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1998: Will MP3 Make PHYSICAL MEDIA Obsolete? | Inside Tracks | Retro Tech | BBC Archive

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  • Опубліковано 9 гру 2022
  • "Soon your CD collection will be obsolete" - Kevin Greening.
    Inside tracks examines the potential of the new MP3 music format. Is the future of music going to be online, or will there always be a place for physical media?
    Originally broadcast 27 September, 1998.
    You have now entered the BBC Archive, a time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of TV to educate, entertain and enlighten you with classic clips from the BBC vaults.
    Make sure you subscribe so that you never miss a single stop on our amazing journey through the BBC Archive - ua-cam.com/users/BBCArchive?...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 275

  • @NightimeInDeepSpace
    @NightimeInDeepSpace Рік тому +73

    I love tech videos especially from the 80s and 90s, that's when things got exciting

    • @jamesfielden4935
      @jamesfielden4935 Рік тому

      And now its being used for tyranny and exploitation as the fourth industrial revolution is ushered in and our collective humanity is being eradicated through the transhumanist agenda.

  • @mr702s
    @mr702s Рік тому +69

    It's nice revisiting the past like this

  • @mondegreen9709
    @mondegreen9709 Рік тому +43

    So as early as 1998 the writing was already on the wall, but instead of coming to grips with the new situation, the music industry was fast asleep and stolidly holding on to the physical medium as if nothing would ever change. The guy from the Fraunhofer institute who developed the mp3 codec had warned the RIAA that this would happen, but they just couldn't be arsed. Fast forward a few years later, and Napster and filesharing networks were eating away their profits, and not just that, but lo and behold, hard drives increased their sizes, computers increased their performance and the Internet accelerated so much that by then, you weren't just able to download entire albums, but even entire films within a few minutes. Aw shucks, who'd think that would ever happen?! But instead of blaming themselves, they responded by showering people with lawsuits, exploiting back catalogues, breeding one instant talent show superstar after another with the shelf life of a raw egg and dropping bands as soon as their first record didn't shift enough units instead of giving them time to develop. The repercussions of that are still being felt today and the industry never really recovered from that.

    • @LinoWalker
      @LinoWalker Рік тому +1

      You're absolutely spot on! I always thought that the Internet took the industry by storm and the big record labels didn't have time to react,so their only real course of action was those ridiculous lawsuits.
      But no, it was clear as day - years in advance - that this was always going to happen. This very report talks about how sales of physical media were leveling off. How did the bean counters running these companies not see that, when sales are all they ever care about?! Absolutely insane.

    • @davidbull7210
      @davidbull7210 Рік тому +4

      The majors were warned about the internet and the MP3 revolution in 1996 but they ignored it.

    • @mondegreen9709
      @mondegreen9709 Рік тому +7

      @@willnicholson18 Wanna cuddle? 😙😜

    • @axa897
      @axa897 Рік тому

      Idiot how many years you skipped I was never able to download movie in few minutes in old era . PC was to slow Internet was to slow . It took few minutes just to find and start download movie .

    • @mascot4950
      @mascot4950 Рік тому +7

      @RaniaIsAwesome Because suing your customers for choosing to not meet their needs, and them sorting it out by themselves, accomplishes nothing except making customers even more annoyed you're wasting time on suing them instead of meeting their needs. And suing customers is like standing outside your house during an ant invasion and stepping on one out of every thousand ants.

  • @ShaunakHub
    @ShaunakHub Рік тому +76

    This one actually aged pretty well. Truth be told, yes cassettes and viyls are making a come back. But that is only for a niche customer base.
    Look around and see how many music stores you saw growing up in neighbourhood still selling the same stuff ? They have become like land lines...

    • @skip485
      @skip485 Рік тому +3

      Wait till people to buy vinyl and cassettes figure out you can artificially add vinyl and cassette noise digitally

    • @PipimiOden
      @PipimiOden Рік тому +4

      ​@@skip485eeeehhhhh, we're kinda in it doe the physical media itself and not the grain... i mean come on you know google play stopped selling music in favor of youtube music... also hard drives can fail

    • @PipimiOden
      @PipimiOden Рік тому +4

      ​@@skip485...also half the stuff on vinyl, cassette, and cds aren't on streaming

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Рік тому +1

      Not the websites tho. Aged like milk.

    • @NeverStopRolling
      @NeverStopRolling Рік тому

      I draw your attention to the line "it'll never scratch" 😋

  • @MD-fu6ly
    @MD-fu6ly Рік тому +23

    I want to support artists (and do however I can) but I don't miss paying Our Price £15.99 for a CD album

    • @daviddowsett1658
      @daviddowsett1658 Рік тому +4

      and that was in the 90's when 15.99 was more like 29.99 covering inflation.

    • @lincolnshirepoacher8651
      @lincolnshirepoacher8651 Рік тому

      Try £70 for a SNES game that you could finish after 5-6 hours. There was a reason most of my games, videos, and CDs/cassettes were second hand back then.

  • @hawsrulebegin7768
    @hawsrulebegin7768 Рік тому +28

    The spice girls are really cool. His eyes didn’t believe himself.

    • @SuperMookles
      @SuperMookles Рік тому +2

      He couldn't look at the camera - good taste was fighting his job description.

    • @daviddowsett1658
      @daviddowsett1658 Рік тому +2

      haha I said that, the face does not match the words, he was embarrassed saying it.

  • @onlineamiga
    @onlineamiga Рік тому +10

    The record industry was just too slow to monetise it properly and make it accessible. It wasn't until iTunes came out that there was really a central place to go get whatever song yu wanted. They were beaten by things such as napster. Having the music on your computer at the time to me was no different to recording it off the radio. The mp3 file alone seemed to have no value. If you really liked it, you'd still go and get the album / cd for your collection and for a few years I still did that. Most MP3s I had I wouldn't have bought the CD anyway.
    In a paralell world if say iTunes or similar was launched earlier than free downloads. It would have been like, "OMG i can get any song I want for £1 and I don't have to get the bus into town to get a CD!". Then I think my generation would have grown up feeling there was a value to digital media.

