CD single





Hanson's "Give a Little" as promo-CD-single


A CD single (sometimes abbreviated to CDS) is a music single in the form of a compact disc. The standard in the Red Book for the term CD single is an 8cm (3 inch) CD (or Mini CD).[1] It now refers to any single recorded onto a CD of any size, particularly the CD5, or 5-inch CD single. The format was introduced in the mid-1980s but did not gain its place in the market until the early 1990s. With the rise in digital downloads in the early 2010s, sales of CD singles have decreased.


Commercially released CD singles can vary in length from two songs (an A side and B side, in the tradition of 7" 45rpm records) up to six songs like an EP. Some contain multiple mixes of one or more songs (known as remixes), in the tradition of 12" vinyl singles, and in some cases, they may also contain a music video for the single itself as well as a collectible poster. Depending on the nation, there may be limits on the number of songs and total length for sales to count in singles charts.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Mini CD

    • 2.1 Japan


    • 2.2 United States


    • 2.3 United Kingdom


    • 2.4 Technology


    • 2.5 Longevity


    • 2.6 Technical specifications



  • 3 Demise of the CD single in the United Kingdom


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References




History


Dire Straits' "Brothers in Arms" (1985) is reported to be the world's first CD single,[2] issued in the UK in two separate singles as a promotional item, one distinguished with a logo for the tour, Live in '85, and a second to commemorate the Australian leg of the tour marked Live in '86. Containing four tracks, it had a very limited print run. The first commercially released CD Single was Angeline by John Martyn released on 1 February 1986.[3] CD singles were first made eligible for the UK Singles Chart in 1987, and the first number 1 available on the format in that country was "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)" by Whitney Houston in May 1987.


The Mini CD single CD3 format was originally created for use for singles in the late 1980s, but met with limited success, particularly in the US.[4] The smaller CDs were more successful in Japan[5] and had a resurgence in Europe early this century, marketed as "Pock it" CDs, being small enough to fit in a shirt pocket. By 1989, the CD3 was in decline in the US (replaced by the 5-inch CD single, called CD-5).[5]


It was common in the 1990s for US record companies to release both a two-track CD and a multi-track (usually "remix") maxi CD. In the UK, record companies would also release two CDs but, usually, these consisted of three tracks or more each.


During the 1990s, CD single releases became less common in certain countries and were often released in smaller editions, as the major record labels feared they were cannibalizing the sales of higher-profit-margin CD albums. Pressure from record labels made singles charts in some countries become song charts, allowing album cuts to chart based only on airplay, without a single ever being released. In the US, the Billboard Hot 100 made this change in December 1998, after which very few songs were released in the CD single format in the US, but they remained extremely popular in the UK and other countries, where charts were still based solely on single sales and not radio airplay. At the end of the 1990s, the CD was the biggest-selling single format in the UK, but in the US, the dominant single format was airplay. With the advent of digital music sales, the CD single has largely been replaced as a distribution format in most countries, and most charts now include digital download counts as well as physical single sales.


In Australia, the Herald Sun reported the CD single is "set to become extinct". In early July 2009, leading music store JB Hi-Fi ceased stocking CD singles because of declining sales, with copies of the week's No. 1 single often selling as few as only 350 copies across all their stores nationwide.[6] While CD singles no longer maintain their own section of the store, copies are still distributed but placed with the artist's albums. That is predominantly the case for popular Australian artists such as Jessica Mauboy, Kylie Minogue and, most recently, Delta Goodrem, whose recent singles ("What Happened to Us", "Put Your Hands Up (If You Feel Love)" and "Sitting on Top of the World" respectively) were released on CD in limited quantities. The ARIA Singles Chart are now "predominantly compiled from legal downloads", and ARIA also stopped compiling their physical singles sales chart. "On a Mission" by Gabriella Cilmi was the last CD single to be stocked in Kmart, Target and Big W, who then concluded stocking newly released singles. Sanity Entertainment, having resisted the decline for longer than the other major outlets, has also ceased selling CD singles.


In China and South Korea, CD single releases have been rare ever since the format was introduced, due of the amount of infringement and illegal file sharing over the internet, and most of the time singles have generally been album cuts chart based only on airplay, but with the advent of digital music the charts have also occasionally included digital download counts.[citation needed]


In Greece and Cyprus, the term "CD single" is used to describe an extended play (EP) in which there may be anywhere from three to six different tracks. These releases charted on the Greek Singles Chart (before it abandoned tracking altogether) with songs released as singles.



