ANTHRAX’s ‘For All Kings’ Projected To Sell 20K-23K First Week

According to music industry web site Hits Daily Double, ANTHRAX’s new album, “For All Kings”, is likely to sell between 20,000 and 23,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release. The SPS figure is expected to be between 21,000 and 24,000.

SPS, a practice used by Billboard magazine, stands for “sales plus streaming,” which includes album sales and converted track sales plus converted streaming data.

For those interested: 10 tracks sold equal one album sale (since $1.29, the cost for an individual track, multiplied by ten gives you $12.99, a common price for an album, and 1,500 streams is equivalent to one album sale.

ANTHRAX’s previous album, 2011’s “Worship Music”, sold 28,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release to land at position No. 12 on The Billboard 200 chart. The disc followed up “We’ve Come For You All”, which opened with just under 10,000 units to debut at No. 122

“For All Kings” was released on February 26 via Nuclear Blast in Europe and Megaforce in the U.S.

Speaking about the ANTHRAX songwriting process on “For All Kings”, guitarist Scott Ian told Rolling Stone: “ANTHRAX songs don’t happen until it’s in the room, really, with Charlie [Benante, drums] , Frankie [Bello, bass] and me arranging material. But for Joey [Belladonna, vocals], we left a lot of room for him — even going back to ‘Worship Music’ — we felt we didn’t need to be looking over his shoulder like we used to back in the eighties and the nineties. We used to all sit there and analyze and nitpick, and obviously things didn’t work that way. So we decided to let Joey just work with Jay [Ruston, producer] and do his thing.”

He continued: “No one else in the band has everybody hanging over his shoulder when he’s doing his thing, so why should we all hang over Joey‘s? Obviously we had to become grownups to come to that decision. [laughs] So we sent template ideas of the songs to Joey — like, I’ve written lyrics that I shout down into my phone — but then we just leave it in Joey’s hands. He’s, like, the Superman of vocals. There’s nothing he can’t do, which I realized in the last five years. I certainly used to be a control freak and I’m not that person anymore in any shape or form, and Joey has certainly proved that he doesn’t need anybody looking over his shoulder.”

Benante told Yahoo! Music: “Joey’s incredible on this record. He was great on the last one as well. It’s amazing to have him back in the band, and there was a time I never thought that could happen. I’m happy that it did, and I’m also happy that we’ve learned from some of our past mistakes. Nowadays, I feel strongly about making quality records from front to back, and not being one of those bands who make records four songs deep and the rest is just filler to have something to go on tour with.”

ANTHRAX’s U.S. tour with LAMB OF GOD came to a close on February 12 in Los Angeles, California.

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Source: Blabbermouth

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