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Discogs

Discogs
Discogs logo.svg
Type of site
Music
Available in English (US), English (UK), German, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, French
Headquarters Portland, Oregon
Owner Zink Media, Inc.
Created by Kevin Lewandowski
Industry Internet
Services Database, Online shopping
Revenue Advertisement (logging-in removes all ads), Marketplace Seller Fees
Website discogs.com
Alexa rank Increase 799 (Global: November 2016)
Commercial Partially
Registration Optional
Users 329,000
Launched November 2000; 16 years ago (2000-11)
Current status Online

Discogs, short for discographies, is a website and crowdsourced database of information about audio recordings, including commercial releases, promotional releases, and bootleg or off-label releases. The Discogs servers, currently hosted under the domain name discogs.com, are owned by Zink Media, Inc., and are located in Portland, Oregon, US. While the site lists releases in all genres and on all formats, it is especially known as the largest online database of electronic music releases, and of releases on vinyl media. Discogs currently contains over 8 million releases, by nearly 4.9 million artists, across over 1 million labels, contributed from nearly 330,000 contributor user accounts—with these figures constantly growing as users continually add previously unlisted releases to the site over time.

The discogs.com domain name was registered on 30 August 2000, and Discogs itself was launched in November 2000 by programmer, DJ, and music fan Kevin Lewandowski originally as a database of electronic music.

He was inspired by the success of community-built sites such as Slashdot, eBay, and Open Directory Project, and decided to use this model for a music discography database.

The site's original goal was to build the most comprehensive database of electronic music, organized around the artists, labels, and releases available in that genre. In 2003 the Discogs system was completely rewritten, and in January 2004 it began to support other genres, starting with hip hop. Since then, it has expanded to include rock and jazz in January 2005 and funk/soul, Latin, and reggae in October of the same year. In January 2006 blues and non-music (e.g. comedy records, field recordings, interviews) were added. Classical music started being supported in June 2007, and in October 2007 the "final genres were turned on" – adding support for the Stage & Screen, Brass & Military, Children's, and Folk, World, & Country music genres, allowing capture of virtually every single type of audio recording that has ever been released.


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