If you grew up four to five decades ago, your idea of infotainment in your parents’ cars was a lot different from what it is today. Forget even a VHS of Cars in the back seats of the minivan; as children, all we had to look at was whatever was visible through the windows, and the audio portion of the not-entertainment was whatever came through the static between 5 and 16 on the radio dial, as determined by the parent behind the wheel – and we didn’t even know what those numbers meant.
Hopefully you didn’t have a General Motors car with that built-into-the-windshield antenna that couldn’t get a station even if you were parked next to the transmission tower. Look at that Chevette radio pic below; you can just hear the scratchy reception and CHOONK noise of the push buttons.
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Some of us were lucky enough to have family cars that got FM as well, perhaps even in stereo, but only the richest kids experienced pre-recorded music. That’s right, an actual tape deck in the car itself!

Car makers started putting tape players into dashboards around the mid-sixties, with Ford being the first in 1965. Often, they were standalone things that pumped sound through speakers on the rear deck, providing surprising bass from the massive trunks in old land yachts.
These optional accessories were rare, likely because they weren’t cheap, and people didn’t see the value. How could a car salesman get you to check the option box for a fancy eight-track deck?

The answer was demonstration tapes: something packaged with the car’s logo and featuring a potpourri of different kinds of music to show the potential buyer how magnificent their life could be for just a few extra bucks on each monthly payment. Here are just a few.
At Least None Of The Songs Got Cut In Half Like On Most 8-Tracks
One of the older ones I found was this “Fancy Colors In Sound” 8-Track from Buick, as these huge cassettes were the primary media for cars up through the seventies.

A lot of real bangers on this one, particularly Carol Burnett and whoever Andre Kostelanetz is. One of the tracks is Oye Como Va from Carlos Santana, which seems a little bit heavy for an Electra 225 owner in 1972. That’s sort of like putting System Of A Down on a compilation for a Lexus.

Here’s a later Buick demo tape. I’d probably select that disco A Fifth Of Beethoven to cruise down I-95 in my new Regal, or maybe put on Theme From S.W.A.T. if I wanted to really squeal the tires like I was in a Kojak-style undercover car.


A 1979 tape gives you some Toto to rock out to, but I think that Lou Rauls would be better to chill on the maroon crushed velour seats.

Shove a Pencil In It
By the ’80s, the cassette had replaced the old 8-Track so car makers had to follow suit. Here’s a late ’80s Oldsmobile test tape that kicks it off with the There Is A Special Feel In An Oldsmobile song, and then rolls into pop tracks. Based on the artist selection of this and those earlier Buick tapes, it seems like Neil Diamond was on GM’s payroll. Toto likely was as well, here singing what an Oldsmobile owner might consider to be “world music.”
Don’t worry; if you look at the song list on the case, the entire other side is classical for the typical Olds 98 Regency, most likely a family doctor or owner of an accounting firm, a real “I could afford a Cadillac but that’s too showy” type.

Mopar owners could show off their Infiniti I Premium Sound Systems with An Introduction To Chrylser Audio Systems, which I hope was narrated by Ricardo Montalban (“rich, substantial bass”). The tape then segways into pulsating Kenny Loggins, after which auto reverse would switch you into Gloria Estefan followed by a bunch of classical that was far more befitting of your New Yorker Brougham.


Did You Get Fingerprints On It, Or Are We Just On A Bumpy Road?
Nothing deserved a demonstration more than a new-fangled compact disc player, especially when you sometimes had to move around all your crap in the trunk just to get to the damn discs. Chevy was ready to show you how those little silver records gave you quality digital sound with a demo that, sadly, did NOT include Bob Seger doing “Like A Rock.” What the hell?

At least you got Sean Penn’s brother doing his one hit at number 2, David Lee Roth at the top of his game on track 7, and what I’m assuming is Mr. Mister strongly and repeatedly encouraging you to carry a laser down the road that you must travel at track 11.

General Motors got its money’s worth out of Mr. Mister, since Broken Wings appears on a 1990 Cadillac Style demo disc. Wait, didn’t that dude drive a ’58 T-Bird in the video?

With No Apple CarPlay, You Might Want That CD Player Back
Demo discs continued for a lot longer than you might think; our Thomas Hundal recalls a promo CD for the Acura RSX that featured Good Charlotte’s Motivation Proclamation.
Naturally, today you can’t even play a disc in a new car, which has obviously been the case for a while, but that doesn’t mean brands aren’t eager to show off how awesome their sound systems are. How about that head-exploding THX noise from a movie theater?
We know for a fact that a recent Member’s Rides included a reader’s 2012 Lincoln MKZ that had a THX stereo unit with a demo mode that plays the bone-shaking THX sound right out of the multiplex theater. Technology might have changed, but we still need to blow people away with our car tunes.
The downside of purchasing these recorded media players back in the day was something that our parents still have post-traumatic stress about. With their newfound tape and CD players, they often bought into this crap:

Maybe it’s a good thing that we can stream whatever we want now without fear of unwanted, unasked-for, full-price cassettes or CDs showing up in the mailbox.
If there are people out there who collect air sickness bags, then I can imagine that at least a few people are stockpiling old car stereo demo recordings. If so, I sure hope they have a disc with the Ride Pontiac Ride song on it to blast in your 1989 Trans Am. Here’s the big question: if audio demo discs existed today, I wonder what the various brands would put on them?









