Last week, RCA Records announced the release of a new record from Ke$ha, the tangle-haired, brown liquor-loving singer whose blippy âTiK ToKâ was inescapable for most of the first half of this year. But Cannibalâcoming to a music retailer near you on November 22, the same day as new releases from heavy hitters like Kanye West, Nicki Minaj, and My Chemical Romanceâis not quite the second album from the untidy singer.
Instead, the official word from RCA is that Cannibal is a âcompanionâ to Ke$haâs debut album, Animal, which came out in January.Itâll contain eight new songs and a remix; the first single from Cannibal, âWe R Who We R,â debuted last week.
âCompanionâ records seems to be the next step in extending albumsâ shelf lives, following the âdeluxeâ editions that populated stores during the past few holiday seasonsâadd a few tracks to the back end of an album and release one of them to radio, slap on a new coat of paint, andâvoila!âa stocking stuffer is born.
In 2008, Coldplay set the stage for the companion-album trend with the re-release of Viva La Vida or Death And All His Friends; the new version was bundled with Prospektâs March, an eight-song EP that included remixes of songs on the parent album, including a Jay-Z-assisted version of the track âLost,â and was available for sale on its own. Then Lady Gaga went one step further, eschewing remixes in favor of what was almost an entirely new album.
âI think re-releases are unfair,â Gaga told Rolling Stone in October 2009, when she announced the impending release of The Fame Monster. âItâs artists sneaking singles onto an already finished piece of work in an effort to keep the album afloat. Originally [my label] only wanted me to put out three songs and now itâs much more than that. Itâs a new albumâs worth of material.â
And so The Fame Monster, which came out in late November 2009, spun forward the story of Gagaâs debut album, The Fame, fattening up the set list for her Monster Ball Tour while also updating her image from a polished dance-pop artist who liked weird sunglasses to a cutting-edge cultural icon who was being photographed by Hedi Slimane and toddling around in Alexander McQueenâs armadillo shoes.
It also sold very well in a climate thatâs been very hostile toward album sales. Since its release last November, Lady Gagaâs The Fame Monster has sold 1.3 million copies as a standalone album; sales for The Fame, which count sales of the version of the album bundled with The Fame Monster, are just past the 3.8 million mark.
âWeâve noticed that The Fame Monster, for Gaga, sold well,â said Keith Caulfield, associate director of charts and retail for Billboard. âBut the one that people were buying more of tended to be the bonus version, which combined the two.â
Those sales capitalize on prolonged exposure: by rolling out singles over time, labels can build a critical degree of awareness. ââBy the time âBad Romanceâ came out and âTelephoneâ came out, if you were that person who doesnât buy albums on a regular basis, you could find yourself at Wal-Mart looking at The Fame Monster /The Fame package and say to yourself, âOh, she did that âPoker Faceâ song too!â" Caulfield says. âSuddenly, thereâs like five or six songs you know, and that gives you a compelling reason to buy this new package.â
And thatâs a good pattern for RCA: Ke$haâs Animal debuted at No. 1 when it was released earlier this year, and the outlandish singer has been a prominent presence on the radio; two other singles from Animal reached the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. (Still, there likley wonât be as dramatic of an image overhaul for Ke$ha as there was for Gaga. The art for âWe Râ has a grimy-looking Ke$ha snarling at the camera while wearing rubber bracelets and a fingerless fishnet glove, while the song (slated for an October 26 digital release) is a blippy, brash party anthem thatâs apparently also about empowering gay youth.)
If Cannibal pulls off the trick of selling well while raising its parentâs profileâconfirming that the magic of The Fame Monster wasnât just Gagaâs to deployâyou can prepare to see more âcompanionâ releases. And with the withered state of the record industry, artists and labels seem more willing to experiment with retail formulas. Justin Bieber turned the companion-album formula on its head with My World and My World 2.0, released in a four-month span; the first album had seven tracks and was considered an EP, while the second was his proper debut, containing 10 songs.
Meanwhile, other artists are âleakingâ material from their forthcoming full-length records in hopes of hooking both fans and more casual listeners. Taylor Swift, whose third album Speak Now drops October 25, has already released four tracks from it in the run-up to its release. And then thereâs Kanye West, her nemesis, whoâs advertising the run-up to his albumâMy Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasyâby trickling out songs that wonât even make the record.