  • @ordeo73
    @ordeo73 Рік тому +7

    The great Kev Greening. Still sadly missed.

  • @magnetikl
    @magnetikl Рік тому +35

    With 56 kbps modems, when one song used to take from 30 min to one night to download. In some ways my heart miss those days, but my brain doesn't.

    • @kinromok
      @kinromok Рік тому +8

      With a 56k modem, downloading a typical mp3 file took about 6-8 minutes :P

    • @magnetikl
      @magnetikl Рік тому +4

      @@kinromok Not for me, i hope you are from that era and you actually used those modems, because the reality was different than on paper. Probably you used a higher speed modem like 700+ DSL, but those were rare at that time. Besides, never take everything so literal, i was exaggerating.

    • @DarkLight748
      @DarkLight748 Рік тому +1

      If you had a 56k modem and your MP3 was compressed to 64kbit then it would take just over 1 sec to download 1 sec of audio. In fact, you could easily stream 32kbit audio in theory.

    • @magnetikl
      @magnetikl Рік тому +4

      @@DarkLight748 The rough/marketed speeds always have to be divided for 7 to get the real world speeds. 56 kbps/7 was 8 kbps real world transfer rate, hell...once i got 10 kbps and i felt like i was in the future :D. Have a nice week.

    • @ObiWanBillKenobi
      @ObiWanBillKenobi Рік тому +6

      Good way of putting nostalgia in general , especially about technology: “My heart misses those days ❤️, but my brain sure doesn’t 🧠.”

  • @GregzVR
    @GregzVR 26 днів тому +1

    _"What happens IF the Millennium comes?"_ Ahh, I forgot about Y2K. I remember sitting at my Pentium PC, as it ticked over, from 1999 to 2000.. the biggest damp squib ever!

  • @ObiWanBillKenobi
    @ObiWanBillKenobi Рік тому +3

    “Soon your CD collection will be obsolete. And your video game cartridges. And your paper game manuals. And all your paper books. Vinyl record style, however, will have you ironically punching yourself for getting rid of them in 1990. Along with your VCRs 10 years later so that you can no longer watch your home movies, dance recitals, and wedding ceremony.”

  • @BenjyDale
    @BenjyDale Рік тому +1

    Another fairly accurate historic article! The Download Chart opened in 2005, so not a million years on from 1998, and our chart is still based on that now, 25 years on :-)

  • @bojack-horseman
    @bojack-horseman Рік тому +3

    those old websites are classic, i miss the old internet

  • @Alex58399
    @Alex58399 Рік тому +2

    The presenter sadly passed away at an early age in 2007 from a heart attack as a result of drug use RIP

  • @ebayerr
    @ebayerr Рік тому +1

    In the mid 80's my friends and I spoke of this development as "no moving parts"audio.

  • @Bearsio
    @Bearsio Рік тому +6

    I like that he was concerned about the new millennium coming. Just wait for 2020 when things really go down hill.

  • @beyondvisiblefilms
    @beyondvisiblefilms Рік тому +3

    This is pretty on the button. Hard to disagree with any of the predictions...love the last line 🤣

  • @brucedanton3669
    @brucedanton3669 Рік тому +1

    Thank you!!

  • @marvy3022
    @marvy3022 Рік тому +10

    You made a mistake in the description, "30 Sep 1989". Think you meant 1998.

    • @BBCArchive
      @BBCArchive  Рік тому +5

      Good spot, thanks! It also should have been 27th September. The month was right...

  • @APRICEPRODUCTION
    @APRICEPRODUCTION Рік тому +1

    This was definitely the point I'd imagine Blockbusters started to become slightly nervous, even though wouldn't be till 2014.... I'm sure even then they worried one day the internet would catch up and put an end to the days of buying and renting films in the shop.

    • @The_Natalist
      @The_Natalist 9 місяців тому

      Speaking this was the beginning of the end for physical music. Its like being in a warzone and watching your buddy get blown away by a tank round

  • @GallowsClough
    @GallowsClough Рік тому +3

    When this was being broadcast I thought I was seriously ahead of the times buying a Minidisc player, just ten years later it was as quaint and obsolete as betamax.

  • @thewotsit
    @thewotsit Рік тому +2

    Time to listen to the song The Replacements by Art Brut again.

  • @enilenis
    @enilenis Рік тому +1

    I remember coming across a CD at a pirate market containing 11 Prodigy albums on one disc, claiming to have no loss of quality. I thought that to be impossible. I didn't know about MP3 format that just came out. Computers with Pentium 75Mhz or higher, could decode it. 128kbps was the standard. 1mb per minute. Internet was only 28.8k. That was cutting edge, and obviously, not fast enough to play anything in real time. Not even audio. There were some guerilla radiostations, multicasint 8 bit mono... fun memories. Very nostalgic.

  • @yyy333
    @yyy333 Рік тому

    Dude the future is going to be awesome!

  • @pauljakeman
    @pauljakeman Рік тому +12

    Fast forward a few years.
    Will mp3 survive in the age of streaming
    😂

    • @ukusanz
      @ukusanz Рік тому +1

      And will the Spice Girls still be really cool 😂

    • @ThizOne
      @ThizOne Рік тому +3

      It won’t and it shouldn’t either, because nowadays you can download/get your music in even higher quality than CD (FLAC, WAV, AIFF).
      But streaming is not the way to go though. Especially the way that artists don’t get compensated fairly.

    • @pauljakeman
      @pauljakeman Рік тому +3

      @@ThizOne exactly mate, just meant that’s been the latest question that’s handed around nowadays.

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Рік тому +1

      No because you are streaming the MP3z

    • @davidspear9790
      @davidspear9790 Рік тому

      Yes, because MP3 or any digital audio files are there for good (unless they have DRM built in), and therefore don't require an active internet connection at all times and aren't subject to any data limits.

