michael hagerty said:
firepoint525 said:
"Love Me Do" only reached #17 in the UK. If we are to believe Michael Hagerty, then this might have actually been considered a "stiff." (Not sure if logic applied to American charts works with UK charts, or not.) At any rate, it is fairly well-known that Brian Epstein bought up multiple copies of the 45 in order to help inflate its sales figures. Apparently, British charts were, at least, in part, sales based. Great guy, that Brian Epstein. The downside to doing that is that he might have taken those copies of that 45 out of circulation, thus making it tougher to find the 45 in the stores. With a new group, you don't really want that. You want enough supply of the record available there to meet the demand.
Even if the UK charts were based on wholesale (and I don't know), the only strategy Brian could use without implicating EMI (a very strait laced company in those days) would be to buy up retail copies and hope for those stores to re-stock, boosting wholesale numbers. As you say, though, that strategy runs the risk that in the interim (or if the store for whatever reason doesn't re-order), legitimate sales will be lost.
That was, kinda sorta, what I was suggesting here. It seems to me that if the charts measure
wholesale orders rather than retail sales, it would be a lot like the way that we elect the president. None of you (unless you are an elector) have ever voted
directly for a president. Instead, you vote for a slate of electors, who, in turn, meet about a month after the election, and THEY cast the direct vote for the president. In my state (Tennessee), we have 11 electors, for our nine congressional districts, plus our two U.S. senators.
Getting this back on topic, I am curious about the "implicating EMI" bit. Could what Brian did be considered a form of payola? I was also curious if anyone ever found a stash of Beatles 45s (probably almost entirely "Love Me Do"s) in his personal possessions after he died, or if maybe he gave most of them to radio stations as promotions. It would seem to me that radio stations likely got their music DIRECTLY from the record companies.