Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography

This article discusses a significant if imperceptible feature of how audio compact discs (CDs) inscribe sound: interleaving. It shows how CDs materialize interleaving—the microtemporal re-ordering of data—as a cultural technique of contemporary digital media, and, as such, how the CD’s surface test...

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Main Author: Eamonn Bell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Simon Dawes, Centre d’histoire culturelle des sociétés contemporaines (CHCSC), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ) 2021-09-01
Series:Media Theory
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Online Access:https://journalcontent.mediatheoryjournal.org/index.php/mt/article/view/910
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author Eamonn Bell
author_facet Eamonn Bell
author_sort Eamonn Bell
collection DOAJ
description This article discusses a significant if imperceptible feature of how audio compact discs (CDs) inscribe sound: interleaving. It shows how CDs materialize interleaving—the microtemporal re-ordering of data—as a cultural technique of contemporary digital media, and, as such, how the CD’s surface testifies to much more general operations of cultural data processing than those that appear to be at stake in the few media-theoretical discussions of the format to date. First, I provide a brief overview of the CD’s operating principles, followed by a closer examination of the error-correction and detection system used in CD media. I explain how interleaving co-operates with this system to improve the resilience of disc media to both pre-sale defect and post-sale damage. I interpret this tacit and little-remarked-upon operation of CD players in cultural-technical terms. The perplexities of digital sound media push the principles of contemporary sound reproduction well beyond the kind of efficient and effective critical scrutiny we may associate with what I here call archaeophonographic sound media (for example, tape and vinyl LPs), unless we are willing to confidently assert the value of the media-technical explanatory register to digital media history.
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institution DOAJ
issn 2557-826X
language English
publishDate 2021-09-01
publisher Simon Dawes, Centre d’histoire culturelle des sociétés contemporaines (CHCSC), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)
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spelling doaj-art-66fa42d6913f440f95447d8b23a5ec7b2025-08-20T03:12:43ZengSimon Dawes, Centre d’histoire culturelle des sociétés contemporaines (CHCSC), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)Media Theory2557-826X2021-09-015110.70064/mt.v5i1.910Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of ArchaeophonographyEamonn Bell This article discusses a significant if imperceptible feature of how audio compact discs (CDs) inscribe sound: interleaving. It shows how CDs materialize interleaving—the microtemporal re-ordering of data—as a cultural technique of contemporary digital media, and, as such, how the CD’s surface testifies to much more general operations of cultural data processing than those that appear to be at stake in the few media-theoretical discussions of the format to date. First, I provide a brief overview of the CD’s operating principles, followed by a closer examination of the error-correction and detection system used in CD media. I explain how interleaving co-operates with this system to improve the resilience of disc media to both pre-sale defect and post-sale damage. I interpret this tacit and little-remarked-upon operation of CD players in cultural-technical terms. The perplexities of digital sound media push the principles of contemporary sound reproduction well beyond the kind of efficient and effective critical scrutiny we may associate with what I here call archaeophonographic sound media (for example, tape and vinyl LPs), unless we are willing to confidently assert the value of the media-technical explanatory register to digital media history. https://journalcontent.mediatheoryjournal.org/index.php/mt/article/view/910compact disc, cultural techniques, interleaving, digital audio, media archaeologycompact disccultural techniquesinterleavingdigital audiomedia archaeology
spellingShingle Eamonn Bell
Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
Media Theory
compact disc, cultural techniques, interleaving, digital audio, media archaeology
compact disc
cultural techniques
interleaving
digital audio
media archaeology
title Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
title_full Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
title_fullStr Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
title_full_unstemmed Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
title_short Interleaving as Cultural Technique in the Audio CD and the End of Archaeophonography
title_sort interleaving as cultural technique in the audio cd and the end of archaeophonography
topic compact disc, cultural techniques, interleaving, digital audio, media archaeology
compact disc
cultural techniques
interleaving
digital audio
media archaeology
url https://journalcontent.mediatheoryjournal.org/index.php/mt/article/view/910
work_keys_str_mv AT eamonnbell interleavingasculturaltechniqueintheaudiocdandtheendofarchaeophonography