What?
Kidding. I'm not one to post the best 37 albums of the past year, or the greatest 219 songs of the past decade. If you ask me, every album I got over the past decade is great...that's why I got it. But I'll give you one decade-end story. Eminem and The Beatles are officially the top selling artists of the 2000's. Surprised? Not me.
Over three decades after their breakup, the Beatles still released the top-selling album of the 2000's. The Fab Four’s greatest hits compilation, 1, sold over 11,448,000 copies since its release in November 2000 according to Nielsen SoundScan’s decade-end sales numbers. Eminem was the 2000s’ top-selling artist with 32.2 million combined in sales, plus two albums in the decade’s Top 10: The Marshall Mathers LP was fourth with 10,195,000 sold and Eminem Show was fifth with 9,789,000. Slim Shady edged out the Fab Four for the distinction of the decade’s top-seller as the Beatles claimed Number Two with 30 million. Only two more albums managed to cross the 10 million plateau: ‘NSync’s No Strings Attached (11,111,000) and Norah Jones’ Come Away With Me (10,523,000.)
As a testament to the record industry’s decline in the second half of the decade, only two albums released in the years between 2005 and 2009 managed to get in the Top 20 of the 2000s’ bestsellers: Nickelback’s All the Right Reasons and Carrie Underwood’s Some Hearts at 14 and 17, with sales under seven million. Obviously Nickelback and Carrie Underwood fans don't know how to download, or quite possibly even know how to use a computer.
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