  • @jimjamz.
    @jimjamz. Рік тому +1

    Alice hasn't been outside of London has she? There is London, and then there is outside it, like rural areas, which aren't likely to have a big record shop, but are expected to have high-speed Internet. In 1998? Broadband in the UK didn't start appearing until 2000-2001, and many rural areas still don't have it some 20+ years later.

  • @APRICEPRODUCTION
    @APRICEPRODUCTION Рік тому

    I can remember 1999-2000 using WinMx and then Limewire for downloading music, like all kids did back then!
    I can remember being very young in the 90s and going into HMV with parents, and you had rows of CD genre shelves, nowadays you go into HMV its DVDs/Blu-rays figures and posters... The music section is pretty much non existent

  • @Eleutherarch
    @Eleutherarch Рік тому +17

    25 years later, the majority of people aren't even interested in owning their music at all. I still buy new and used CDs regularly. I can play them as much as I want, rip them into lossless formats, I owe nobody any more money and I don't have to rely on the Internet. Superior sound too compared the vast majority of wireless streaming.
    Sincerely,
    An early 90's child.

    • @TheDjcarlos67
      @TheDjcarlos67 Рік тому +1

      Ripping a digital source like a CD doesn't make it a lossless recording. Digital music is compromised whatever you do to it.

    • @aeiouxs
      @aeiouxs Рік тому +1

      So what? Then your music collection is defined by preferring 44.1 KHz/16 bit from a physical medium? Wireless streaming is a poor comparison - that will be deliberately low quality to dissuade people from recording a perfect digital copy of it. It shouldn't matter the outright source quality of the music, the music should be first. Sincerely, an 80's child

    • @Eleutherarch
      @Eleutherarch Рік тому +1

      @@aeiouxs That is true. A badly mixed and mastered record with poor performances will always suck.

    • @kahyui2486
      @kahyui2486 Рік тому +1

      You're not listening to a "superior sound compared to wireless streaming".
      you can listen to high resolution/quality wavs and flac files on streaming sites like tidal n apple music. That aside, the average person can barely tell the different between lossless and 320kbs (High quality MP3) anyway. Which is lower quality than ogg. Ogg and aac is better than MP3.
      I can buy a wav file of many songs on band camp or Apple, quicker than u can run to hmv or have delivered. People do still buy digital music, mainly other musicians and DJs. But let's be honest, who wants all those files taking up space in your storage for the rest of your life? When u can rent/subscribe to billions of songs under 1 service.
      Flac is more impressive than wav. Mainly cos it retains basically the same quality yet, It's smaller. Sample rates only matters to audiophiles, most people listen to music on phones, not monitors, so sample rate makes little difference.
      U may own it but you're also responsible for storing it and for replacing it when it gets damaged.
      Enjoy your 16 bit rate, CDs.
      Sincerely, a mid 1666 child.

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival Рік тому +4

      @@kahyui2486 "Sincerely, a mid 1666 child."
      Congratulations on reaching your 356th birthday.

  • @mrgw98
    @mrgw98 Рік тому

    What is the song playing from 2:09 to 2:20, played again at 3:23 to 3:34?

  • @bide7603
    @bide7603 Рік тому +1

    “The spice girls are really cool” 😂

  • @user-eb6cw2nh5y
    @user-eb6cw2nh5y Рік тому

    please help. what song playing from 0:35?

  • @emptyspace713
    @emptyspace713 Рік тому +2

    When you made a copy of the original so you always had a backup at home (no hard drive needed)

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому

      At one point software companies and some music publishers advocated for making backups of your purchase, they would often print on the original disk/disc "Back me up and then put me me somewhere safe". Crazy how all that changed.

  • @1UPWonders
    @1UPWonders Рік тому +59

    Fast forward to 2022, we still have CD’s, and vinyls & cassettes have made a comeback to some extent! While physical media is not obsolete, digital media takes up a fair chunk of the market, especially with Spotify, Soundcloud, etc.

    • @Jayfive276
      @Jayfive276 Рік тому +37

      Yeah but no ones actually listening to them. People are buying records to have has interior decor in their ikea shelves so they can post about them in Instagram.

    • @1UPWonders
      @1UPWonders Рік тому +6

      @@Jayfive276 granted some people do do that, but I actually like to listen to my records. I know that’s probably a “boomer” thing to do, or whatever new-fangled term the kids have made up, but not everyone sees a vinyl record and thinks “ooh interior design!” 😂 (For clarity, I am being sarcastic, but I do like my vinyl. I’m 24 so not quite a boomer and I just appreciate music in different formats, including digital)

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 Рік тому +2

      @@1UPWonders i'm 43 and im NOT a boomer. you kids need to google more

    • @1UPWonders
      @1UPWonders Рік тому +6

      @@BOZ_11 I didn't say you were a boomer, nor did I specify an age range as to who is a boomer and who isn't.

    • @BOZ_11
      @BOZ_11 Рік тому +1

      @@1UPWonders "I didn't say you were a boomer" - i know that........

  • @GoodGuyChucky-666
    @GoodGuyChucky-666 Рік тому +1

    I've listened to a radio 4 documentary about the business of music, apparently the music industry rejected the mp3 format, they were happy to keep making money from CDs in that era, until Napster screwed them

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому

      Ironically the Fraunhofer Society (then known as an institute) that created the MP3 format warned the major record companies that it could do horrific damage to them if they didn't embrace it early and start to monetise it. They failed to embrace it.

  • @TinLeadHammer
    @TinLeadHammer Рік тому +4

    At about the same time this video was made I was streaming ShoutCast music in WinAmp, ripping it with StreamRipper and saving to files. 96 Kbps was the norm, better streams used 128 Kbps. It was about the music, not audiophile quality. It still is for me.

    • @flybeep1661
      @flybeep1661 Рік тому

      As far back as I remember, and I was there when NApster started, it was 128kbps which has always been the norm, even in 2001 Napster days 96 kbps was considered sub par but doable. 192kbps was considered pretty good.

