Does anyone buy music singles anymore?

I have one from the big “Two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles on a sesame seed bun” campaign :smiley:

Do you mean “count” in the sense that it counts towards sales charts and such, like the Billboard Hot 100?

Buying a single song from an album will count towards the singles chart, and then buying a “single package” (which is the albums with one or two songs, basically the digital equivalent of the CD single) also counts towards the singles chart, and then of course buying a full digital album counts towards the album chart.

Sorry if that’s not what you meant and I’ve just told you something you already knew!

You mean those floppy cellophane thingies? What a waste of time they were! If anyone has got one of them that is still playable - assuming you’d want to play it - I’ll be amazed.

A lot of time CD singles will have bonus tracks on them. Of course iTunes is mp3 and some people want lossless, which would also mean buying the CD

I just checked hmv.com and they still have some singles.

Enjoy

I do, indeed. Had several, long since tossed, I’m sure.

I also remember singles being “printed” on the backs of cereal boxes. I seem to recall a promotion for HoneyComb cereal, where you could get a 45 from some pop singer of the time (Bobby Goldsboro, maybe) on the back of the box.

I mean count in that the OP said “I’m not talking about downloads” presumably because they didn’t want to count purchases of portions of albums, but I suspect they forgot about or didn’t realize that ‘single albums’ also exist in digital form.

You left out the onions.

I had a single of The Archies doing “Sugar Sugar” cut off the back of a cereal box!

Nowadays, it’s hard enough to find a brick-and-mortar recored store, let alone a vinyl record. With the demise of Tower, I don’t know of any left in my neighborhood.

A quick scan of my iTunes library reveals fifty-two “singles” that I’ve purchased from iTunes. They’re not uncommon (not that you said they were; just going along with your point). I’d say that it’s the exception for a pop artist not to release a promotional single on iTunes prior to the album release.

iTunes also has those Digital 45s of mostly old material, but also some new stuff. I have the Jay-Z “Run This Town” Digital 45 that also includes a live version of the song, and I saw this on sale in CD form at Best Buy a while ago.