You’d have to buy a music subscription today to get a demo stream.
Holy shit, I had to look it up, but Floyd Cramer + The Keyboard Kick Band – Foolin’ Around (the second Buick 8-track) is a gotdam banger!
Yeah, Floyd Cramer was a legendary session pianist in Nashville in the 50s-70s, playing with Chet Atkins (guitar) and Boots Randolph (sax) on tons of albums. Look up the Nashville A-Team, which was like the Nashville version of Memphis’s Booker T & the MGs (the Stax Records house band) or the Wrecking Crew out in LA.
that’s awesome, love those stories
My parents had a couple Floyd Cramer 8-tracks back in the 70s. I remember them playing it in the Suburban we had on long trips.
Shit, I’m gonna pull a neck muscle groovin’ this hard.
My first car was a hand me down car from my then non-driving grandmother. A 1969 ford galaxie she bought new a few months before I was born. It had a non working AM radio. My tunes came from a small boom box strapped in the middle of the front bench seat that ran on 8 D batteries, and sat under my co-pilot a stuffed Opus Penguin. There was Nothing! cool about that other than the back vinyl covered bench was big enough for 2.
Buick was so cheap they only got Gary Puckett! He was nothing without the Union Gap.
The youth leader at our church had the factory upgraded sound system in his ’87 Olds 442. It was one of the first times I experienced stereo music. He had the sampler CD in the glove box and I loved to crank Kyrie. One of by buddies derided the song as simply an advertisement for what the Yamaha DX-7 synth could do.
I just use a Spotify playlist that works for all makes and models:
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/34Fw2PjFjTBdkHWWyuSay4?si=56jMFm0lRvi74H1zqDR4Hw
we’re tigra, and bunny, and we. like. the. boom.
That one was obligatory, it’d be criminal to leave it off 😉
I also think Columbia House may still have a hit contract out on me.
I remember checking those boxes and taping a penny to that page.
Omg I had collection letters from them for literal years
As “Bill Melater” I was one of their best customers
Woah. That was my alias too! Haha
As a kid, we signed up with fake names and had the cd’s sent to nearby unoccupied houses.
The legality of that Columbia House business was quite dubious. They were essentially selling bootleg cd’s and the artists never got a cut of the money. They were also happy to get into contracts with children who couldn’t legally enter into a contract at all. They knew their business was built on a house of cards. So, when people defaulted, they would send toothless collection letters but would eventually just write-off the loss.
“…By Giving You Strange Mix Tapes”
*Posts lede photo of a CD*
“Mix tape” has become a catch-all term. Sort of the same way we call all disposable tissues a Kleenex.
Nickleback. All Nickleback. Or Taylor Swift.
Memory unlocked! I remember listening to that 8 track in my Grandparents Electra!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PjZXTRpL188
I’ve cited this in interviews about my songwriting development— when I was about 7 (1984-ish/85) we got ourselves a hand-me-down ‘78 Chev Impala wagon…with an 8-track. We went to the NCJW thrift shop in I think it was South Orange, NJ and bought a TON of tapes – Ike and Tina live, Woodstock 2…my first exposure to the who and CSNY…Neil Diamond live… my strongest memory as a child was counting raindrops on the side window in the back and listening to Joe Cocker’s Help from My Friends while we picked up my late sister from the ice skating rink. Later we got one of those 8-track to cassette thingys and by then (1987-88) my sis and I had moved to tapes at home (after trashing our parents’ LPs for years on a Fisher Price record player) and for the first time ever we could listen to our contemporary tunes in the car. That last summer we had it (1988) I remember as one of the best times of my childhood w the Footloose soundtrack being the main thing. And then my dad cracked the car up hitting a deer…we didn’t have a car with a cassette again til 1995.
I mean it when I say that I’ll always be grateful for that car because it’s the first place I really experienced the power of rock ‘n’ roll
*rockin out*
*song quickly fades*
*KA-CHONK*
*song resumes*
*return to rockin out*
True true
ARRRGGHH!! I hated the KA-CHONK.
What was really wild is that when I got an LP or a CD of the song, that I had only heard with the fade out/Kachonk/and Fade in, it was like I was listening to a new and different song…
Haha – yup. I also experienced a song being on more than one tape and the KA-CHONK being there on one tape and not on the other.
Also some KA-CHONK edits were far more graceful than others. Some would gradually fade out, KA-CHONK and then gradually fade back in a few seconds prior to the channel change.
Others were violent with nothing other than the KA-CHONK and the few second pause until it restarted like nothing had happened.
Or when they would take the time to NOT cut songs, but because of that you wound up with EXTENDED sections of dead air
