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Background information

Are music cassettes actually making a comeback?

Debora Pape
15/1/2024
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

Music cassettes haven’t been sold in shops for decades now. And yet, there are still many fans of the medium out there. A portable cassette player was recently presented at major tech event CES. What’s more, well-known female musicians are releasing their albums on tape.

The CP13 looks very similar to the original Walkman and isn’t much different in terms of functionality, either. It plays back tapes and you can listen to them with your headphones. There’s no Bluetooth, just a 3.5 mm jack plug for your earphones. At least the device has a USB-C port for easy charging.

Discover further curiosities presented at CES in the following article penned by my colleague Michelle:

Tapes aren’t dead

Portable cassette players available at Galaxus

If you’re feeling the same way, browsing our shop might help. Turns out we have a few portable cassette players in our range. Here’s a small selection for you.

The edgy aluminium one

Kurt, the minimalist cuboid device sporting retro colours, is made by we are rewind and looks like it’s stepped right out of the last millennium. Only the basic playback buttons protrude from the housing, which, incidentally, is made of aluminium. Just like the original. The device also does Bluetooth and the battery should provide 12 hours of playback.

The quasi all-rounder

This device is also retro. Entirely made of plastic, with round edges and even a belt clip. It too features Bluetooth. There’s also a loudspeaker so you can listen to cassettes without headphones or an external sound system. The foldout antenna at the top also lets you listen to the radio. It also has a microphone you activate by pressing the record button. This turns the cassette player into a dictaphone.

Sadly, this model isn’t available in Germany

The digitiser

The cassette player by Renkforce doesn’t support Bluetooth, but comes with in-ear earphones. Interestingly, it can transfer your cassettes to the internal memory and therefore digitise them. At the end of the day, digital tracks are probably handier than cassettes.

*Still have cassettes at home? Miss the good old cassette era? Or do you think they’re rubbish nobody needs any more?

Header image: Shutterstock/JOKE777

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Feels just as comfortable in front of a gaming PC as she does in a hammock in the garden. Likes the Roman Empire, container ships and science fiction books. Focuses mostly on unearthing news stories about IT and smart products.


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