*** ----> Music industry begins global Friday release of new albums | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Music industry begins global Friday release of new albums

New York

Big record stores, streaming services and hit charts adjusted longtime practices as the music industry Friday began a coordinated global release for new albums.

For the first time most new albums will be released in all formats on Fridays everywhere in the world, ending regional divergences that industry players found increasingly anachronistic in the age of instant digital music.

The IFPI, the industry's global body, is championing "New Music Fridays" both to curb piracy and to stimulate sales as shoppers start their weekends.

The coordinated day marks "an opportunity to recreate excitement around the release of music -- the message is 'Think Friday, Think New Music,'" said Frances Moore, chief executive of the London-based IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry).

Releases on the first New Music Friday included the latest by English synthpop star Little Boots and the first album in more than a decade by Chicago alternative rockers Veruca Salt.

Spotify, the leader in the booming streaming sector, marked New Music Friday with a notification to subscribers and a playlist of songs recently released by artists such as Eminem, Demi Lovato and Pharrell Williams -- who had originally put out the song "Freedom" as an exclusive for Apple's new streaming service.

Major global charts also modified reporting periods. The next "weekly" hit list of Billboard, the premier US chart, will cover 11 days to account for the transition.

Albums traditionally have come out on Tuesday in the United States and Billboard's chart has looked at weeks ending on Sundays. 

The top album on the last chart with such a period, ending July 5, was "Dreams Worth More Than Money" by rapper Meek Hill, who scored his first number one.

One institution that faced a peculiar problem with the transition was NewReleaseTuesday.com, a leading US site for Christian music.

The site rechristened itself NewReleaseToday to keep with the times while preserving the acronym NRT, by which it is commonly known.