    • @lincolnshirepoacher8651
      @lincolnshirepoacher8651 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, I remember the claims back then that 128kbps was 'near' CD quality. 😀
      Still, it sounded better than The Top 40 recorded onto battered cassette tapes.

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому

      @@lincolnshirepoacher8651 Nah, near-CD was 160 kbps AAC, according to Steve Jobs ;) And I think that for most people it was: no hiss, no wobble, no clicks and pops.

    • @lincolnshirepoacher8651
      @lincolnshirepoacher8651 Рік тому +2

      @@TinLeadHammer Yeah, but he was someone who thought that one button on a mouse was plenty. 🙃

  • @garryleeks4848
    @garryleeks4848 Рік тому +3

    Downloaded all my boyzone and westlife greatest hits , really cool. 🙄🙄🤘

  • @ilovegot7754
    @ilovegot7754 Рік тому

    I wish I embraced my childhood more because I can't remember most of these things

  • @bestbry1
    @bestbry1 Рік тому +5

    I still prefer having a compact disc collection and a Spotify subscription for the things I can’t yet buy 😊

  • @Behindstage
    @Behindstage Рік тому +4

    Rip kevin greening

    • @BadgerBotherer1
      @BadgerBotherer1 Рік тому

      What happened?

    • @puddleglum3306
      @puddleglum3306 Рік тому

      @@BadgerBotherer1 Drugs ... and bondage.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Рік тому

      @@puddleglum3306 superglue poisoning?

    • @nkt1
      @nkt1 Рік тому +1

      I loved his early Radio 1 stuff. I thought he'd be the next Kenny Everett, but it wasn't to be.

    • @puddleglum3306
      @puddleglum3306 Рік тому +1

      @@nkt1 He was great on his own show. Then the BBC made Zoe Ball I think it was join him. And that totally killed his humour and the feel of the show. The BBC did the exact same thing with Simon Mayo drive time more recently putting Jo Whiley on with him, ruining the show and it's ratings.

  • @Seal0626
    @Seal0626 Рік тому +10

    And then the behaviour of streaming platforms made physical media necessary again. I'm not paying for a format that allows the seller to arbitrarily decide that I don't have access to it any more, give me a CD and I'll rip it myself.

    • @kahyui2486
      @kahyui2486 Рік тому +3

      Have u ever thought about buying the song digitally? U don't need physical to own it. Just avoid streaming sites buy direct from band camp, Amazon, itunes, beatport etc...

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 Рік тому +1

      For the most part, that rarely happens. And besides it'll cost you more in the long run to buy everything. Why not just buy what isn't on streaming or buy it when it's removed from streaming?

  • @Headwyres
    @Headwyres Рік тому

    0:01 2022: MP3 is long gone obsolete

  • @Minalkra
    @Minalkra Рік тому +2

    And I rarely have a need for MP3s these days. Usually, I just find the song I want on UA-cam (of all places, UA-cam!) - but then again, I'm not really interested in 'hot new releases'. It's usually video game music or me asking Google about that one song from that one movie that I don't even remember the artist but a single lyric line can get me exactly where I need to go.

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Рік тому

      UA-cam is MP3/4 if you are watching songs or listening to videos on UA-cam.

  • @richardjohnson1493
    @richardjohnson1493 Рік тому

    The record industry tried and failed to find a way to monetise music online… until Steve Jobs persuaded them to throw in their lot with Apple.
    The iTunes Music Store was released five years after this clip. And the rest is history.

  • @rattyfus8218
    @rattyfus8218 18 днів тому

    That last interviewee was so off beam. Nobody will want their music collection on their computer and the computers would crash in the year 2000? Oh dear. I worked on the Millennium bug for six months and had literally nothing to fix!

  • @pyeltd.5457
    @pyeltd.5457 Рік тому

    We got the spice girls on channel 3

  • @samnicholson5051
    @samnicholson5051 8 місяців тому

    Are Adam Townley and Martin Freeman the same person?

  • @OlafProt
    @OlafProt Рік тому

    2:20 we can only hope this “dude” realised he was named after toilet cleaner and rectified this.

  • @scifirocks
    @scifirocks Рік тому +1

    Thanks goodness people can use this, it's not like we're a different country 😂

  • @MichaelBennett1
    @MichaelBennett1 Рік тому +3

    5:17: spot on but streaming trumps physical copies for convenience so even people like me who have CD collections will leave them gathering dust and use Spotify instead.

    • @matthewprince9705
      @matthewprince9705 Рік тому

      What happens where you're somewhere where there's no or limited internet connection? Don't you still want thousands of songs on usb, micro SD cards or CD/vinyl? Music is meant to be paid for and enjoyed. Spotify has damaged the music scene more than anything with singers making quick Bop music under 3 minutes as listeners are impatient now.

  • @perfectlemming8394
    @perfectlemming8394 Рік тому +3

    Then came along the dreaded Napster , Morpheus , limewire, Kazaa 😎

  • @charleshamill2129
    @charleshamill2129 Рік тому +1

    Will never catch on

  • @Dragoneer
    @Dragoneer Рік тому

    Remember HMV?

  • @necropink9200
    @necropink9200 Рік тому +3

    The day you can't buy music on physical format is the day I will stop buying music. I can't see myself spending real money for music as an MP3. I always buy music on cd as I like to feel I have something for my money. I have over 6000 original CDs and I like how they are on display on my shelves. Also there are a lot of CDs in my collection that are rare and quite valuable.

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 Рік тому

      I used to think like you until I started Apple Music. I spend less on music each month and I have access to a large chunk of the world's music catalog in my pocket and it doesn't take up space in my home. My family won't have to sell it all or send it to the junkyard when I pop off.
      I feel like I have something for my money with streaming, because I can listen to any album when I want to, even guilty pleasures I would probably never have spent money on, because there was always something else I wanted to buy.
      So for the price of a CD each month, I get every new release each month.

