Death to “Hidden Tracks”

I don’t know when it started, this idea of including “hidden tracks” on CDs. You know, the kind of track you only hear when you don’t get up and take the CD out of the player at the end; after a minute or two of silence… Like many useless things, or bad jokes, it was cute once. But then you get tired of it. First of all, hidden tracks aren’t listed on the CD or the liner notes. So you don’t know what they’re called, how long they last, etc. Second, you’ll miss them unless you’re too busy to change a CD after the end. In many cases, you’ll listen to a new CD a dozen times before you notice. And, finally, it’s just obnoxious. If a band’s got something to say, let them say it out loud, not hide it.With digital music, this is even stranger: since you see the actual timing of the last track, you know that it’s either long or that there’s a “hidden” song. But that’s the whole point of this article: with digital music, the track isn’t hidden, so the “cuteness” is gone.

I’ve had enough of hidden tracks: they’re annoying, and I’d really like to be able to hear them in normal conditions. If I’m listening to music on my iPod, then I’ve got to either listen to air or fast-forward. (Not that silence is not a good thing; see this article about using silence in playlists.) The problem is that bands think it’s cool to add hidden tracks, that it serves some sort of ego-boosting purpose. If they thought about their listeners, then they might think a bit differently…

I’m not going as far as starting a petition against hidden tracks; that would be as foolish as the hidden tracks themselves. But if only musicians realized that they do little more than annoy listeners, maybe they’d stop, and maybe we’d be able to know about all the tracks on their albums.


Read more articles in this category: iPod & iTunes

Posted: 5/28/2006 by kirk | Filed under: iPod & iTunes | 1 Comment »

One Response to “Death to “Hidden Tracks””

  1. genericwoods says:

    I agree completely.
    In almost a protest of this sort of idea, The Queens Of The Stone Age have an album "Songs For The Deaf" and the last track on the album (its own actual track) is called the "hidden track".
    My solution for these hidden tracks is to use iTunes’ start-time/stop-time feature, copy the song so it appears twice on my harddrive, import it twice, and crop it to the two locations of the regular track and the hidden track. This is tedious and also screws up my playlists when I have it limited by time length (iTunes needs to take into account your start and stop times when calculating the time length of a playlist).


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