ISRC

FRZ189600610

Quand tu m’appelles Eden

Étienne Daho
matched
Released 1996-01-01

Last verified:

FRZ189600610 is the International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) for the recording "Quand tu m’appelles Eden" by Étienne Daho, released 1996-01-01. ISRCs are 12-character ISO 3901 identifiers that uniquely tag a specific sound recording — different masters, remixes, and live versions each receive a distinct ISRC. The underlying musical work is ISWC T-003.101.908-5.

Format

FRCountry
Z18Registrant
96Year (1996)
00610Designation
Country:
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code (FR).
Registrant:
3-character code identifying the label or distributor that assigned this ISRC.
Year (1996):
Last two digits of the reference year (1996). Years < 50 are 21st century.
Designation:
Unique 5-digit code assigned by the registrant for this specific recording.

Credit Chain

ISRCQuand tu m’appelles Eden

Musical Work (ISWC)

T-003.101.908-5Quand tu m’appelles Eden
SourcesMusicBrainz

Verified on

People also ask

What is the ISRC for "Quand tu m’appelles Eden" by Étienne Daho?
The ISRC for "Quand tu m’appelles Eden" by Étienne Daho is FRZ189600610.
What is an ISRC and what does it tell you?
An ISRC (International Standard Recording Code) is a 12-character ISO 3901 identifier that uniquely tags a specific sound recording. The first two characters are the country code, the next three are the registrant (label or distributor), the next two are the year, and the last five are a unique recording number.
Is the ISRC the same as the ISWC?
No. The ISRC identifies a specific recording, while the ISWC identifies the underlying musical composition. FRZ189600610 is the ISRC for this recording; T-003.101.908-5 is the ISWC for the composition it is a recording of. One composition (ISWC) can have many recordings (ISRCs) — originals, remixes, live versions, and covers each get their own ISRC but share the same ISWC.

What is ISRC FRZ189600610?

FRZ189600610 is an International Standard Recording Code (ISRC) that uniquely identifies the recording "Quand tu m’appelles Eden" by Étienne Daho. ISRCs are 12-character alphanumeric codes defined by ISO 3901, used globally by streaming platforms, record labels, and rights organizations to track plays and distribute royalties.

This recording is linked to the musical work T-003.101.908-5, which represents the underlying composition. Multiple recordings can share the same musical work — for example, an original version, a remix, and a cover would each have their own ISRC but reference the same ISWC.

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