Album

Blur

Blur · 1997

medium confidence

This page models tracked-song album economics, not a full release-level royalty statement. Why?

Cover artwork for Blur by Blur

Blur groups the songs currently tracked from this release, adds release metadata where available, and separates full-album context from the songs that already have dedicated earnings pages.

Short Answer

How much money does Blur make?

Blur is modeled at $330K-$830K/year per year across the songs currently tracked from the release, not as a full-album royalty statement.

This page still relies on tracked songs only, so the revenue view is partial even if the album itself is important.

Blur is useful as a catalog page, but the economics are still partial until more songs or a fuller release picture are attached to it.

  • Currently ranks around the top 39% of tracked albums by modeled revenue
  • Released in 1997 and still reads as an active catalog asset roughly 29 years later
  • 1 total tracks on the matched edition
  • 1 tracked song page currently support this album
  • medium confidence estimate

Blur sits in the top 39% of tracked albums on the site by modeled revenue.

Last updated: May 25, 2026

How It Compares

These albums are close to Blur by artist overlap, era, or genre context, so the comparison is more useful than a generic ranking table.

Album Why compare Estimated yearly midpoint
Blur Blur $580,000
(What's the Story) Morning Glory? same era $1,985,000
Urban Hymns same era $727,500
Different Class same era · same genre $515,000

Tracked Revenue Breakdown

Tracked album revenue $330K-$830K/year
100% of the lead revenue lane
Song 2 $330K-$830K/year
100% of the lead revenue lane

Bars reflect modeled annual midpoint ranges for the album and its tracked songs.

Why This Album Page Matters

  • This page still relies on tracked songs only, so album context is partial.
  • Tracked-song revenue has been normalized into a numeric annual range for ranking and comparison.
  • Album economics on this site are conservative proxies for catalog strength, not a substitute for a full release-level royalty statement.

Album pages model tracked-song revenue, not full-album royalty statements, and become stronger as tracklists, release metadata, and provider links improve.

More Context

More From This Artist Other albums already tracked from the same catalog.
  • Parklife · 1994-04-25 · $100K-$330K/year

More Questions About Blur

How much does Blur make in a year?

Blur is modeled at $330K-$830K/year per year across the songs currently tracked from the release, not as a full-album royalty statement.

Why does Blur still matter financially?

This page still relies on tracked songs only, so album context is partial.

Is this full-album revenue or just tracked songs?

Album pages on How Much Music model tracked-song revenue and album context. They are not full release-level royalty statements unless every revenue input is explicitly available.

Show tracklists and assumptions
Release Metadata Blur · 1997 1 tracks on the matched edition · 1 tracked song on the site
Model Scope Album pages model tracked-song revenue, not full-album royalty statements, and become stronger as tracklists, release metadata, and provider links improve. The page still relies on tracked songs only, so the release context is partial.

Full Tracklist

A full tracklist is not available yet for this album.

Tracked Songs on How Much Music

These are the songs from this album that currently have dedicated earnings pages in the catalog.

  • 1. Song 2 · $330K-$830K/year

Medium confidence album estimate

Album pages model tracked-song revenue, not full-album royalty statements, and become stronger as tracklists, release metadata, and provider links improve.

  • This page still relies on tracked songs only, so album context is partial.
  • Tracked-song revenue has been normalized into a numeric annual range for ranking and comparison.
  • Album economics on this site are conservative proxies for catalog strength, not a substitute for a full release-level royalty statement.

Read the full methodology.