The music industry's latest problem: Archive hard drives from the 90s are failing

zohaibahd

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TL;DR: The music industry is grappling with a looming crisis regarding its archive of 90s recordings stored on aging hard drives. According to data storage experts at Iron Mountain, around 20 percent of drives from the era are now unreadable. The company is raising concerns that, due to deteriorating formats, insufficient metadata, and increasing disk failures, a significant portion of these historic recordings could be lost forever if urgent action is not taken.

A report from music industry publication Mix, citing Robert Koszela, global director of studio growth at Iron Mountain Media and Archive Services, highlights the bubbling issue. Hard drives from the 1990s, even those stored according to best practices and appearing pristine on the outside, are increasingly failing.

Prior to the 2000s, master tapes were used to produce vinyl, cassettes, or CDs, with multitracks archived securely. However, the advent of new formats like 5.1 surround sound, Guitar Hero games, and online streaming led to a renewed need to access and remix older materials. This exposed the extent of degradation in some tapes, rendering them unplayable or even lost. Additionally, many formats from that era have become obsolete.

Compared to tapes, accessing files from old hard drives might seem straightforward, but Iron Mountain's analysis reveals that it's often far from easy. Even if drives power up, users face a range of technical challenges. These may include needing updated software, fixing plug-ins, or locating outdated proprietary cables or power adapters.

The issue has also been discussed on Hacker News with user "abracadaniel" highlighting additional concerns. "Optical media rots, magnetic media rots and loses magnetic charge, bearings seize, flash storage loses charge, etc." They concluded, "Entropy wins, sometimes much faster than you'd expect."

Also read: Anatomy of a Hard Disk Drive

Fortunately, Iron Mountain has invested in specialized equipment capable of reading various storage media as long as the disk platters remain undamaged. However, challenges persist, such as the lack of metadata to identify the content on poorly marked disks. Koszela notes that the only information on the outside of some cases might be an artist's acronym, making it difficult to determine whether the content is a video session, an interview, or something else.

Accessing archived drives often depends on commercial needs, like remixes or immersive releases. If a drive contains outdated transfers, additional budget may be required to re-transfer tapes at modern high resolutions.

The sad reality is that unless there is a commercial motive to pull and preserve an old drive, it's likely to sit in an archive and rot away. "My worry is that these assets will just be lost. People need to know that their hard drives are dying," Koszela warned.

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A crisis, really? :) Everything remotely interesting is up in the cloud, for YouTube, Spotify, Torrents, etc. The rest is just history, as in a bunch of mediocre oldies. Not much of a crisis, methinks.

R.I.P.
 
A crisis, really? :) Everything remotely interesting is up in the cloud, for YouTube, Spotify, Torrents, etc. The rest is just history, as in a bunch of mediocre oldies. Not much of a crisis, methinks.

R.I.P.
That's not the issue. It's not that you losing your Barbie Songs The Princess Movie CD because some recording studios hard drive died. It's losing the live recordings or when a musician released an album where they did something different to songs on their main album. The songs in the cloud are for the most part, the original songs released with the album. They're losing special releases that might have only sold 10,000 copies as an anniversary or collectors edition and 30 years later, many of them have been lost to time.

When you get into different versions of a song and collaborations, this gets to be a problem. While the masses might not care, people who are into music usually have a favorite version of a song.
 
Sounds like a new best storage practice should be "duplicate onto the latest generation cold storage media every 5-10 years"

Throw the hard drive in Iron Mount in 2020, and roll back around between 2025 and 2030 to copy its contents onto a new hard drive. And potentially combine multiple drives down onto a single, larger drive as capacities increase.
 
Last paragraph is the actual issue,

a massive problem has been noticed but since theres no "money" in solving it then does anyone really care? I hope all you data hoarders and digital sailors keep your copies in order because these corps aren't.
 
That's not the issue. It's not that you losing your Barbie Songs The Princess Movie CD because some recording studios hard drive died. It's losing the live recordings or when a musician released an album where they did something different to songs on their main album. The songs in the cloud are for the most part, the original songs released with the album. They're losing special releases that might have only sold 10,000 copies as an anniversary or collectors edition and 30 years later, many of them have been lost to time.

When you get into different versions of a song and collaborations, this gets to be a problem. While the masses might not care, people who are into music usually have a favorite version of a song.
still not a crisis. life will go on
 
A crisis, really? :) Everything remotely interesting is up in the cloud, for YouTube, Spotify, Torrents, etc. The rest is just history, as in a bunch of mediocre oldies. Not much of a crisis, methinks.

R.I.P.

You do wonder if the library of Alexandra was really that great. nearly no books of the new testament have been found from the first 3 centuries. So itsf just a selection from those around from a couple of centuries later put together. I do think this is all worthy knowledge worth preserving,
I laugh when some say some painting is destroyed and everyone acts like it's a big loss , but images and closeups of it abound.
Buddhists make elaborate sand mandala that are destroyed to signify the insignificance of mans creations, pagans burn stuff etc . Hindi god Kali does her death and destruction. probably 1000s of examples
Circle of life and all that
 
That's not the issue. It's not that you losing your Barbie Songs The Princess Movie CD because some recording studios hard drive died. It's losing the live recordings or when a musician released an album where they did something different to songs on their main album. The songs in the cloud are for the most part, the original songs released with the album. They're losing special releases that might have only sold 10,000 copies as an anniversary or collectors edition and 30 years later, many of them have been lost to time.

When you get into different versions of a song and collaborations, this gets to be a problem. While the masses might not care, people who are into music usually have a favorite version of a song.
Dying 30-year-old hard drives and resulting data loss could not be a more obvious sign of the affected company being utterly incompetent and untrustworthy with archiving data. Nothing lasts forever, data must be periodically transferred to newer drives at least once every decade. Musicians do not deserve this cartoonishly inane bullshit.
 
I still think that over-digitization and over-storage have turned humans into data hoarders.

that is true but think about the millions of written text lost to times. we can't know how much valuable that would been.

hoarders are those that stockpile everything wihout even knowing why.
we must preserve data that is valuable and important to the human history, and with modern techs is luckly not so hard to achieve that.
 
Dying 30-year-old hard drives and resulting data loss could not be a more obvious sign of the affected company being utterly incompetent and untrustworthy with archiving data. Nothing lasts forever, data must be periodically transferred to newer drives at least once every decade. Musicians do not deserve this cartoonishly inane bullshit.
That's what really gets me. Who still has 30 year old hard drives? Y'all never moved them? Copied them? Put them on an actual file server with a proper data retention filesystem? Anything?

And yet they want me to pay for their music.
 
So on average, drives around 30 years old are breaking down?
No way anyone could have seen that coming.
I have an 80GB hard drive from 2001 that still works. It is in a Box on a shelf and I check it from time to time! I have home burned DVDs from 2002 that are still good! I had a few home burned CDs go bad but that all!
 
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