Covermount: Covermount (Sometimes Written Cover Mount) Is The Name Given To Storage
Covermount: Covermount (Sometimes Written Cover Mount) Is The Name Given To Storage
Covermount: Covermount (Sometimes Written Cover Mount) Is The Name Given To Storage
History
Audio recordings were distributed in the UK by the use of covermounts in the 1960s by the fortnightly satirical magazine Private
Eye though the term "covermount" was not in usage at that time. The Private Eye recordings were pressed onto 7" floppy vinyl
(known as "flexi-discs" and "flimsies") and mounted on to the front of the magazine. The weekly pop music paper NME issued
audio recordings of rock music on similar 7" flexi-discs as covermounts in the 1970s.
The covermount practice continued with computer magazines in the early era of home computers. In the United Kingdom
computer hobbyist magazines began distributing tapes and later floppy disks with their publications. These disks included demo
and shareware versions of games, applications, computer drivers, operating systems, computer wallpapers and other (usually free)
content. One of the first covermount games to be added as a covermount was the 1984 The Thompson Twins Adventure.[1]
Most magazines backed up by large publishers like Linux Format included a covermount CD or DVD with a Linux distribution
and other open-source applications. The distribution of discs with source programs was also common in programming magazines:
while the printed version had the code explained, the disk had the code ready to be compiled without forcing the reader to type
the whole listing into the computer by hand.
In November 2015, The MagPi magazine brought the concept full circle and attached a free Raspberry Pi Zero on the cover, the
first full computer to be included as a covermount on a magazine.
In other places, such as Finland, covermounts on computer magazines never caught on. Instead, popular Finnish magazines such
as MikroBitti offered subscribers access to an exclusive BBS via modem, and later via the World Wide Web.
Adding audiovisual media as a covermount has started with music magazines adding covermounts in the form of sampler for
promotional uses, using compact cassettes as a storage medium. The cassette was in the end replaced by the compact disc.
Apart from magazines also newspapers have discovered the covermount and started to add compact discs to their publications.
Magazines are also including non-storage media like toys, games, stationery sets, make up, cross stitch kits and whatever the
publisher believes will help the sales of their titles.
In the United Kingdom, many television-related "partware" magazines (magazines aimed at collectors which build up to a
complete set over months or years) have been launched in recent years, with covermounts containing episodes of the subject
show (such as Dad's Army, Stargate SG-1 or The Prisoner).
American musician Prince is known for offering studio albums free with various newspaper publications. His 2007 album Planet
Earth was the first to be given this treatment, in the United Kingdom, in partnership with The Mail on Sunday. His new album
20Ten was released in 2010, in Belgium, under the same circumstances, with the same happening for the album with other
publications across Europe. Pop rock band McFly too released a covermount album, which was Radio:Active (their fourth studio
album). Other artists known to release covermount albums are UB40, Peter Gabriel, Calvin Harris and Soulwax. In April 2007,
EMI licensed the Mail on Sunday to cover-mount 2.25 million copies of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells shortly before the rights on
it were due to revert to him, something about which the artist was not best pleased.[2] The NME have also had a long history with
covermount releases, from the influential cassette compilations C81 anD C86, mix albums like NME Dust Up, mixed by The
Chemical Brothers, and Beat up the NME, mixed by Fatboy Slim, as well as albums in which you would have to send a token to
the NME in exchange for the covermount release, including Capital Radio by The Clash and Ally Pally Paradiso by BAD II.
Covermounts came late to the world of video game console publications. Since nearly all 8-bit and 16-bit consoles were
cartridge-based (with the exceptions of Sega's Mega-CD and NEC's PC Engine CD), covermount demos only began appearing in
1996, with the official Sega and PlayStation magazines.
Games redistributed by covermount occasionally have problems if the originals were fitted with copy protection measures. If a
buyer tries to apply a patch or update, there is a high chance of the game not recognizing a covermount CD, as they are often
reprints and lack the copy prevention sectors.
Software publishers, both then and now, are often against the overuse of putting software on the covers of magazines as they see
it is deflating the value of software.
See also
Disk magazine (a magazine contained entirely on disk rather than a disk attached to a paper magazine)
Volume (a jewel case sized music magazine that came with a CD in each issue)
References
1. Reviews of Speccy Games Based on Real Life Personalities. (http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/youngsteve/Celebritie
s.htm) Archived (https://web.archive.org/web/20070205235919/http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/youngsteve/Celebritie
s.htm) 2007-02-05 at the Wayback Machine
2. Oldfield attacks Tubular Bells giveaway (http://www.musicweek.com/story.asp?
sectioncode=1&storycode=28250), Music Week, 8 May 2007
External links
Record company representative decries 'covermount culture', 29 June 2007, The Guardian (http://business.guard
ian.co.uk/story/0,,2114557,00.html)