Taylor Swift’s Showgirl has already sold 3.5 million, beating Adele’s 25
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Fans looking at copies of US singer-songwriter Taylor Swift's album The Life Of A Showgirl during a release party on Oct 3.
PHOTO: EPA
Ben Sisario
Follow topic:
NEW YORK – When Adele’s album 25 came out 10 years ago – featuring the hit Hello – it sold nearly 3.5 million copies out of the gate, breaking longstanding opening-week sales numbers.
An astonished music industry assumed that in the new age of streaming, no album could top it. Then came Taylor Swift.
The Life Of A Showgirl, which came out on Oct 3, has surpassed Adele’s decade-old record. According to initial sales reports collected by tracking firm Luminate and reported to Billboard, Showgirl has logged the equivalent of at least 3.5 million sales in the United States in its first five days on sale, and it still has two days to go before the opening-week sales period ends on Oct 9.
The success comes as Swift navigates a mixed reaction to Showgirl.
For an artiste accustomed to receiving heavy helpings of praise from critics and fans, responses have been all over the map, including some notably harsh reviews – Pitchfork gave it 5.9 out of 10, The Guardian two stars out of five – and many disappointed hot takes on social media among the usual hosannas.
“I welcome the chaos,” Swift said of the reactions in a video interview with Zane Lowe of Apple Music. “I’m not the art police,” she added.
The roll-out for Showgirl included an 89-minute “release party” in cinemas over the weekend, which featured the premiere of a music video and behind-the-scenes segments that some critics compared with DVD extras.
It drew US$33 million (S$42.7 million) at box offices in the US and Canada, clobbering the total for The Smashing Machine, the latest movie from action star Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.
The maths behind Swift’s victory shows how physical media formats like CDs and vinyl LPs remain key to the success of top albums even now, when streaming accounts for about 82 per cent of revenues from recorded music sales in the US, and services like Spotify and Apple Music have become the default listening platforms for most fans.
The 3.5 million sales tally is an “equivalent”, or composite number, used by Luminate and Billboard to reconcile streaming popularity with purchases of individual tracks and of the album as a complete package.
Of the figure, about 3.2 million were “traditional sales”, or purchases of the full album, with 2.7 million logged on the first day of release. That means many of those purchases – perhaps most – were made in advance. Swift issued no singles for Showgirl before its full release.
The remaining 300,000 equivalent sales were attributed to streaming activity, according to Luminate and Billboard.
Its tally so far includes 1.2 million copies sold on vinyl, beating Swift’s previous record of 859,000 in 2024 for The Tortured Poets Department.
Swift’s vinyl numbers have shot up dramatically in recent years. When she released Midnights in 2022, it opened with 575,000 copies on that format; 1989 (Taylor’s Version), released in 2023, did 693,000.
In 2006, when Swift began her recording career, the US music industry logged only about 900,000 vinyl LP sales for the entire year, according to data from the Recording Industry Association of America.
As with Swift’s other recent releases, album sales for Showgirl were helped by their availability in a portfolio of “variants” and special editions, including special cover art, multiple colours of vinyl and packages released through her website for a limited time.
According to Billboard, Showgirl was released in at least 27 configurations on physical formats – vinyl, CD and even cassette – including four that were released in the last few days. For a limited time, Swift sold a US$70 package that included a “TS”-branded cardigan, in Showgirl-style glittery orange, with a CD in a box.
The final first-week sales numbers for Showgirl are expected to be announced early next week. NYTIMES

