The Sound Of Windows 95 About To Disappoint You Added To Library Of Congress Significant Sound Archive
The Brian-Eno-composed sound played by Windows 95 when booted has been added to the US Library of Congress’s list of nationally significant recordings.
The list, formally known as the National Recording Registry, lists material felt to be “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant.”
As explained in an FAQ, recordings in the Registry “are not necessarily selected as the ‘best’ recordings of all time, but rather as works of enduring importance to American culture and, hence, in need of permanent preservation by either the Library of Congress or another qualified institution.”
Which explains why Celine Dion and Elton John were added this year.
Here’s the sound in all its glory.
And here’s what The Library of Congress had to say about the significance of the Windows boot chime:
- Free95 claims to be a GPL 3 Windows clone, but it's giving vaporware vibes
- Windows 95 setup was three programs in a trench coat, Microsoft vet reveals
- Techie told 'Bill Gates' Excel is rubbish – and the Microsoft boss had it fixed in 48 hours
- Microsoft whiz dishes the dirt on the Blue Screen Of Death's colorful past
Windows 95 was, to be fair, a very significant improvement on Windows 3.1, and your correspondent recalls genuine community excitement at the time of its launch as eager buyers queued outside retailers to obtain a copy. In Australia, Dame Edna Everage launched the OS (while I, as the youngest staffer of the long-dead PC Week Australia, held the fort in the office, dammit).
The OS was, however, often unstable. Users hearing the sound now deemed historically significant will likely have memories of hearing it more often than they wanted to – and often at inconvenient moments.
Also added to the Registry on Wednesday was “Minecraft Alpha”, a soundtrack for the game that debuted in 2011.
Plenty of more conventional music also made the list, including albums by Miles Davis, Tracy Chapman, and Amy Winehouse.
Plus the dross mentioned earlier in the story.
The full list is yours to read here and the comments are down there ↓ for those of you who may wish to take issue with this very occasional music critic’s taste. ®
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