NewsApril, 10 Billionth music single downloadedActs such as Adele and Maroon 5 have helped push the UK record industry to a new milestone with the one billionth download of a digital single. The volume of sales for downloads has exploded in recent years to the extent that barely any physical singles are sold except in the run-up to Christmas. The billionth download was bought last night, according to data tracking by the Official Charts Company. The company's figures also show that Adele's Someone Like You is the most downloaded track ever in the UK, with Maroon 5 featuring Christina Aguilera at number two with Moves Like Jagger. In third place is Somebody That I Used To Know by Gotye featuring Kimbra, followed by Black Eyed Peas with I Gotta Feeling and Rihanna's We Found Love, featuring Calvin Harris. Rounding off the top 10 are Sex On Fire by the Kings Of Leon, Carly Rae Jepsen's Call Me Maybe, LMFAO's Party Rock Anthem, Just The Way You Are (Amazing) by Bruno Mars and Price Tag by Jessie J. Downloading took off in a major way in 2004, the same year that a separate sales chart was launched, and figures went on to be included in the main singles chart the following year. Download sales for singles now run to more than three million each week, and last year they hit new heights with 188.6 million tracks sold. The one billion figure does not include sales of whole albums, but does include album tracks which are bought individually. Chief executive of the BPI Geoff Taylor said: "The digital music revolution has made it easy to buy any song you like, instantly, for half the price of a coffee. As fans increasingly download music on the move, tablets, smartphones and connected cars will drive another phase in digital music's expansion." Official Charts Company managing director Martin Talbot said: "The explosion in download sales over the past nine years means we are genuinely now living in the digital music age - with Adele as our queen. Over the nine years of legitimate digital music, more than 16 new tracks have sold one million copies, which emphasises just how popular digital music is in the modern age."
Source: music.uk.msn.com
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