I got my first in 1987 at a cd specialty store (remember when that was different than a record store?) as a high school graduation gift to myself. I think the brand was A/D/C may be? It was a brand I had not seen before and have not seen since, but it looked cooler than the common brands available at Best Buy, etc, and I bought it on impulse. Cost about $250. I was not an audiophile at the time, so I can't tell what it sounded like, but it sure seemed better than cassettes and scratchy lps on the cheap lo-fi gear I had at the time. It died about 5 years later.
My first cds (purchased with the player--the store threw in 2 with the purchase of the player and I bought 2): Led Zeppelin-In Through The Out Door (symbolic because it was one of the first albums I bouhgt as a child), The Eagles-Greatest Hits, James Taylor-JT, and Rainbow-Down To Earth. Shortly thereafter I recall picking up Deep Purple-Machine Head and Dire Straits-Makin' Movies. Strangely, I still have almost all of these cds. Only the Deep Purple and Rainbow have been replaced with remasters (yeah, I'm still a Blackmore nut).
This reminiscing reminds me of a little rant of mine: It is my recollection that back in the early days of digital cds were about $5 more than lps and cassettes. I'm sure that was somewhat justified at the time by the costs of new manufacturing facilities. But now cds are cheaper to produce than cassettes or lps ever were and the big record companies have never let go of that premium. And they still can't make money?!?!?
My first cds (purchased with the player--the store threw in 2 with the purchase of the player and I bought 2): Led Zeppelin-In Through The Out Door (symbolic because it was one of the first albums I bouhgt as a child), The Eagles-Greatest Hits, James Taylor-JT, and Rainbow-Down To Earth. Shortly thereafter I recall picking up Deep Purple-Machine Head and Dire Straits-Makin' Movies. Strangely, I still have almost all of these cds. Only the Deep Purple and Rainbow have been replaced with remasters (yeah, I'm still a Blackmore nut).
This reminiscing reminds me of a little rant of mine: It is my recollection that back in the early days of digital cds were about $5 more than lps and cassettes. I'm sure that was somewhat justified at the time by the costs of new manufacturing facilities. But now cds are cheaper to produce than cassettes or lps ever were and the big record companies have never let go of that premium. And they still can't make money?!?!?