The following charts illustrate data regarding the marketing of three various kinds of songs during a period of time in England.
Overall, it is readily apparent that in the bar graph, pop music is the highest selling product, while classical music is the lowest and rock music seems to be at average, while the linear graph presents pop song at peak selling item, rock music at the bottom, whereas old song is stable between the two.
Looking at the details, in 2001, British natives mostly preferred pop music, accounting for about 5 billion pounds; however, it decreased in 2002 at around less than 4 billion pounds. Similarly, at the initial phase, classical music and rock music constituted about 2 billion and 4 billion pounds, respectively, and declined afterwards. Next, according to the line graph, people are fond of pop music, so near 5 billion pounds of these items were sold until 1990, whereas the remaining were distributed approximately below 4 billion and around 2 billion, respectively.
