Dude, she was a popular artist in the day, but no where near the multi-generational staying power of a band like the Rolling Stones, Beatles, or now potentially; Taylor Swift. Just because Ronstadt is one of your favorites, doesn't change her standing as an artist in history.
Really? How so?
And there was no "hit churn" back in the 60's through today? Ever hear the term; one hit wonder? An artist who writes, produces, and performs 19 out of the top 40 songs in a given month isn't a one hit wonder.
Again, really? You keep saying that, so please explain the differences.
Okay, then whats the comparison of comparing music sale-tabulation/popularity vs diary and PPM?
This is going to be interesting...
Maybe it's changed the way music is consumed, but not popularity. One could easily argue it's easier to accurately track consumption in the digital space than record companies reporting sales.
How did it change? There wasn't any streaming to speak of before 2005-2010, when streaming began to dominate music consumption. In the past, music
sales figured into the Billboard charts. There were separate charts for airplay, naturally.
Now the Hot 100 is dominated by streaming, because
there are no sales to speak of. That to me is different.
Streaming became the dominant method of consuming music in 2015, according to the RIAA. That's just 7 years ago. Sales comprise maybe 5% of music consumption. The rest is streaming.
You want to tell me how many times relatively unknown acts swamped 20% he Billboard Hot 100 every other week, before 2015? I'll wait for your answer. I already know it rarely, if ever happened. Even the Beatles didn't have 20% of the Billboard 100 chart.
As for PPM vs. diaries, even David Eduardo has stated several times on RD that
the diaries clearly were not accurate. The PPM is accurate. That's quite a difference.
The diary keepers were entering blocks of time for a station that
they weren't listening to for much of that time. The PPM showed that during that same period of time the radio could have been on 2-3 other stations during that same time period.
To me, that's a different metric. One is based on memory and convenience to the user. The other one is a direct recording of whatever they actually were listening to.
I don't care to argue with people here about the definition of what makes a different metric. The fact is that the chart reflects the popularity of music differently from how it reflected it in 1999. There are no sales. The chart is based on what junior calls up on his Spotify or Pandora from minute to minute. The only similarity is that it is music consumption. That's where the similarity ends.
In 1992 there were no Gunna's taking up 12 slots of the Hot 100, or Lil Baby's taking up 20% of the chart for a week. before disappearing within 14 days or so. That kind of thing didn't happen.
As for one hit wonders, Vanity Fare was a one hit wonder band, and their hit "Hitchin A Ride" lasted on the chart for much longer than a week. Disco Duck was a one hit wonder that lasted on the chart longer than a week, too. Many one hit wonders had hits that lasted on the chart longer than a week or two. They may have only had one hit, but their hits often had some longevity on the chart. None of the one hit wonders took up 20% of the national chart, only to disappear the next week. Your idea of 'churn' and my idea of 'churn' are obviously different concepts.
As for your last statement, we're in total agreement. Remember how one Garth Brooks album shipped platinum, and then it was revealed that record companies were shipping multiple crates of CDs to stores, and many of those CDs weren't sold to the consumers for a couple months or so? The shipments to the record stores alone drove the album up the charts. Finally they came up with a system to more accurately track sales -- sound something or other (Soundscan?). Can't remember the name of the system. Where they actually tracked sales, at the checkout stands, of each individual CD, and that data was used for the charts.
PS, Ronstadt isn't one of my favorites. I was stating that she didn't have the generational impact that Taylor Swift, the Beatles, or Nirvana had. She was popular, but not the same sort of superstar that the others were.