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Walkman History 101
Discussing the
beginnings of the walkman probably requires a brief look at the
audio scene in the '70s. The audio industry was enjoying success
in the growing home stereo market, and the implementation of the
transistor for a portable AM band receiver created a pocket radio
"boom" in the '60s which continued well into the '70s.
"Boomboxes" or battery-powered one-piece stereo systems were
growing in popularity near the turn of the decade, with sound
eminating through two or more loudspeakers. Consumers appreciated
the ability to listen to high fidelity sound without being
confined to sitting near a home stereo system. Pocket-sized micro
and mini-cassette players were also successfully sold by
companies like Panasonic, Toshiba and Olympus.
So, was the development of a "personal" stereo system an
obvious step in the evolution of audio? Shu Ueyama of Sony cites
that this invention was purely accidental. Organizational changes
were taking place at Sony in 1979 and the tape recorder division
was pressed to market something soon, or risk consolidation. They
came up with a small cassette player capable of stereo playback.
The invention was born from a tweaked Pressman (Sony's monaural
portable cassette recorder) and a pair of headphones.
Sony chairman and founder Akio Morita heard of the invention
and was eager to market it. The final design of the TPS-L2, the
personal stereo cassette player was completed on March 24, 1979.
Sony then formulated a unique marketing campaign to sell the
contraption. But first, what to call it?
The name needed to
present the idea of portability, so they considered Stereo
Walky. Unfortunately, Toshiba was already using the "Walky"
name for their portable radio line. The new product was a
descendant of the Pressman so Walkman was proposed next.
Senior staff responded to this name with doubts, as it sounded
like a Japanse phrase clumsily made English. The name would fly
in Japan but the product would be marketed in the US as the
Sound-About and in the UK as the Stowaway.
Again, senior staff thought twice about the naming
conventions--globally marketing a product with regional labels
would prove costly, so Walkman was ambivalently accepted
as the name of this new personal stereo system.
The next
task was marketing the product. The story behind Sony's market
research was legendary: they didn't do it! Said Akio Morita in a
1982 Playboy interview, "The market research is all in my head!
You see, we create markets." But how does one convince the
public they need a product that they've never owned or seen? The
first step was to get the word out to people who had influence on
the public, like celebrities and people in the music industry.
Sony sent Walkmans to Japanese recording artists, tv and movie
stars free of charge. They also began an innovative marketing
campaign, targeting younger people and active folks. The Walkman
was engineered carefully to make it affordable to this market,
priced to be around 33,000 yen (Sony was 33 years old at the
time. Coincidence?) The imagery Sony successfully used around
their Walkman gave the feelings of fun, youth and most
importantly, freedom. Their invention allowed one to bring an
exceptional listening experience anywhere.
The
Walkman craze began in Japan and reached the US by 1980. Other
audio companies jumped on the personal stereo bandwagon, and by
Spring of 1981, at least two dozen companies were selling similar
devices, many of which were marketed with catchy names of their
own. Toshiba had their Stereo Walky, Infinity had their
Intimate, Panasonic sold their Stereo-To-Go, GE
marketed their Escape, and even discount audio producer
Craig followed suit with the Soundalong. Styles and colors
varied from the Walkman, but several key features were found on
early models: two headphone jacks (listen with a friend!)
separate left and right channel volume controls, and a neat but
impractical "hotline" switch, as Sony called it. Pushing this
button turned on an ambient microphone so the listener could hear
the noise around him instead of the music. Strangely enough, all
of these features disappeared from portables a year or two
later.
While one may be tempted to criticize these other companies as
Walkman "wannabes," We should instead appreciate their
accomplishments, for together they provided us with what we refer
to as the walkman "Golden Age." A marketing person described this
movement accurately. "During any product development," he said,
"the first few years are associated with innovative design and
quality." He's absolutely right. Many personal stereo products
emerged and surpassed the Walkman in terms of features and price.
Sanyo's M5550 was smaller than the Walkman, more durable with its
all-metal chassis and contained a variable tape speed dial. Aiwa,
owned by Sony since 1969 created a product line initialized by
their TPS30, a personal stereo cassette recorder. Akai's PM-01
had FM tuning capability through the aid of a cassette-shaped
radio module. What an incredible concept: in an effort to confine
the space of a personal stereo, how can one add features at the
same time? The logical, yet nonetheless remarkable idea was to
place a radio within an audio cassette chassis and engineer it to
send the audio into its cassette player home. Toshiba had the
same functionality and offered an AM module, also.
Companies like Infinity worked at sound quality. Their
Intimate offered Dolby noise reduction. Koss sold their
radio-only Music Box with a set of their well-reputed
over-the-ear headphones, and offered circuitry to notify the user
when he or she was listening to audio that was "too loud." High
grade stereo component manufacturer Proton even stepped into the
ring and sold a model that included some hi-tech circuitry
previously available only on $1000+ stereo equipment.
Many groaned after seeing the $150
price tags of Sony and Toshiba and settled for their $20
earphone-clad radios until names like Unic, Randix Audiologic,
Craig and Yorx came along cheap personal stereos. Discount
manufacturers seized the opportunity during the portable stereo
craze. Products similar in shape and functionality (but not
necessarily quality) were marketed as the Walkman, using
photographs of people on the go, in sneakers, roller skates and
on bicycles. Fortunately, these companies made a personal stereo
available for everyone.