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому +1

      Rare CDs on your shelf? Do you hear yourself? You buy CDs as interior ornament or as investment at best, not for the content recorded on them.

    • @necropink9200
      @necropink9200 Рік тому +1

      @@TinLeadHammer If you're not a collector then you wouldn't understand. Most of my CDs I bought for the music recorded on them and the artwork. It's just nice when I find a rare cd to add to my collection.

    • @Ridersonthestorm8899
      @Ridersonthestorm8899 Рік тому

      @@TinLeadHammer Do you hear yourself? Blimey your all over these comments big boy( you got to be a bloke with that attitude) judging what others are doing.Apparently you have met them all and know all their listening and buying habits.
      Grow up matey you sound like a snipe in the playground

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому +2

      @@necropink9200 You do understand that collecting trinkets and having unrestricted access to music you like are different things?

  • @ClayMann
    @ClayMann Рік тому +14

    Long before this I'd already jumped to files rather than CD's. I really didn't see streaming as the future. I just didn't think it could get any better than having thousands of tracks in your pocket. .

    • @Mindphaser1
      @Mindphaser1 Рік тому +3

      Having your own digital audio collection is still better than streaming (which is basically just downloading and listening to files on the spot, without owning them). Streaming is convenient but you're at the mercy of the streaming services.

    • @PatrickSwayzeOnDbol
      @PatrickSwayzeOnDbol Рік тому +1

      can't beat having a box of vinyl or shelf of cd's though.

    • @dougfisher1813
      @dougfisher1813 Рік тому +4

      How did you get mp3 files, much less a portable mp3 player long before 1998?

    • @jeanbonnefoy1377
      @jeanbonnefoy1377 Рік тому

      Quantity over quality. Maybe as a background music while driving the car or travelling on bus, tube or train, but at home, really? Nothing compare to the real uncompressed original recording on vinyl, reel to reel, cd or high end cassette read on a good quality hifi or studio equipment.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому +3

      ​ @Doug Fisher I never had anything portable. My switch over to digital happened with the Amiga computer that came out in 1985. I didn't get mine when it first came out. Not sure of the exact year I got mine now. mp3's didnt exist at that point but you had WAV which is uncompressed so pretty easy for any computer at that time. It had big file sizes, but with hard drives increasing rapidly in size it wasn't a big problem. I played around with the first mp1 which sounds weird saying that now. MP3 is what we all know but there was a v1! lol I think mp1 was actually mp2 but for dummies. mp2 just wouldn't play in real-time at any bitrate. And as for mp3, wow that was so demanding for the computers at the time it came out but I don't really remember when I switched over to that. I just remember getting my first PC so I jumped to a computer a hundred times faster lol and that was just mental how fast that was. Suddenly playing highly compressed music formats like mp3's was just not an issue. On the Amiga just encoding one track to mp1 would take hours. Anyway just pointing out the digital revolution was going on a long time before 1998, it was just a bit janky to start with but also exciting as it was all rapidly evolving month to month.

  • @magnusbruce4051
    @magnusbruce4051 Рік тому +1

    I find it so funny hearing them lamenting the "loss of middle-man" when Bandcamp is one of the greatest things to happen to underground musicians. Being able to buy directly from artists you like with little (or zero) money going to anyone else is fantastic. And I say this as both a consumer and an artist.
    I am just old enough to remember the early parts of the media discussion of "the internet killing music". Although this was also a time when TV programs felt it necessary to start their web addresses with "www."

  • @brysonhahn8736
    @brysonhahn8736 Рік тому

    1998:Will MP3 Make PHYSICAL MEDIA Obsolete?
    2022: no, but streaming will.

  • @user-tp2cn7eo3i
    @user-tp2cn7eo3i Рік тому

    Basically because iTunes happened in the 2000's and now we have apple music

  • @alanmusicman3385
    @alanmusicman3385 Рік тому +5

    They were really asked the wrong question. What they should have been asked is "In the coming age of digital media, can the music companies keep their gold-plated gravy train running and remain the main conduit between 'the talent' and the public?" In short the disintermediation of music.
    I did have dealing as a consultant with some of the record companies in the mid-late 1990s and there was a lot of denial going on and it was all about how they could protect music with various clever technology and so on. But, as the movie companies also found out in the 2010s, the simple truth is that you can't protect a playable product cos at some stage it has to visible or audible and at that stage it can be copied.

  • @qzh
    @qzh Рік тому +16

    compact discs remain the best way to consume music at home: great audio quality even on inexpensive equipment, compatible with seventy years of both analogue and digital equipment, and most importantly artists actually get paid for their work (at least on indie labels), unlike streaming which has decimated the economy for working musicians (only superstars earn money from streaming, everyone else gets pennies or nothing). CDs can be ripped to a hard drive to enjoy all the benfits of digital files while maintaining the CD as a long-term backup solution (do you really think that digital file on your hard disc will be readable in twenty years ?). finally, streaming services have terrible audio quality and often only the bad-sounding (re: loudness war) remastered versions of albums

    • @hepphepps8356
      @hepphepps8356 Рік тому +4

      You were doing great until the last couple of lines! Actually streaming has killed/is killing the loudness war, everything is loudness-normalized noe, which means great potential for audio quality again. Not exploited by everyone, but still. Formats are moving lossless. A standard Apple music subscription gives you lossless 24bit/48kHz which is better than CD.