Mini CD















Mini CD single

8cm CD single jacket.jpg
Mini CD single

Media type
Optical disc
Capacity
80 mm holds up to 24 minutes of music, or 210 MB (210 × 220 bytes) of data.
Standard
Red Book
Dimensions
8 Centimeters (3.1Inch)
Usage
Audio storage
Released
1987[4]

The original CD single (sometimes mini CD single or 3-inch CD or CD3 in the US) is a music single released on a mini Compact Disc that measures 8 cm (3.1 in) in diameter, rather than the standard 12 cm (4.7 in). They are manufactured using the same methods as standard full-size CDs, and can be played in most standard audio CD players and CD-ROM disc drives.[4]


The format was first released in the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, France, West Germany, and Hong Kong in 1987 as the replacement for the 7-inch single.[7] While mini CDs have fallen out of popularity among most major record labels (partly due to their incompatibility with many slot-loading CD players), they remain a popular, low cost way for independent musicians and groups to release music.[4]
Capable of holding up to 20 minutes of music, most mini CD singles contain at least two tracks, often consisting of a single edit and an instrumental version in the same way as 7-inch vinyl singles.[8]



Japan


These were released in both a 5" size slim jewel case and long flip-out sleeve snap-packs or (Japanese: tanzaku) as they are known in Japan.[9] These sleeves could be 'snapped' and folded into a small 3" (8cm) square, rather than the original 6" by 3" inch (15×8 cm) length when originally sold. Most were sold at around ¥1,000 (today about £6 or $9) at the time of release during the late 1980s to early 2000s.


Beginning in 1999 some labels began to package mini CDs in 12cm slimline cases. As the “tanzaku” sleeves slowly morphed into the use of slimline jewel cases, the mini CD single was finally stopped from production in the early 2000s.
The last Japanese 8cm CD single released was a reissue and repackaging of "I Was Born to Love You" by Queen in 2004. Many of the artists who released 3" CDs are from that era, including Wink, Madonna, Phil Collins, Michael Jackson, Queen, U2, Prince, Metallica, Bros, Huey Lewis and the News, Bon Jovi, Kylie Minogue, Falco and George Michael. Some singles packaged in 5" single jewel cases contained a 5" CD adapter.



United States


US versions were often packaged in cardboard slipcases, either 3" square or 6" by 3" gatefold. Others were released in 5" slimline single cases, which allowed an adapter to be included with the CD. At the time of first release in 1987, their retail price was between $4 and $6 at least $3 less than even the least-expensive 5-inch discs. Delos Records, a small, independent label, issued the first commercially available 3-inch CDs in 1987 with 20 classical and jazz titles. The Massachusetts-based Rykodisc issued Frank Zappa’s “Peaches en Regalia” the first pop 3-inch CD. Initially when released, 300,000 of the discs were shipped to retail outlets.[4]



United Kingdom


UK 3" CDs were made mostly in a small square case/cover form only, some including a 5" CD adapter to use in normal compact disc players. Although the format was not widely available in the United Kingdom, several artists have released singles in the format.



Technology


From a technical standpoint, a 3-inch CD follows the Red Book standard for CD digital audio. The major difference is that the smaller physical size of the disc allows for fewer data sectors, meaning the disc can store less audio. The majority of audio CD players and CD-ROM drives have a smaller circular indentation in the CD tray for holding these discs. Most slot-loading drives, such as those found in some car CD players, are unable to manipulate the smaller discs or their adapters. Laptop drives generally only require the centre hole to hold the disc so the smaller diameter is irrelevant. In fact, software and drivers for some hardware are provided on the 3" discs.



Longevity


In the United States and United Kingdom, the format barely lasted into the early 1990s, partly due to inconvenience of needing to attach an adapter on every disc (very few packages were issued with one) before playing. Sony remained in support of the 3-inch CD having had plans to launch a 3-inch CD player for the Japanese market in 1988.[8]
Also replaced by simply putting less music on a regular full-size CD, at least among major labels. The full-size discs are a more standard manufacturing process and so may end up being cheaper to press. The CD single format continued until 2000 for Japanese releases. Despite the unpopularity it survived with publishers adopting the 3-inch CD as an inexpensive way of presenting bonus material with books.[10]



Technical specifications


  • Data: 185-210MB (versus 650-703MB on a 12 cm CD)

  • Audio: 21–24 minutes (versus 74–80 minutes on a 12 cm CD)[11][12]

The slim jewel boxes used for 3" CDs are nearly the same size as 3.5" floppy disks, making storage boxes for 3.5" floppies usable for 3" CDs as well.



