New arrival! 43 minutes, 43 seconds
Revolution State & Noizekatt
Revolution State Vs. NoizekattYesterday I mentioned that a Wikipedia entry on the history of the compact disc cast doubt on the legend that when the CD was originally invented, Sony and Philips decided it should be just large enough to fit Beethoven's 9th Symphony. That is to say, 74 minutes. This morning I went to the Philips Web site, which offers its own detailed account of the invention of the CD, and it affirms the story, attributing the length request to Sony's then-vice president (and Beethoven fan) Norio Ohga.
According to Philips's history, the CD was originally meant to hold a maximum of 60 minutes' worth of music, a few minutes more than a double-sided LP could contain. That meant the disc could indeed be "compact," at 11.5 centimeters in diameter. But accommodating Ohga's request meant expanding to 12 cm. Still pretty compact, if you ask me.
Unfortunately, Sony's history of the CD is much thinner on these sorts of details, preferring instead to focus on the dawn of the CD player, rather than the disc itself. However, it does note that the first CD release was Billy Joel's 52nd Street. Blecchh. Some choice. Imagine if the first book that rolled off Gutenberg's press had been The Da Vinci Code.
Also today:
35:35 Der Blutharsch, The Moment of Truth
35:34 Maelifell, The Summerlands
New arrival! 73:16 Slow Six, Private Times in Public Places
2 comments:
Fuck You. 52nd Street was a great album.
Funny! The one and only comment I get on this blog in nine months, and it's from a Billy Joel fan. An offended Billy Joel fan at that. But apparently one who's not quite ready to come out of the closet about his fandom, preferring to hide behind an anonymous posting.
It's OK, I understand. If I were a Billy Joel fan, I wouldn't want anyone else to know either. Best of luck to you.
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