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Chart: The History of Portable Music

Thanks to smartphones, streaming services and wireless headphones, music is now more portable than ever.
Felix Richter
Jun 22 2021
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Thanks to smartphones, streaming services and wireless headphones, music is now more portable than ever.
Photo: Tobias Gonzales/Unsplash
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As the world celebrated la Fête de la Musique, or Music Day, on June 21, we look back at more than 40 years of portable music. From the first Walkman to wireless earpods, technology has shaped the way we are consuming music in 2021: anytime, anywhere.

When Sony introduced the first Walkman in 1979, the portable, if clunky, cassette player was a total gamechanger. It freed music lovers around the world from the shackles of only being able to listen to their favorite tunes at home or while driving a car and brought music everywhere. Much to the disdain of some people that saw the Walkman as “a potent symbol of an antisocial electronic future” and “worried about the fate of humanity”.

More than 40 years later, people are used to listening to music (or podcasts – welcome to the 21st century) wherever they go. And critics of more recent innovations such as Apple’s AirPods bring forward the same arguments as ever, claiming that listening to music while roaming the earth is in fact antisocial, dangerous and overall obnoxious.

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Thanks to smartphones, streaming services and wireless headphones, music is now more portable than ever. The following chart shows several milestones on the journey that started with the first Walkman in 1979 and seems to be nearly completed in 2021: the total liberation of music.

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You will find more infographics at Statista

This article went live on June twenty-second, two thousand twenty one, at eleven minutes past ten in the morning.

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