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In 1949, RCA introduced the 7-inch record as both a successor to older 78 rpm discs and a competitor to Creator/ColumbiaRecords' Long Play (LP) format. RCA's attempts at pushing 7-inch albums (which collected multiple discs like 78 rpm albums) fell flat, with customers overwhelmingly preferring the LP for that niche. Despite this, the 7-inch would remain standard for single releases until the advent of 12-inch singles in the mid-'70s and cassette and CD singles in TheEighties. On the flipside, RCA would be quick to jump on the UsefulNotes/CompactDisc bandwagon that decade, releasing albums on the format as soon as it became available outside of Japan.
to:
In 1949, RCA introduced the 7-inch record as both a successor to older 78 rpm discs and a competitor to Creator/ColumbiaRecords' Long Play (LP) format. RCA's attempts at pushing 7-inch albums (which collected multiple discs like 78 rpm albums) fell flat, with customers overwhelmingly preferring the LP for that niche. Despite this, the 7-inch would remain standard for single releases until the advent of 12-inch singles in the mid-'70s and cassette and CD singles in TheEighties. On the flipside, RCA would be quick to jump on the UsefulNotes/CompactDisc Platform/CompactDisc bandwagon that decade, releasing albums on the format as soon as it became available outside of Japan.
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* Music/TheCalling
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* Music/TheCallingMusic/{{TheCalling|Band}}
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* Music/BlackRebelMotorcycleClub (North America only)
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* Music/BlackRebelMotorcycleClub (North America only)Music/BlackRebelMotorcycleClub
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Added DiffLines:
* Music/BlackRebelMotorcycleClub (North America only)