People!!!!
That you can find it, doesn't mean it isn't being phased out ..
Click here ...One can find 8 mm camera films.. Does that mean they aren't gone? I find and buy from time to time CD and DVDs but would you bet they are alive and well? I don't care much to downlaod music, the economics don't work for me ... I usually buy used CDs and then promptly rip them and have found pristine gems for less than $5 shipping included... Do you see Walkman coming back? or Discman? Would netflix suddenly find itself renting more DVDs and BluRays than movies being streamed? Allow me to have my doubts... The future of media is in the cloud .. Money is already in the Cloud... Some would even say the future of computing is in the Cloud... I don't know yet , I am somewhat reluctant to send everything to the cloud but we are already there however much resistance we may want to propose. "Is it wise to rely so much on the Cloud", could be an interesting question. Perhaps a thread on the matter
Again, I'm not very comfortable with predicting the further, Frantz, and for the reasons I've already alluded to in previous posts. However, I respect that you may be, which is of course your prerogative.
Some quick thoughts in defence of the CD:
1) Upon its release, CD became a mass market carrier unlike any we'd seen before (until the MP3). It could be played almost anywhere - cars, boats, planes, portables, high-end home setups, the beach - by anything with a laser drive and did not suffer the physical maladies of vinyl and tape.
2) CD allowed music to rediscover its past. The number of unreleased master tapes archived in vaults of major (and minor) labels that have since been restored, baked, digitally mastered and re-released meant that music long hidden finally had a medium upon which it could reach the masses in ways previously unthinkable. Outtakes, alternative takes, music that for whatever reason was deemed “un-releasable” finally found a new lease of life on CD. All those Coltrane and Miles and Hendrix and Cream and Glenn Gould and Cortot, Thibaud & Casals recordings that have given an historical context for their musical genius, the release of previously unheard interpretations of composers and conductors thought lost to the world… Solely from an musicological perspective, CD has made the landscape for multiple genre’s imminently richer. (I’m thinking for instance of the 1997 release of the
Anthology of American Folk Music on CD by Smithsonian Folkways Recordings which allowed the public to appreciate the huge cultural influence of music pre-dating the Great Depression in a way that was previously the domain of bootleggers, not to mention the incredible musical legacy unearthed by Columbia, DG, EMI, Trojan, Impulse, Blue Note, Rykodisc, et al.)
3) CD allowed Classical and Jazz to make for itself a future on indie, specialty and avant-garde labels. Being a music lover during the 90’s and 2000’s was to witness and explosion of new music because of a single mass market format able to accommodate 80 minutes of music, and composers, artists and musicians suddenly found a way to reach audiences in ways vinyl and tape could not.
4) Almost all of the music generated during the last thirty years is available on CD. Extreme metal, cajun, Americana, electonica, roots, blues, reggae, dub, pop, rock, country, alternative, hip hop, rap, experimental, and of course, classical and jazz… Whatever you’re into it’s far more likely that if it was made between 1982 and the late 2000’s, it’s on CD. Given the state of the music industry, it’s possible some of it will only ever be available on CD.
5) It’s estimated there are currently over 200 billion CD’s in circulation, and the oft-repeated mantra that the polycarbonate layer was susceptible to failure hasn’t resulted in the long-term deterioration many expected. Given the number in circulation, CD is relatively much more robust than the formats it “replaced” (handling issues notwithstanding).
6) Japan, Germany and France still have an appetite for CD, with over 80% of music in Japan being sold on physical media.
7) Based solely on anecdotal evidence, some of it shared on this forum here, CD is still revealing new levels of performance from dedicated playback equipment in a similar way vinyl has. Y’know, that other format that “died”.