Slipped discs How I wish I had held on to all my CDs
The Guardian Weekly|August 02, 2024
Growing up in the 1990s, compact discs provided the soundtrack to my life. Then along came the digital age and I couldn't get rid of them fast enough
Tom Lamont
Slipped discs How I wish I had held on to all my CDs

Grease: The Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture. The Beatles' Red Album. A flimsy single, Boom! Shake the Room, by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, and Now That's What I Call Music! 24. I thought about these treasured objects - my first CDs, bought or gifted to me in the mid-1990s - when I read the other day that CD sales were now enjoying a bounce. I felt pleased at the news of a resurgence, as you might on hearing something nice about an old friend you long ago lost touch with.

It made me think of being 10 years old, newly in possession of a plasticky portable stereo. With a CD player, you could boom and shake your room on infinite repeat. You could digitally programme the Red Album to skip And I Love Her, that buzz kill, and reorder the soundtrack of Grease to prioritise Beauty School Dropout, as heaven surely intended.

I was a child. I wouldn't have known or cared about the bigger-picture changes happening in the music industry in terms of clarity of sound, manufacturing or distribution processes, what the shift towards a digitised, copyable archive of sound would mean in terms of piracy. Back in the 90s, I saw only the enormous new potential for control. I could take a carefully orchestrated album of 11 or 12 tracks and turn it from a multi-course meal into a messy, free-for-all buffet.

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