    • @precumming
      @precumming Рік тому +5

      The music I listen to I simply could not find if it wasn't for Spotify. I listen to bands with under 10k monthly listeners (rare to go over 100k), it is incredibly rare for a band to become widely known, bands like Modest Mouse, Wild Child, Bright Eyes, Kishi Bashi, Twenty One Pilots, and Youth Lagoon. My Spotify Wrapped told me I listened to 2'345 (I didn't just type ascending numbers, it just happened to be that and it's easy to remember) bands in 2022, and all but maybe 100 have never been played on the radio or got any form of recognition. They wouldn't be in a record shop.
      The medium for supporting artists has changed from buying music to buying merch or supporting on Patreon or Ko-fi (pretty much all of the small artists I listen to I can find on UA-cam and they often have a way to donate). Yes Spotify means that artists earn less, but Spotify allows people to earn something and to provide a platform for discovery, and many get a small but devoted fanbase that provides enough income to work full time as a musician while not necessarily getting super rich from it.
      If everyone liked popular music then yes CDs would be far superior for supporting artists, but that isn't the real world. Spotify has opened up a world of people not needing to make music to be popular, but to make what they enjoy and for the audience to be led to them. My Discover weekly is 30 fresh songs that range from good to amazing from people who may have only just released their first songs. Songs that Spotify analysed and knew I would love.
      So yeah, streaming services screw over the people creating popular music who aren't themselves popular. If you get lots of streams you do well, if you wouldn't have got any sales without the platform you do well.

    • @CaptainKenway
      @CaptainKenway Рік тому +3

      I have MP3s that I downloaded 20 years ago, so yes, I do think that. The wonderful thing about data is that you can copy and back it up as many times as you like, so the idea of hard drive failure is a non-issue. That includes both local backups and off-site these days, both of which are now relatively inexpensive and accessible to all. The vast majority of my music is in FLAC format and backed up, meaning I have the best of all worlds in terms of sound quality, convenience and long-term archival security.

    • @lucaseve
      @lucaseve Рік тому +3

      Do you know CD surface degrades and in 30 years become unreadable?
      Not a long-term backup solution for sure.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_rot

    • @bobsmithy9024
      @bobsmithy9024 Рік тому +2

      I have cds from 1990. Still play fine on my cd player. I think it's an urban legend that cds have a finite playing life span.

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 8 місяців тому

    I love the snobbish attitude here about getting music online - those people aren't laughing now, as CDs are now a dinosaur industry and everyone gets their music online. I have not bought a CD since around 2009.

  • @aniym21000
    @aniym21000 Рік тому +13

    5:40 "I'm not sure people are going to want to have a list as their record collection"
    This guy could not have been more wrong lol, playlists are how new music gets discovered these days

    • @tomjoslin435
      @tomjoslin435 Рік тому +3

      It's not as nice as having a record collection though

    • @flybeep1661
      @flybeep1661 Рік тому +1

      @@tomjoslin435 Nope, it's way better, fast and easy access wherever you are. Record collection is just to show off, got rid of mine, about 1900 cds, have it all digitally now. Way easier.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому +1

      "playlists are how new music gets discovered these days"
      Just as mix tapes/CDs were how music got discovered before...

  • @nigel900
    @nigel900 Рік тому +2

    No.

  • @TheMonkeydood
    @TheMonkeydood Рік тому

    And now mp3 is almost defunct and streaming and vinyl are winning.

    • @the_real_glabnurb
      @the_real_glabnurb Рік тому +1

      MP3 as a standard will stay with us for decades. And in this video MP3 was equated with compressed digital music formats.
      AAC is the successor of MP3 and is being used by itunes.
      Other streaming services use lossless compression codecs like FLAC.
      And regarding vinyl winning: It's just a personal anecdote, but since the advent of MP3, I have never bought any music since then and my collection consists of over 100,000 songs..
      So people buying music is now heavily biased towards groups how aren't very tech savvy and also fall for snake oil.
      In this sense these stats aren't representative anymore of the popularity of physical vs. digital medium.

  • @danfrakes7346
    @danfrakes7346 Рік тому

    30 odd minutes to download one song if things went well. Also you had a choice of about 10 songs and only what ever was there not what you actually wanted. That’s why MIDI files was better at the time

    • @MD-fu6ly
      @MD-fu6ly Рік тому +1

      Ah yes I used to have an excellent collection of MIDI files that sounded awesome with my sound card

    • @lincolnshirepoacher8651
      @lincolnshirepoacher8651 Рік тому

      Mod files too, they were really popular back then.

  • @peter5.056
    @peter5.056 Рік тому

    In 2022 it's as easy as "okay Google play...."

  • @sevenwatson5854
    @sevenwatson5854 Рік тому +2

    With streaming, where you don't own a copy of the song, vinyl is the best way to own it in terms of quality of sound and product. CDs have a shelf life, as does digital. Hurrah for the return of Vinyl.

    • @ambeegaming76
      @ambeegaming76 Рік тому +2

      How would digital have a shelf life less then vinyl?

    • @MATTY110981
      @MATTY110981 Рік тому

      @@ambeegaming76 various reasons why CD’s have a limited shelf life. The main one has been down to the manufacturing process.
      Poorly manufactured CD’s and other optical discs can suffer from disc rot. It’s not rare to find it on a early CDs and seems to be widespread on Laser discs.
      CD’s that have been manufactured and stored correctly would last for centuries.

    • @ambeegaming76
      @ambeegaming76 Рік тому +1

      @@MATTY110981 I said Digital not CD of course a CD is going to degrade but Digital shouldn't have a shelf life.

    • @MATTY110981
      @MATTY110981 Рік тому

      @@ambeegaming76 Hard drive degrade over time.

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival Рік тому +2

      @@MATTY110981 But the file can be moved to another drive or storage medium without loss of quality.

  • @pongespob
    @pongespob Рік тому

    And in 2023 - CD, Download...and LP. Lol. 🤣

  • @zephryus
    @zephryus Рік тому

    well, they weren't wrong

  • @jamesmitchell8922
    @jamesmitchell8922 Рік тому

    Streaming took over

  • @97channel
    @97channel Рік тому

    I find it baffling as to how the CD is still a thing. Why do people buy music CD's nowadays? I got online in 2007, and I haven't bought so much as one CD ever since. I listen to all my music on UA-cam. It's free, it's on demand. And converting it to a downloadable MP3 is a doddle. Maybe unethical, but I don't remember morality stopping people from copying tapes back in the day.