Competition was strong as throughout the early '80s and new
ideas were popping all of time: Sony feeling the pressure worked
on engineering their Walkman line be smaller, while still looking
and sounding better. Long Island, New York audio company Mura
decided to focus on the radio-only stereo, so they enhanced
functionality in their Hi Stepper line. One model even offered TV
audio reception. Popular US electronics distributors like Radio
Shack, Sears and JC Penney also jumped on the bandwagon by
selling their own personal stereos.
Overseas audio manufacturers like Grundig and ITT were selling
similar portables that rivaled the quality of Japanese brands.
JVC announced the "be-all" of portables in 1982: the CQ-F22K.
This was the first portable stereo that included
all of the features we're accustomed to having today, like Dolby noise
reduction, auto-reverse and AM/FM tuning. Perhaps the
most exotic feature offered on a personal stereo at the time was
the wireless feature discovered on some gray market Aiwa CS-J1
units. They apparently transmitted an audio signal that would be
received by special headphones. Sony offered their affordable
Walkman II, or WM-2 in a small, shapely all-metal chassis. This
remains the most successful model of all time, selling 2 1/2
million units. By 1983, Everyone was shopping for a personal
stereo.
As with any fad, many groups raised concerns with the Walkman.
Were we at risk while performing daily activities like driving or
walking around town oblivious to the world around us? Would we go
deaf or catch brain damage? Would we turn into anti-social
creatures, encapsulated in our little personal stereo world? Of
course, these concerns didn't slow the Walkman movement even
slightly. 
We caught MTV's tongue-in-cheek airing of "Video Killed the
Radio Star," but teenagers didn't think twice about strapping on
a pair of samarium cobalt headphones and banging their heads to
Autograph's "Turn Up The Radio." The generation gap widened as
young people became "wired." With the exception of school, many
kids spent their waking days with a personal stereo on the
hip.
Several initial players in the personal stereo market dropped
out as the '80s endured, but Sony, Aiwa, Toshiba, Sharp,
Panasonic and Sanyo thrived. Product lines widened from $25
"disposables" to $200 professional-grade models. Niche models
popped up, like Sony's durable Sports line, and Aiwa's
featured-packed J Series recorders with stereo microphones and
wired remote controls. Perhaps Sanyo and Sharp enjoyed the most
success with their inexpensive portables, aimed at young and
price-conscious buyers. If you were sick of wasting AA batteries,
you had solar-powered walkmans available, like Sony's WM-F107 and
Mura's Sun Stepper. Sony and Panasonic even offered models that
contained two cassette drives, so you can listen to one cassette
right after another, or dub a copy of an original recording.
We also noticed the blossoming of an industry to provide
aftermarket accessories for personal stereos. We've all had to
buy a second set of headphones at some point, some of us
purchased little desktop speakers allowing our little personal
stereo to become a home one of sorts. Unitech marketed a
cushioned vinyl travel bag for your walkman that contained little
stereo speakers inside. Simply pop your unit into it and you've
got a boombox. Signatech sold a trendy vest that sported
loudspeakers on the shoulders and special walkman "pocket" for an
audio source.
The walkman craze (note the lower-case "w", as the name was
entered into the Oxford English Dictionary in 1986) continued its
run, and prices dipped as functionality rose. By 1985 many models
featured graphic equalizers for even better sound, tape direction
change and auto-reverse features for ease of use. The average
model required two batteries, as opposed to the typical four in
1980. Sony announced a belt-free "direct drive" mechanism for
remarkably low wow and flutter (terms that describe the warbling
noise in audio cassette playback). Panasonic offered their "Radio
Card," the thinnest pesonal stereo radio ever.
1986 marks the year that we identify the beginning of the end
for the walkman, for it was in this year that Sony announced the
D-50, a portable audio device that played a new digital medium
called the compact disc. The public was eager to hear the
"perfect" sound of the CD so they rushed out to grab a "Discman."
Audio companies again followed Sony and began focusing their
efforts to this new technology. Walkmans didn't wane in
popularity initially, for all pre-recorded music was available in
cassette form and there was no consumer CD recorder at the time.
As we approached the turn of the decade, features digital
tuning, clocks, alarms, rechargeable batteries, wireless
headphones and logic controls. But the walkman novelty had worn
off, replaced by the CD and later the mini-disc.
Today, personal stereo cassette players and radios bear little
resemblance to their predecessors from years prior. They're
absolutely disposable, averaging $20 in price and offering key
features like pastel and chromy colors, rounded edges and clear
plastic chassis. Obviously little effort is put into the design
or engineering of the walkman, for manufacturers believe the audio
cassette is a dying medium, soon to be replaced with the digital
technology of hard disks and RAM cards.
This sad state is what drove us to build this site. We hope
you can appreciate the obsolete device we call the
walkman. It changed our perception of sound and became a
cultural icon. It was a gadget with soul.
© 2002 Pocket Calculator.
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