Pop music’s Ultimate Top 10: Bon Jovi, Justin Bieber reign
$120.5 million
The long-running rock group had 51 nice days on the road last year that yielded a concert take of $108.2 million. Even without adding in the $12.3 million in album and digital track sales, that would have been enough to finish first. A reminder that we’re in the era of lowered expectations: it’s the third lowest figure to top the Ultimate Top 10 list, ahead of only Madonna in 2008 ($120.1 million) and the
By Randy Lewis, Los Angeles Times (Mel Evans / Associated Press)
$90.6 million
Canada’s latter-day one-man Rat Pack demonstrated remarkable muscle on the road, bringing in $65.7 million last year. An additional $24.9 million in album and digital track sales put him close at the Beatles’ boot heels. (Bryan Bedder / Getty Images)
$89.6 million
The former
$82.5 million
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$79.2 million
If these guys ever stop touring, they’re going to put a lot of people out of work. Their road-warrior approach got them a spot in the Ultimate Top 10 yet again, even though without a new album, the DMB posted a relatively modest $6.3 million in album and digital track sales. (Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)
$71.7 million
The Detroit rapper was such a powerhouse in record stores, on iTunes and at other music vendors that even without touring in 2010 he made the Ultimate Top 10. The man who sold more albums in the first decade of the new millennium stayed strong at the outset of a new one with $56.2 million in album sales and a field-leading $15.5 million from sales of 15.7 million digital tracks. Pollstar didn’t break out Mr. Mathers’ take from his high-profile U.S. concert performances last year: four stadium shows he played in Detroit and