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Рік тому

      If you got online in 2007 then you should of got Spotify Free when that launched in 2008 if you are in the UK or just use iTunes not crappy UA-cam videos

    • @97channel
      @97channel Рік тому +1

      @@pyeltd.5457 I'm sure you're right, but it was never too bad a sound quality on UA-cam enough to drive me away elsewhere.

    • @mrgratis561
      @mrgratis561 Рік тому +1

      Because cd is much higher quality than youtube and mp3.

    • @yeti3994
      @yeti3994 Рік тому +2

      good god, you're still converting youtube to mp3?
      mp3 can sound good, but youtube is already heavily compressed, and those conversion tools frequently compress them *again*
      CD allow for full quality, giving you full control over the files, and will actually play gaplessly (which some services still struggle with)

    • @am_pm.17
      @am_pm.17 Рік тому

      I buy CD because it's physical (i.e. get the sense of it being a real thing you can touch/hold), which means a lot to me. Sure vinyl has the same benefits but it's less flexible due to its larger size (can only use it indoors) and the fact it breaks the bank. CD is extremely cheap. Streaming is the same as renting; you don't own the music, so it's not what I'd want.

  • @nathanw9770
    @nathanw9770 Рік тому

    Back when the Internet was called the "worldwide web" 😂

    • @daviddowsett1658
      @daviddowsett1658 Рік тому

      I still say on purpose (being 50) to my mates Gen-Z'er the "Inter-Web" just to sound old (while kicking their ass at FIFA), they think it's funny, haha, truth be told I'm well into tech and know much more than them (IT business systems' manager, gamer, programmer and restorer of useful old tech)

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому

      The World Wide Web was an upgrade of the original Internet that made it much more accessible and easier to use. The EU tried to get people to adopt WWW or "Internet Superhighway" as a way to distinguish the post-1991 Internet from the pre-1991 Internet but neither name really stuck.

    • @richardjohnson1493
      @richardjohnson1493 Рік тому

      Or the ‘Information Superhighway’

  • @upthebuffer1921
    @upthebuffer1921 Рік тому +2

    You will own nothing and you will be happy

  • @littlemisssunshiney7
    @littlemisssunshiney7 Рік тому +1

    The irony of watching this on UA-cam

  • @RPKGameVids
    @RPKGameVids Рік тому +2

    Now mp3 players are obsolete.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому +2

      I really didn't see that one coming. The phone ate everything.

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому +1

      @@ClayMann I play MP3s off my smartphone.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому +2

      @@TinLeadHammer that's my point. The phone replaced the mp3 player, it ate it. The phone ate the mp3 player market is what I was trying to say just like it ate the camera market

    • @dreamweaver4188
      @dreamweaver4188 Рік тому

      I still have an mp3 player. Haven't been able to use it since windows 7.

    • @mondegreen9709
      @mondegreen9709 Рік тому +1

      Not for me, I still use mine when I'm out and about. But then again, I'm one of those old-fashioned chaps who still listen to the radio every now and then and don't need Internet everywhere all the time.

  • @al3k
    @al3k Рік тому +1

    Yeah, we're not quite at the point where the definition of obsolete applies to these things.. I mean, all these things are still actually being manufactured or made, bought and sold, and used, albeit in small numbers. Even nuclear launch computers are still using floppy disks.. So yeah, we got some time left before we're complete dinosaurs. :)

    • @daviddowsett1658
      @daviddowsett1658 Рік тому +1

      Yer I saw a documentary on that a few years ago, the USA were starting to update it silos that were dependent on no ancient 8-inch floppy disks from the 1960s FFS ... nuked by old tech ...

  • @mccobsta
    @mccobsta Рік тому +1

    And now a lot of people are going back to cds as streaming just sucks now

  • @tacituskilgore9803
    @tacituskilgore9803 Рік тому +1

    Physical Media will never be obsolete because as convenient as Downloading is, It can't make up for holding the physical item in your hands. The general experience of owning a Record or CD and opening it for the first time. The feel, the smell and then using it. Hearing it as it was meant to be heard, not touched up by a computer.

    • @aeiouxs
      @aeiouxs Рік тому +4

      IMHO the Music should be first. Not whether it's a physical object, a live experience or a digital file. The music is first. If you want to collect nice looking things, great. But it's a blinkered viewpoint. And your comment about 'not being touched up by a computer' is somewhat delusional - in the last 40 or so years everything from Classical recordings to the most folky of folk music is likely to have been assisted by a computer to improve the end result - in those 2 cases usually in post-production/mastering.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому +2

      I think that ship sailed and you've just got a really good telescope to see it. Its telling that you can buy speakers that have no way to play physical music. And in mono, who saw that coming? The mono speaker takes over, SMH

    • @elysiumsexsmith
      @elysiumsexsmith Рік тому +1

      ​@@aeiouxs There is an argument to be made that music is enriched when engaged with as many of the senses as possible.
      Physical media not only gives you something to put on a shelf and look at but to and look at and play with, it's also often full of artwork and lyrics and other nick-knacks that you can engage with during your listening experience.
      Vinyl also introduces a ritual aspect to the act of listening. You don't put a record on for background or casual listening but to listen and experience an album from start to finish. By having to stand up, take it from the shelf, remove it from the sleeve, place it on the turntable and drop the needle then having to flip the record over midway through, it commands your full attention in a way digital music (and even CDs) can't replicate.
      Certainly buying pop music on physical media is pointless today as much of it is not made to be listened to be but to dance to, sing along to or just to fill silence, but when it comes to music made to be listened to physical media is more than an obsolete trinket to be relegated to history.

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 Рік тому +1

      I don't need a physical object anymore, apart from liner notes, that would be nice on streaming. It's just adding to more plastic waste to the planet. But I understand what you mean. After you've unwrapped it though and are disappointed that there's only a few tracks you like on the album, you might wish you paid 10 quid per month to listen to all new releases that month.

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому +1

      The concept of holding canned music or movie in your hands is only a hundred years old. It will be quickly forgotten.

