It’s album named Virgin from Lorde. Not quite my taste of music, but the disc itself is pretty interesting.
Though it does have issues. Since the reflective layer is very thin, a lot of light passes through.

Even beaming through the lid:

Here’s a blog post about it on Hackaday, also showing the lower signal amplitude compared to regular CD.
For me, so far it worked in 2 out of 4 CD players/drives. And I didn’t even try with those that can’t read CD-RW, as those can probably be crossed off right away.
Anyway, what happens when it’s upside-down? Obviously, “doesn’t work” is the answer. But at least we can see the lens dance a bit, trying to read the disc:
If you’re worried about data consumption, this video is less than 300KB in size thanks to AV1. Although it took 7 minutes to encode…
And something funny to add.
I ripped it once, there was weird noise, so I tried it again. I played random track, “David”, and skipped through it. It sounded corrupted. So I tried playing it directly using VLC. Still the same. Thinking it was the drive, I tried my Discman. Same issue.
Is the disc bad?
But, after finally getting the track from the internet, I found it just sounds like that.
I own a few Japanese SHM-CDs and they are similarly transparent, albeit with a green-ish tint, apparently to reduce reading errors (and the need for error correction) by limiting light scatter.
Out of all my CDs, those were among the most straight forward and fastest to copy to my SSD, so maybe they’re onto something
it just sounds like that
that’s the impact of brat for ya’
the effect at the end is what sells that song to me even though i also felt the album was a bit underwhelming
All CDs are transparente, this one just doesn’t have a visual layer on it
I don’t know whether it is really all, but I can confirm that if you hold them in front of a strong light source, you can see it shine through many
The question is, does it sound as clear as it looks?




