Recording industry is learning that digital is NOT forever...

antiquark

Derek Ross
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From Rolling Stone Magazine:

Vinyl and analog tapes last forever, but hard drives fail and digital
formats change, 7 Dec 2010


Last year, the Beggars Banquet label unearthed the multitrack master
recordings of the Cult's classic 1985 album, Love, for a planned deluxe
edition. The LP was an early digital recording, and to the label's shock,
one master was unplayable; the other contained only 80 percent of the
album. "That's the problem with digital," says Steve Webbon, head archivist
of the Beggars Group. "When it goes, it's just blank. It's gone."

Welcome to the digital nightmare...

http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/17389/239965

(via http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/26.25.html)
 
and, yet, we still have cylinders recorded by Thomas Edison in good old analog and even Charlie Parker's first recording made on paper disk.

His Master's Voice indeed.
 
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