rarely played, albums were used to introduce the groups,
who planned their albums as singles anyway, that is as conceptual
units (Chapple and Garofalo. Rock and Roll is here to Pay, p. 76).
•Flying was credited to Lennon/McCartney/Harrison/Starr
and copyrighted in the UK by Northern Songs sometime in '68 (Schultheiss
199).
• In addition to negotiating a greatly increased royalty
rate for the Beatles (since early 1967 they had received, excluding
publishing income, 39 cents per album-prior to 1967, they had only
earned 6 cents per album) Klein also secured a piece of the action
for Apple Records as part of the deal. The deal was quite inventive
and it stipulated that EMI-who retained ownership of the Beatles
master recordings- would grant Apple the right to manufacture and
sell Beatle albums in the United States. Apple would then pay Capitol
to manufacture the actual records (Granados, S. Those Were the Days.
p. 93).
•Paul was in conference with some representatives from the
J. Walter Thompson agency. It was October 18, 1968, and Paul had
been worrying about ways to promote the release...of the White Album.
They couldn't rely on the same old hippies and the like to buy Beatles
albums because the saturation level was far too low. And he realized
that a formidable advertising machine such as JWT would know how
to up the ante (Flippo, p. 239).
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