Demise of the CD single in the United Kingdom


































Period
Sales
Percentage
Other sales
January–December 1999[13]78 million
Probably 95%+

January–December 2004[13]
Less than 50%
DL: more than 50%
January–June 2006[14]
19%

DL: ?/76.7%

7": ?/1.7%

12": ?/2.1%

Other: ?/0.4%


January–June 2007[14]
8.1%

DL: ?/88.9%

7": ?/1.5%

12": ?/1.2%

Other: ?/0.3%


January–December 2007[13]8 million

DL: 72.6 million
January–December 2008[15]4.6 million

DL: 110.3 million
January-1 October 2009[16]Less than 1.6 million
Less than 1.4%
DL: 115.4 million

In September 2003, there was talk of ringtones for mobile phones outstripping CD singles sales for the year 2004.[17]


Woolworths Group, which previously accounted for one third of all CD sales in the country, stopped selling CD singles in August 2008, citing the "terminal decline" of the format as customers moved to digital downloads as their preferred method of purchasing single tracks[13][18] (the Woolworths chain itself would collapse the following November).


In July 2009, The Guardian reported that Florence + The Machine's single 'Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)' sold a CD and 7" vinyl combined total of 64 copies, where it reached No. 16 in the Mid-Week Chart.[19]


In March 2011, Mercury Records announced that they were to stop manufacturing CD singles for lack of demand and loss of money on the format in 2010.[20]


As of 2012, selected HMV stores sold a small selection of CD singles, mostly charity releases and acts from The X Factor.



See also


  • Single

  • Radio single

  • A-side and B-side

  • EP

  • Maxi single

  • Digital download


References




  1. ^ http://sp.e-words.jp/p/r-cd.html


  2. ^ "Dire Straits – Brothers In Arms - Live In '85". Discogs. 1985. Retrieved 20 June 2015. 


  3. ^ "John Martyn - Angeline, First commercially released CD Single". Matt's CD Singles. 1986. Retrieved 12 October 2017. 


  4. ^ abcde 3-inch Compact Discs Aim At Singles Market - August 06, 1988|By Los Angeles Daily News.


  5. ^ ab "CD News" by Pete Howard for Rolling Stone magazine, 14–28 December 1989, page 216


  6. ^ Adams, Cameron (2 July 2009). "JB HiFi stops selling CD singles because of declining sales". Herald Sun. News.com.au. Retrieved 15 July 2009. 


  7. ^ The Music Lover's Guide to Record Collecting - By Dave Thompson. “CD-3s Good Things Don’t Always Come In Small Packages”


  8. ^ ab The Music Lover's Guide to Record Collecting - By Dave Thompson


  9. ^ "Glossary of Music Terms". Alibris. Alibris, Inc. alibris.com. Retrieved 2015-03-30. 


  10. ^ The Music Lover's Guide to Record Collecting - By Dave Thompson


  11. ^ "80 mm CD: Minus size - plus portability - ExtensivelyReviewed". www.pricenfees.com. 


  12. ^ Red Book (CD standard)


  13. ^ abcd Wallop, Harry (26 May 2008). "CD singles off the shelves at Woolworths". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 20 August 2009. 


  14. ^ ab Dangerfield, Andy (23 July 2007). "Can the CD single be saved?". BBC News. London. Retrieved 15 November 2012. 


  15. ^ Sean Michaels. "UK singles sales hit record high in 2008". the Guardian. 


  16. ^ Khan, Urmee (23 October 2009). "Sales of music singles hit record levels thanks to internet downloads". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 15 November 2012. 


  17. ^ "Music Law Updates". musiclawupdates.com. 


  18. ^ Ruki Sayid (26 May 2008). "CD singles to be axed as sales fall". mirror. 


  19. ^ Rosie Swash. "A chart hit with 64 sales?". the Guardian. 


  20. ^ metrowebukmetro. "Arcade Fire's label Mercury Records abolishes physical CD singles - Metro News". Metro. 









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