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From:
Greg Clow
To:
Date:
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 19:43:06 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] MD releases
Msg-Id:
<6.0.1.1.0.20031230192741.0288a0c0@mail.velocet.net>
In-Reply-To:
<025101c3cf33$af009ac0$6a00a8c0@ovuca>
Mbox:
idm.0312.gz
At 07:18 PM 30/12/03, Andrew Hime wrote:
quoted 2 lines Random trivia, I wanna say the first Fiona Apple album and a Fatboy Slim>Random trivia, I wanna say the first Fiona Apple album and a Fatboy Slim >album were available on MD in the UK.
Yeah, a lot more releases came out on MD in the UK, Europe and Japan than in North America. I think Mute UK released some stuff on MD, for example, but the only large North American labels that released many MD titles were Sony and associated labels. I remember back when MiniDisc was first introduced by Sony, there was another new format called DCC (Digital Compact Cassette - sort of a hybrid of DAT and regular cassettes) introduced by another company (Phillips, I think). The flagship HMV store in Toronto had a big display of MD and DCC releases along with players you could check them out on, and has it set up as a "which format do you prefer" challenge of some sort. The problem with that challenge, though, was that none of the major labels were behind both formats. Sony was behind MD, and I think PolyGram and Warner were behind DCC. And the indies were completely ignoring both of 'em. So from the perspective of selection (which is all the casual music fan really cares about), both formats sucked. And not only was the "software" limited for both formats, but this all took place only a couple of years after CDs had taken off. So consumers had no interest in getting into another audio format when they were still busy replacing their vinyl & cassette collections with CDs. Anyway, DCC died a well-deserved death, and while MD pretty much died in North America, Sony was smart enough to heavily market it in other regions like Japan as a recordable format to replace cassettes as opposed to a replacement for CDs. That basically saved the format, and allowed it to come back to life in North America a few years later (albeit on a fairly limited basis). Of course, the introduction of cheaper MP3 players in the last few years has dealt the MD format a pretty serious blow, and some worry that Sony's decision to stop making pre-recorded MDs means that they might pull the plug on the format entirely at some point. But as long as someone somewhere is still selling blanks, I'm not too worried. Greg :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Greg Clow ::: greg@stainedproductions.com ::::::::: concert & event promotions ::: http://www.stainedproductions.com :::::: electronic music radio & reviews ::: http://www.feedbackmonitor.com ::: electronic/experimental record label ::: http://www.pieheadrecords.com ::::::::: 158 Close Ave. 2nd Floor ::: Toronto, Ontario M6K 2V5 ::: Canada --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org