Modern CD players can play discs with up to 90 minutes of music. Compilation CDs from the German label Soundcolours regularly exceed 80 minutes. The third CD of the collection "Blank & Jones Present SO8Os (So Eighties) 1" has a playing time of 89:49.
It was actually : Pon De Replay. =) And Music To The Sun was the name of her first cd.=)
First CD ever made was ABBA's "The Visitors" in 1982, pressed in Germany
The song Save You is on the CD All I Ever Wanted. It is the 8th song on the CD. There is no music video for Save You unfortunately.
All of the DVD players that I have ever seen will play music CDs as well.
To get CDs made for your music album, you can work with a CD duplication service or a music distribution company. They can help you create physical copies of your album in CD format for distribution and sale.
use iPod Access. The best ever
Type his name in Google and got to wikapedia.com, He had made alot of contributions and has the biggest selling CD ever.. He is the King of Pop
Alf Garnett's Music Hall (available on CD).
It is possible to find music from Dracula Spectacula online. However, there has not been a CD made for it.
YES BUT IT DIDNT GET TO NO 1
To keep music on a CD, it is already there and you do nothing. To put music onto a CD, you "burn" it to the CD. To copy music from a CD to some other memory location, you "rip" it.
"Proclamation" by Douglas Ye (Doyen DOY CD 055, released in 1996) is sometimes said to be the longest CD ever recorded. It's officially 80:17, but my CD player (a 1980's De non which has no trouble playing the full CD) says 80:20. "Proclamation" is a bass trombone recital with 17 tracks of typical recital material, varied enough to keep it interesting despite the length. Doug is one of the world's leading bass trombonists, he's accompanied by the Black Dike Mills Band, Doyen are a well known UK label specialising in brass recordings. If this is indeed the longest CD ever recorded it shows no signs of being a conscious or contrived attempt to push the envelope. NOT ANYMORE As of May of 2012 there is a recording of the four movement version of Bruckner's symphony #9 under Simon Rattle with a total timing on one CD of 82:10