My dad got a stereo with an 8-track recorder on it and I spent far too much time trying to capture music from the radio for my 8-tracks. Stupid DJs talking over the intro AFTER I pushed the record button! ASSHATS!
Funniest of all were home recorded dubbed 8-tracks. My uncle had a friend with an 8-track recorder, and he gave me a couple of homemade tapes when I was a kid. There was no fade out if there was a channel change in the middle of a song, – you would just get the ka-CHONK right in the middle of a tune with no fadeout/fade-in.
Probably the best mix tapes with any car was hands down the the Chrysler imperial Sinatra Edition (multiple tapes of old blue eyes). you could listen to Sinatra til the battery ran our waiting on the tow truck.
All this talk about older media formats, and not a single mention of the Muntz Stereo-Pak.
The Ford tape entered our road trip tape rotation and stayed there a long time. My favorite track off of there was the theme from Back to the Future.
The itsy bitsy spider was a banger!
LOL, YES! So wild.
Lemme see how I do.
Counting as “I know it” if I can sing at least one verse and/or hum along with the orchestral stuff and hit the beats reliably.
That Chevy CD threw me off, not having the artist is hard.
2/17
Diamonds Are Forever
Oye Como Va
2/12
Luckenbach Texas
Send In The Clowns (kinda)
5/16
Hold The Line
Maria
If You Leave Me Now
Love Train
Send In The Clowns
2/8
Africa
Always On My Mind
4/8
Danger Zone
Rhythm Is Gonna Get You
Way You Make Me Feel
Dance Of The Tumblers
2/11
Jump
Hot Hot Hot
3/14
Mountain Music
William Tell Overture
Jupiter
I have both Android auto and Bluetooth connectivity in my newer cars and they all run built in nav. I am usually more likely to hook up with blue tooth than on of the car play setups. the sound is the same and connections seem to be a little less interruptive of the on board Nav.
Carplay seems like it should replace those two things though yet they often live side by side on more expensive stereo oprtions. Perhaps the carplay stuff should be for cheaper car stereo options?
I never had any of those mix tapes. But I remember my grandpa’s old Ford truck in the 70s had an FM thing bolted under the metal dashboard.
I had a Radio Shack FM converter in my old Dodge, too.
I still have the cassette that came with my Chevy Beretta. I’d post a pic if I could. Also enjoy how that 80s Olds tape has plenty of country music on it, as was the style at the time.
Those tape and later CD clubs were awesome if you kept careful track and remembered to cancel before the next shipment came. And corporate inventory/tracking methods being what they were back then, you could easily sign up again for the inital deal. My father amassed a considerable collection of CDs doing this.
Some think mixtapes are for artists trying to get noticed outside the C-store or for winning back your high-school/college on again off again girlfriend (god I hope those don’t exist anymore)……but not me. I think of car stereo sampler albums, mail in kool-aid custom tapes, and Shell Rotella Farther Down the Road albums given out at trucking conventions….
Seriously realizing I miss those Farther Down the Road compilations….
Im pretty sure i still have the JBL (i think) sponsored tape cassettes from my grandfather’s Mercury Grand Marquis purchases in the ’90s. I remember it being mostly Jazz with nothing “top 40s” related…. I remember being a fan of at least one of the songs. This just made me want to see if I can find the big cassette case hold with the Styrofoam inserts the next time I go to my parents house.
Edit: they were Dolby branded, Not JBL
https://ebay.us/m/ADFmAu
Always thought Ford missed a big opportunity by not doing appropriately retro-themed collection CDs during its 2000s retrocar era. The Thunderbird needed a cool jazz soundtrack, tell me Wilson Pickett wouldn’t have licensed Mustang Sally, etc.
Haha Mustang Sally for the Mustang, fun fun fun for the tbird
Thirty plus years ago, I had a 1969 Lincoln Continental sedan with a working 8-track. When I bought it, there were two cassettes in the glove box. One was the Lincoln demo tape that I have no recollection what was on it, and the other was classical Spanish guitar by Jose Feliciano.
I listened to the radio.
I actually have a 2002 (IIRC) Camry demo CD I got from a local auto show one year. It has “September” on it, but I think it’s the remastered version where they turned up the bongo man…also “Stuck In My Car”, which is fun, and a couple pop songs I don’t remember.
I had no idea these tapes existed. I grew up too late to be buying cars in this era, so I appreciate the history lesson.
But I can’t get the image of Don Cheedle selling the “highest fidelity” stereos (from Boogie Nights) out of my head.
“Yo, this Dealer Mixtape is FIRE“
-Fiero salesmen, probably.
The salesman would have said “choice” rather than “FIRE” but point well made.
They also probably wouldn’t say “yo”, either. Let me live in my alternate timeline, dammit!
Sooooo satisfying.