Australian Recording Industry Association
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"ARIA" redirects here. For other uses, see ARIA (disambiguation).
Music of Australia [ ] | |
---|---|
Indigenous Australian | English, Irish and Scottish |
Pub | Other immigrants |
Timeline and samples | |
Genres | Classical - Hip hop - Jazz - Country- Rock (Indie · Hardcore punk) |
Organisations | ARIA |
Awards | Australian Music Centre · ARIA Music Awards · The Deadlys |
Charts | ARIA Charts, JJJ Hottest 100 |
Festivals | List: Big Day Out · Livid · Homebake · Falls · Stompem Ground Tamworth (Country) · Womadelaide · Splendour In The Grass |
Media | CAAMA, Countdown, Rage, Triple J, ABC |
National anthem | "Advance Australia Fair" |
Cities and regions | |
Adelaide - Brisbane - Canberra - Perth |
The Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) is a trade group representing the Australian recording industry. It oversees the collection, administration and distribution of music licenses and royalties. The association has more than a hundred members, including small labels typically run by one to five people, medium size organisations and very large companies with international affiliates. ARIA is administered by a Board of Directors comprising senior executives from record companies, both large and small. It is the Australian counterpart of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
In 2006 ARIA formed sponsorship deals with Motorola and Nova and changed the appearance and conduct of the charting. Motorola took naming-rights sponsorship seeing the charts referred to in the media as the Motorola ARIA Charts. ARIA, have commented that as part of the same marketing printed charts would be reintroduced into media retailing shops and their website would be redesigned. As part of the deal Nova began broadcasting the charted singles in reverse orders on a Sunday afternoon show.
Contents |
[edit] Methodology of its charts
ARIA collects recorded music sales data from more than 1100 music retailers across Australia. Sales figures are then extrapolated to achieve a 'best estimate' of the actual overall sales of each title. Titles are ranked according to their 'weighted' sales figures.
The charts are calculated once every week on Sundays. They are based on retail music sales within Australia for the week from the preceding Saturday to the Friday prior to calculation. The new charts are usually uploaded to the official ARIA website on Sunday night Eastern Australian time. The Club Chart is compiled from weekly DJ reports across Australia.
According to ARIA, a music single, album or DVD that has shipped a minimum of 35,000 copies to music retailers can be certified gold, and shippings of over 70,000 copies can be certified platinum.
In April 2006 ARIA began producing a Digital Track Chart, calculated from sales data submitted by major online music providers such as Apple iTunes, BigPond Music, Destra Music, NineMSN Music and Soundbuzz, as well as retailers such as Ripit, Leading Edge and JB Hi-Fi. [1] ARIA says the digital sales market accounted for $8 million revenue to the industry during 2005, or around 1.5 per cent of the overall wholesale market. [2]
[edit] Criticisms
Like most recording industry associations, ARIA has been criticised for fighting copyright infringement matters aggressively, although in Australia this has taken largely the form of aggressive advertising campaigns particularly in cinemas directly preceding movies. This criticism is stauncher in Australia due to the absence of an equivalent Digital Millennium Copyright Act or state crimes acts which clearly establish copyright infringement as a crime.
[edit] ARIA Charts
- For more information, see ARIA Charts.
[edit] Singles
- Top 50 Singles Chart
- Top 20 Dance Chart
- Top 20 Australasian Chart
- Top 50 Club Chart
- Top 40 Digital Track Chart
- Top 50 Physical Singles Chart
- Top 40 Urban Singles Chart
[edit] Albums
- Top 50 Albums Chart
- Top 20 Country Chart
- Top 20 Compilations Chart
- Top 40 Urban Albums Chart
[edit] Home Videos
- Top 40 DVD Chart