Think You Have a Hit? Make Sure Its the First Song on Your Album


As a songwriter and producer, Warren Oak Felders resume encompasses hits from Nicki Minaj (Your Love), Usher (Good Kisser) and Alessia Cara (Here). Hes been in the industry for nearly 15 years and, until 2018, he had never heard anyone say skip rate in the studio.

That word was not uttered, Felder says. But its become increasingly common: Now there are conversations we all have as songwriters yeah, we just want the skip rate of this song to be super low.'

Skip rate indicates whether listeners make it through any 30 seconds of a song after which a stream counts for royalty purposes in a given playlist. And data like this, which comes from the streaming services, is quietly rewiring the album-making process, especially for young artists with commercial ambitions.

The basic concern: At a time when every skip is quantified and reflected in both an artists public statistics at least on YouTube and Spotify and his or her bank account, how do you construct an album to be bulletproof against listeners short attention spans?

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Ive had a million and one conversations about the whole album sequencing thing, says Barry Hefner Johnson, co-founder of the management company Since the 80s, which includes 21 Savage and J.I.D. on its roster. This really affects new and younger artists that are trying to capture the attention of an audience. If you dont, theyre gonna move on to something else too quick.

Here are the numbers; numbers dont lie.

Previous generations of artists never realized how good they had it. If fans bought Marvin Gayes tour de force, I Want You, and only listened to the first song before moving on, Gaye was none the wiser and, just as important, none the poorer. Whats more, Gayes label did not receive information the week after release indicating that fans had decided to skip track three, the After the Dance instrumental, en masse because they preferred tracks with vocals.

Thats not to say that the musical medium of choice hasnt always dictated, to some degree, the creation of content. Concept albums were not possible before LPs were popular. The adoption of the 12 vinyl single in the Seventies allowed for the recording of longer songs with more distance between soft and loud, paving the way for remixes and transforming dance music.

But the feedback loop between the medium and the music transmitted within is now instantaneous and ruthlessly precise.Data comes back [from YouTube] and its like, videos that have intros longer than 20 seconds have less playback value,' adds Alexander AE Edwards, vp of A&R at Def Jam. So if an artist is going to start a video off with a 30-second scene of them running in the bank and robbing the bank, its like, people might not watch this because they dont want to sit through 30 seconds of no music. We have those conversations within the label and with the artists: Maybe the intro has to be 15 seconds; this is why; here are the numbers; numbers dont lie.'

When it comes to albums, the current emphasis for younger acts is steering prospective listeners through the projects early stretches with a white-knuckle grip. People are definitely putting the focus tracks towards the front of the album to make sure those get the proper shot at having a chance to stick, says Ezekiel Lewis, executive vp of A&R at Epic Records.

Johnson has seen the same trend. Put the best six songs up front, make it top heavy to keep em glued in for a longer listen, he explains. I remember a conversation that me and No I.D. had a couple months ago. He was saying, nowadays, if you can make it past the first six songs, people almost deem your album a classic.

In theory, front-loading an album has an attention-holding effect If people dont appreciate the top of the album, they wont even get to the bottom of it, Lewis says but theres also a psychological aspect to it. Playlist-listening is already out-performing album-listening in surveys, so people are positioning their albums to feel like playlists, explains Henny Yegezu, who manages Goldlink and Smino.

Think of a Spotify or Apple playlist: Positioning matters, Yegezu continues. The Number One song on the playlist is something youre gunning for. The way you gauge success is how far up and down you are. [Placing big songs first on an album is] adjusting to the customer and how they consume the music [now].

There may also be a commercial advantage to placing singles first. To the extent that fans still start an album by listening to the first track, putting singles near the top of the album is a way to give them a boost on the charts, since streams count towards the rankings. You see the intro always at the top of the streaming numbers the first week when their album is released, says Dallas Martin, svp of A&R at Atlantic Records. Everybody is listening to the first song automatically. So when 21 Savage starts I Am > I Was with A Lot, thats for sure a strategy to help it get more attention. (Its also worth noting that A Lot is great, and worthy of extra attention.)

Some in the music industry caution against over-reliance on data. Skip rates are a funny thing for a few reasons, explains Danny Rukasin, who co-manages Billie Eilish. Youre looking at an aggregate every single listeners skip rate in a given playlist. But some artists have core fans that are going to listen no matter what. Those are the people that you should care about. You obviously care about the mass audience as well, but when youre trying to pull it all into one ratio, I think youre missing a lot of details you should be paying attention to.

Attention spans are so short, if you dont catch people right off the bat, they might not hear the hits at the end.

But when data is in your face all the time and labels now pride themselves on their spreadsheet-reading abilities its not easy to ignore. We have tons of conversations about skip rates, Martin says. Soon as that first week data comes, we check to see whats really talking back.

There is one group of commercially-inclined acts that gets to rise above these conversations: Stars. [Ariana Grande] already made the money back on the album [from the gargantuan success of her first two singles] people like her, who are established, can make albums how they want to, Johnson says. Interestingly, Grande back-loaded her new album, placing all three singles at the end.

There are a few other singers in her orbit. Rukasin says Eilish is not taking any skip-rate calculations into account as she finishes her debut album; Eilish has amassed a fervent following over the past two years, to the point where she is one of the only singers with singles that can stream like Grandes. Then there are the usual suspects: Beyonce, Rihanna, Kendrick They do what they want, Johnson adds. Youre gonna listen anyway. This suggests that the Album As Statement is now primarily a luxury, a plaything for the mega-rich.

But even seemingly invincible stars cant stop listener attrition over the course of an album. March 14, the 25th and final track on Drakes Scorpion, is the marathon-double-albums least-listened-to song, according to data from BuzzAngle, a company that charts music consumption. The same goes for Coffee Bean, the closing song on Travis Scotts Astroworld.

This puts young acts in a tough position. I had this argument with the label, Dreamville and Interscope, about the album from Earthgang [a hip-hop duo who signed with J. Coles Dreamville Records in 2017], Johnson says. We had this whole conceptual album with skits and everything, and we had some of our biggest songs at the end of the album. They were just like, what if people dont get to the back of the album? Attention spans are so short, if you dont catch people right off the bat, they might not hear the hits at the end. So how about putting the bigger songs up front.' (In an email, the A&R at Interscope who works with Earthgang said he did not remember this meeting.)

Yegezu understands the strike-early mindset. With baby acts, the reality is that the idea [of a concept album] might go over fans heads, he says.

Concept albums still exist, and there are always exceptions to the general rule, Lewis adds.

But in the era of tracks, put your best foot forward.