According to the magazine, numbers for Wednesday, April 8, show that the iTunes Top 100 chart had 40 songs at the $1.29 price point, and 60 at $0.99 — the premium songs slid an average of 5.3 places, while the $0.99 songs gained roughly 2.5 chart positions. On Thursday the trend continued, with the 53 songs priced at $0.99 rising roughly 1.66 places on the chart, while the remaining songs — priced at $1.29 — lost an average of two chart positions.

iTunes Store’s new pricing scheme effects the charts, that Lightspeed Champion guy expresses surprise

Does this prove that pop songs really are all the same? Seems like most are at least similar enough to be substitutes.

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