The Grammy Awards rescheduled their ceremony today only to choose the exact date that's been occupied by the Screen Actors Guild Awards for months now. RUDE. We'd say this will be a tough call for celebrities as to which to attend but given that there seems to be no end in sight to the pandemic with even the vaccine rollout botched (thus far at least), we imagine both will end up virtual even though they're not happening until March 14th.
But given that the world is in chaos once again we sought distraction today and noticed that both Billboard and Rolling Stone released their 2020 year-end charts for the top albums and top songs. A few notes of interest...
THE TOP DOZEN ALBUMS ACCORDING TO ROLLING STONE
THE TOP DOZEN ALBUMS ACCORDING TO BILLBOARD
We don't know why these differ in ranking but we suspect it's because music figures are much less defineable than say, movie box office... though obviously the movies will eventually be forced to come up with new methodologies in the near future (streaming affected the music industry much earlier). We're a ways off from that still though since powerful filmmakers and stars are not yet demanding accurate verifiable streaming numbers so Netflix (and their competitors) just occassionally will tell us some numbers and we can choose to believe them or not and argue about whether watching 2 minutes of something should count as a view. The current undefinable situation won't last forever since money is involved in these deals and eventually people will want the hard numbers for negotations and profit sharing and the like.
Some other notes from the Rolling Stone list (Billboards differ but we had completed this post before we noticed the Billboard charts which are similar but different)
• Taylor Swift is the undisputed champ with Folklore (#1) triumphantly heading into Grammy voting as well as four other albums charting: 2019's Lover (#28) the brand new Evermore (#63), 1989 (#116), and Reputation (#165). So prolific lately. (Drake had the most albums on the year-end chart though with six... though none were in the top ten)
• Rankings of the "Album of the Year" nominees that didn't make the top ten: Chilombo by Jhene Aiko (#19), Future Nostalgia by Dua Lipa (#42). The other nominees (Black Pumas, Djesse Vol 3, Everyday Life, and Women in Music Pt III) didn't make the top 200 unless we somehow missed them in perusing the list.
• MUSICALS! The following musicals charted in the top 200 of 2020: Hamilton (#10), Frozen 2 (#33), Moana (#78), The Greatest Showman (#118), and Lady Gaga's A Star is Born (#156). Hilariously all of those have been streamed at TFE HQ at least once this past calendar year but then we love musicals more than the average person so we listen to lots of them.
• Catalogue Albums? Old albums that charted indicating either longevity or renewed interest for various reasons (but usually both): The Eagles - The Eagles (#46), Greatest Hits - Queen (#58), Abbey Road - the Beatles (#64), Rumours - Fleetwood Mac (#73), Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac (#87), Appetite for Destruction - Guns N Roses (#98), Nevermind - Nirvana (#101), Back in Black - AC/DC (#105), Thriller - Michael Jackson (#108), Merry Christmas -Mariah Carey (#149), The Wall - Pink Floyd (#167), The Dark Side of the Moon - Pink Floyd (#180), and White Christmas - Bing Crosby (#199).
• Streams vs Sales -Strangely hip hop artists beat pop artists in streaming only charts whereas the reverse happens in sales only charts.
TOP 20 SONGS OF THE YEAR ACCORDING TO ROLLING STONE
TOP 20 SONGS OF THE YEAR ACCORDING TO BILLBOARD
How does WAP -- which was inescapable all summer -- make the top ten in one list and is all the way done at 24 in the other? It's a mystery!
But then so much of this is a mystery. These lists make us feel a bit old as some of the names are unfamiliar. Thankfully you never get too old for movies and TV! So... back to your regularly scheduled programming (aka movies with a little tv thrown in).