How do album singles work?

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Who decides which song is a single and how?

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4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Popular music started as singles when the technology was very expensively produced on vinyl and broadcast over the radio. There was only so much possible time that a single vinyl cut could record, I believe around 3 minutes, but, eventually, there was also a flip/B side, so 6 total minutes . Artists liked to record two songs on a single vinyl for many reasons whether that’s their two most marketable, two favorite, or the two demonstrate their musical range, and distribute them because it was the most cost effective way for a fledgling artist to get music out there. Sometimes they were independent; sometimes they had already been approached by a record company who saw them perform live.

Based on a single, a record company may 1)approach you to maybe make more singles or do a full album or 2)decide you were a good investment and keep working with you. Either way, the company would have more control over your product and future singles/albums; however, you’re getting the added benefit of increased exposure. They could then use these singles to test other markets and determine where they should dedicate or develop their distribution and build your and ultimately their brand.

As time moved on, the single mechanism endured because vinyl was the primary means of distribution for so long and has endured through the history of recorded music. The idea of singles and albums is truly just a hangover from the initial way music was produced and distributed.

Fun fact, this is how the television industry was similarly originally constructed, on the Pilot to series model; it was a reflection of the Single to album model.

Anonymous 0 Comments

In the age of vinyl records, it was more practical for jukeboxes and radio stations to have smaller records (7” diameter) with a “single” song on each side. (You don’t want to hunt for the start of a song halfway through an album) It also takes up less shelf-space and cost less material to make.

Artist and record labels would guess which song would be the most popular and produce a record of that single to sell and give to radio stations. If the single was a hit, it translated in sales for the full album.

With digital music you no longer have to press an expensive run of vinyl for each song, but it still makes sense to promote a single song. People grow to remember and like songs after multiple listens. And climbing the music charts is easier if you don’t split plays between multiple songs on the album.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Depends on the band and label. There are contracts that allow bands creative freedom. And there are contracts that don’t. I would imagine in most modern pop music the producer has control over what single is released and that gets sent to the label for promotion. In all honesty most of time it’s probably just a team effort

Anonymous 0 Comments

you release a good song before the album comes out and people are more excited to buy it. the label or band decides whats is their “singles”

thats it