International Standard Recording Code
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− | An '''International Standard Recording Code''' ( | + | An '''International Standard Recording Code''' (ISRC) is used to uniquely identify musical recordings (audio and music video). It is an official standard (ISO 3901). |
An ISRC consists of 12 letters and numbers, usually shown with dashes for readability, like <code>JM-K40-14-00212</code>. This is composed of a two-character country code (ISO 3166-1), a three character owner code, a two character year code, and a five character serial number (unique for a given owner and year). | An ISRC consists of 12 letters and numbers, usually shown with dashes for readability, like <code>JM-K40-14-00212</code>. This is composed of a two-character country code (ISO 3166-1), a three character owner code, a two character year code, and a five character serial number (unique for a given owner and year). |
Revision as of 05:50, 2 December 2020
An International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) is used to uniquely identify musical recordings (audio and music video). It is an official standard (ISO 3901).
An ISRC consists of 12 letters and numbers, usually shown with dashes for readability, like JM-K40-14-00212
. This is composed of a two-character country code (ISO 3166-1), a three character owner code, a two character year code, and a five character serial number (unique for a given owner and year).
These codes are for recordings; the underlying works should have International Standard Musical Work Codes. There may be a lot of different recordings of a given song, including covers, remixes, and alternate versions.