
The 120-page report is based on Airplay and Digital data supplied by global research and measurement company Nielsen. It analyses the presence of various repertoires – including repertoire from the European Union – in the Top 200 most played songs and most downloaded tracks in France, Germany, Netherlands, Poland, Spain and Sweden, and on a pan-European basis.
The main findings are the following:
– European repertoire fares quite well on a national level with local repertoire but the number of European artists capable of transforming a local success into a cross-borders success is quite limited.
– The only music that crosses borders without limitations is US-based repertoire.
– Even UK repertoire has difficulties crossing borders, as few British artists have pan-European success (Adele in particular).
– Countries from Southern and Eastern/Central Europe are less likely to have cross-borders successes than countries from Northern Europe. However, Romania is becoming a significant source of repertoire.
– In each European country, English-language repertoire heavily dominates the airwaves and digital downloads, with shares of local language music varying by country, but never over 25%.
– European music genres that cross borders are usually in the Dance and Pop fields. US acts that fare well on a pan-European basis are in the R&B, Hip-Hop, Dance and Pop field.
– Rock, as a music genre, is almost non-existent in the European listings.
The study was underwritten by Brussels-based organisation European Music Office, in partnership with Dutch festival/conference Eurosonic/Noordeslag with the support of Nielsen, the global measurement and analytics company.
It aims at monitoring and analysing the cross-borders flows of repertoire within the EU in 2011 in order to identify patterns and suggest policies to address deficiencies in the single music market.