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Opinion

CDs will never be cool – they’re too good for hipsters

David Lee
1.2.2022
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

Records, music cassettes and tape machines enjoy a lot of retro charm. Unlike CDs. Why’s that? Here are some reasons that don’t speak against – but rather for – CDs.

This same phenomenon also exists in old computers, cars and fashion, where a 90s revival would have been unthinkable in the 00s.

Going by the logic of this cycle, CDs should also be deemed super cool in the future. But there are a few things that speak against it.

CDs are too ordinary

Collectors prefer to hunt for rare items; these are the trophies to be truly proud of. CDs have a bad hand there, because they’re anything but rare. In this respect, they’re the victim of their own success. CD sales in the last 40 years far eclipse all other forms of music consumption.

CDs are too easy

CDs aren’t sensual

CDs were never cool to begin with

A case for CDs

The chances of the CD becoming the next cult item are slim. But everything that speaks against the CD as a trend speaks for the CD as a commodity. The range is huge, the handling simple. CDs provide good sound reliably and cheaply. You get a bit of a retro vibe, but without the hassle normally associated with retro sound mediums.

However, the most important reason for listening to CDs is not nostalgia, but your appreciation of the concept of an album. An album doesn’t just play you songs thrown together at random. It gives you music that fits together and belongs together, in the intended, well thought-out order.

CDs appreciate the concept of the album. For records, the album length is limited to about 45 minutes; a CD album can be up to 74 minutes long. And it can be played without a half-time interruption. It doesn’t surprise me that many more albums were sold – and are still being sold – on CD rather than on vinyl.

Of course, I can also listen to entire albums on streaming services or through downloads. But most of the time, I don’t. And even if I do, it’s just not the same. The simple fact that no other music is available until a new CD is inserted makes a difference. When I insert a disc, I commit myself fully to the album.

CDs increase the likelihood that you’ll listen to an album multiple times. In doing so, you’ll discover new, hidden details and rejoice in them. You might notice that the unremarkable pieces of an album are actually the highlight. You discover music.

That’s what CDs are all about. They’re not about hipster coolness. Or fetishising a sound medium or playback device. They’re not about being an audio snob. And they’re also not about this crazy notion of having to have and know everything. CDs are pure. CDs are wholly about listening to music.

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My interest in IT and writing landed me in tech journalism early on (2000). I want to know how we can use technology without being used. Outside of the office, I’m a keen musician who makes up for lacking talent with excessive enthusiasm.


Opinion

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