  • @thebadgamer1967
    @thebadgamer1967 Рік тому +1

    The virgin bloke seemed like a right sleeze

    • @MD-fu6ly
      @MD-fu6ly Рік тому

      He's a pretty accurate summary of most 90s music industry people I ever met 😄

  • @devlindecker
    @devlindecker Рік тому

    Surprise! No.

  • @PatrickSwayzeOnDbol
    @PatrickSwayzeOnDbol Рік тому +1

    Vinyl and CD are still alive though. Even some electronic tracks are still exclusive to wax.

  • @aresef
    @aresef Рік тому +3

    All these years later, physical media remains king.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому +6

      now that's huffing the copium. Streaming accounts for almost all music consumed today. I'd bet that any physical media bought is used mainly for decoration.

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 Рік тому +1

      It used to be king for me, not anymore... I can open my phone and stream every new album for the cost of one CD per month. I will admit I miss the liner notes. Hopefully one day that will come to the streaming platforms.

    • @rdrgtreer
      @rdrgtreer Рік тому

      I started using cassettes recently out of curiosity and now for practical reasons. The sound is remarkably good I must add. Since I don't pay for any services I Instead bring a cassette for my portable "walkman" and car stereo.

    • @ClayMann
      @ClayMann Рік тому

      @@rdrgtreer I think out of all the mediums for music, cassette was the one I enjoyed most. You can't buy any decent players anymore, anything new is garbage. You have to go back to the older players to find something with a great mechanism and features and those from what I've heard are getting rarer. Anyway as long as you're enjoying it, bah who cares what's popular.

  • @ForeverMan
    @ForeverMan Рік тому +3

    Times when a website was designed by a 10 year old with Microsoft FrontPage

  • @markvandermolen7181
    @markvandermolen7181 Рік тому +1

    I’m begging you, stop blowing this up to widescreen. Preserve the original image.

    • @marvy3022
      @marvy3022 Рік тому +2

      Uh... this was the original image. The BBC had been making wide-screen programmes since 1998.

    • @markvandermolen7181
      @markvandermolen7181 Рік тому

      @@marvy3022 no you can it see in the way they scaled the frame

    • @thomas5
      @thomas5 Рік тому +2

      This is the original image. You can see in other videos they keep the original frame size when it's 4:3.

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Рік тому

      @@markvandermolen7181 This seems to be the original 14:9 transitory format. It sucks though that when they upload 4:3 they stick into into a 16:9 frame.

    • @goodiesguy
      @goodiesguy Рік тому

      @@marvy3022 1995 actually, with Last of the Summer Wine being the earliest example I know of with the episode 'The Glory Hole'.

  • @simonleach8464
    @simonleach8464 Рік тому +5

    I love all the comments about the wonders of physical media whilst they're streaming this, and not watching it on VHS 🤣

    • @sizquirtt
      @sizquirtt Рік тому +2

      you cant get this on vhs tape

    • @qzh
      @qzh Рік тому +4

      funny, but that's a meaningless comment. consuming media is not an either/or position. many people buy physical and stream stuff as well

    • @Ridersonthestorm8899
      @Ridersonthestorm8899 Рік тому

      @@qzh Not sure where Simon lad is seeing all these comments proclaiming the wonders of physical product??
      Seems the other way to me, lots of smug planks with their i have a million songs on my Spotify so poo bums to records.

    • @simonleach8464
      @simonleach8464 Рік тому

      @@Ridersonthestorm8899 I stream music on UA-cam... it was just a comment,lots of vinyl worshipers with the hipster crowd is all,we used to call them 45s,records or LP's

  • @markiliff
    @markiliff Рік тому

    1:10 So kind of the posh totty to think of people in woowal aryas

    • @antonioveritas
      @antonioveritas Рік тому

      Except that in rural areas the Internet is probably poor, and the smartphone signal non existent!

    • @markiliff
      @markiliff Рік тому

      @@antonioveritas Ah, but she *did* think of them!

    • @antonioveritas
      @antonioveritas Рік тому

      @@markiliff And its the thought that counts!

  • @BOZ_11
    @BOZ_11 Рік тому

    Now the record companies are spotify and apple music

    • @Liofa73
      @Liofa73 Рік тому +3

      No, they are the distribution companies.

  • @reecedillon5140
    @reecedillon5140 Рік тому

    iPod

  • @paulrose319
    @paulrose319 Рік тому

    haha now even mps3 are dead😅

  • @shadytube84
    @shadytube84 Рік тому

    When they cyber terrorists strike and I’m sitting there enjoying my cd’s and DVD’s with plenty to keep me entertained whilst laughing at all the people that gave theirs away to ‘de-clutter’ and panicking because Spotify won’t work!!

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому

      You would require an army capable of infiltrating several global cities simultaneously to bring the Internet down (by destroying or shutting down one quarter of the master DNS servers) and even then it would only be offline for maybe a day as the remaining master servers would remap themselves around the missing ones. Also big sites like Spotify have backups of backups, any time they experience a drive failure and lose a drive with 10,000 songs the backup stored in a different location will put those 10,000 songs on to a new drive, at no point is there ever less than two copies of something in the cloud.
      Lastly, most people download the albums they own so even if Spotify did go away you would still have your songs on your phone or music player.

  • @nkenchington6575
    @nkenchington6575 Рік тому

    Bought an Accuphase DP-450 last year. F*** streaming.

    • @the_real_glabnurb
      @the_real_glabnurb Рік тому +2

      What's bad about not having to deal with physical media?
      The data on your CDs is digital anyway.
      You do know, that you can set up a local streaming service, so you're 100% in control of your data and the output quality.
      If the digital data stream comes from your spinning disc or via WIFI doesn't matter a bit.

  • @goodiesguy
    @goodiesguy Рік тому +1

    I'd never pay for a lossy format. Lossless or I'm pirating it.

  • @captainkenzie6873
    @captainkenzie6873 Рік тому

    Nope, I and a lot of other people still use Tapes, Cds and Records.