Music History Monday: The Sony Walkman: A Triumph and a Tragedy!

We mark the introduction on July 1, 1979 – 45 years ago today – of the Sony Walkman.  The Walkman was the first entirely portable, high-fidelity (or at least fairly high-fidelity) audio cassette player, a revolutionary device that allowed a user to listen to entire albums anywhere, anytime.  Introduced initially in Japan, the higher-ups at Sony expected to sell 5000 units a month for the first six months after its release.  Instead, they sold 30,000 units in the first month alone and then – then – sales exploded.  All told, Sony has sold over 400 million Walkmen (“Walkmans”?) in cassette, CD, mini-disc, and digital file versions, and Sony remained the market leader among portable music players until the introduction of Apple’s iPod on October 23, 2001. For Sony the Walkman was a commercial triumph.  For consumers, it was a technological game-changer.  But for humanity, taken as widely as we please, it can (and will!) be argued that the “portable music player” – or PMP – has been an unmitigated disaster, a tragedy that has served to increasingly isolate human beings from one another in a manner unique in our history. Headphones and Earbuds Growing up, my maternal grandparents lived in a pre-War apartment […]

The post Music History Monday: The Sony Walkman: A Triumph and a Tragedy! first appeared on Robert Greenberg.

2356 232

Suggested Podcasts

maximumfun.org, Lisa Hanawalt, Emily Heller, Rob Pera

BBC Radio 5 Live

Jon Haws RN Nursing School Mentor and Kati Kleber RN CCRN Nursing Podcast Host with NRSNG

Dan Rusyniak a Howard Greller

Speak Like a native

Old Time Radio DVD

Rep. Mike Gallagher

Bardia Doosti