UPC · Release
I Can Hear It Now / The Sixties
Walter Cronkite, Fred W. Friendly
Last verified:
074646590720 is the Universal Product Code (UPC barcode) for the release “I Can Hear It Now / The Sixties” by Walter Cronkite, Fred W. Friendly, released 1999-01-01 on Legacy. UPCs are unique numeric identifiers assigned by distributors to identify a music release — album, EP, or single — across every digital and physical retail platform. This release contains 87 tracks, each with its own ISRC.
Format
- Number system:
- Identifies the product category (0/1/6/7/8 = general retail, 2 = variable measure, etc.).
- Manufacturer:
- 5-digit code identifying the label or distributor that owns the release.
- Product:
- 5-digit code identifying this specific release within the manufacturer's catalog.
- Check digit:
- Modulo-10 check digit that validates the rest of the barcode.
Track List (87)
| # | Track Title | Artist(s) | ISWC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prologue | — | ||
| 2 | Warnings for the Decade | — | ||
| 3 | January 20, 1961: John (F. Kennedy: 'Ask Not What Your Country Can Do for You') | — | ||
| 4 | November 14, 1961: Pablo Casals White House Concert | — | ||
| 5 | John (F. Kennedy: 'The Problems Are More Difficult Than I Imagined Them to Be') | — | ||
| 6 | John (F. Kennedy: 'Each Day the Crises Multiply' - January 30, 1961 State of the Union) | — | ||
| 7 | John (F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon: Excerpts From 1960 Debate on Cuba) | — | ||
| 8 | April 17, 1961: United Nations Security Council, Ambassador Adlai Stevenson Denies Bay of Pigs Invasion | — | ||
| 9 | April 21, 1961: News Conference: John (F. Kennedy takes Responsibility for Bay of Pigs) | — | ||
| 10 | July 25, 1961: John (F. Kennedy: Berlin Crisis / Need for Air Shelters) | — | ||
| 11 | March 21, 1962:John (F. Kennedy: 'Inequity of Life') | — | ||
| 12 | June 26, 1963: John (F. Kennedy: 'Ich Bin Ein Berliner') | — | ||
| 13 | John (F. Kennedy Humor: December 6, 1961: N.A.M. Speech; June 11, 1962: Yale Honorary Degree) | — | ||
| 14 | September 29, 1960: Krushchev Pounds Shoe at U.N., Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's Jibe at Krushchev | — | ||
| 15 | October 3, 1960: Secretary General Dag Hammarskjöld's Fight Against Soviet Attempts to Impose Troika on United Nations | — | ||
| 16 | September 25, 1961: John (F. Kennedy Delivers Hammarskjöld's Eulogy) | — | ||
| 17 | October 25, 1962: Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, Soviet Delegate Valerian Zorin: Cuban Missile Crisis at U.N. | — | ||
| 18 | October 22, 1962: John (F. Kennedy Reports to Nation on Cuban Confrontation) | — | ||
| 19 | December 17, 1962: John (F. Kennedy Describes Andrei Gromyko at White House During Missile Crisis) | — | ||
| 20 | October 28, 1962: Radio Moscow: Cuban Missile Crisis | — | ||
| 21 | John (F. Kennedy Sums Up Cuban Missile Crisis and American Position by Christmas 1962) | — | ||
| 22 | November 7, 1962: Nixon Concedes Defeat in California Gubernatorial Election | — | ||
| 23 | February 20, 1962: Progress in Space, Early '60s: Sputnik I, Wehner Von Braun, Yuri Gagarin, Mercury I, John Glenn and Flight of Friendship One | — | ||
| 24 | May 8, 1963: John (F. Kennedy: Need for a Test Ban Treaty) | — | ||
| 25 | June 10, 1963: John (F. Kennedy American University Speech: 'We All Breathe the Same Air...') | — | ||
| 26 | July 26, 1963: John (F. Kennedy Announces 'Important First Step' Treaty Between United States, Soviet Union, and United Kingdom) | — | ||
| 27 | June 11, 1963: Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach and Governor George Wallace at the University of Alabama; John (F. Kennedy Broadcasts to the Nation After Black Students Have Entered University of Alabama) | — | ||
| 28 | August 28, 1963: Civil Rights March on Washington: Mahalia Jackson; A. Philip Randolph; Martin Luther King Jr: 'i Have a Dream' | — | ||
| 29 | November 22, 1963: John (F. Kennedy Assassination / Lyndon B. Johnson Oath of Office) | — | ||
| 30 | November 24, 1963: Lee Harvey Oswald Interview / Jack Ruby Murders Oswald | — | ||
| 31 | November 25, 1963: Funeral of John (F. Kennedy) | — | ||
| 32 | November 27, 1963: Lyndon B. Johnson Addresses Joint Session of Congress on Civil Rights Bill | — | ||
| 33 | May, 1964: Senator Everett Dirksen Explains How Civil Rights Bill Will Get Through Senate | — | ||
| 34 | July 16, 1964: Republican National Convention in San Francisco: Barry Goldwater: 'Extremisim in the Defense of Liberty Is No Vice' | — | ||
| 35 | July 14, 1964: Republican National Convention in San Francisco: Dwight D. Eisenhower Warns Against 'Sensation-Seeking Journalists' | — | ||
| 36 | August 27, 1964: Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City: Lyndon B. Johnson Accepts Nomination | — | ||
| 37 | August 1964: Harlem Riots | — | ||
| 38 | August 4, 1964: Tonkin Gulf, Vietnam Incident and Resolution | — | ||
| 39 | May 24, 1964: Barry Goldwater Suggests Defoliation of Vietnam Jungle; Lyndon B. Johnson: Restraint in Vietnam Bombing | — | ||
| 40 | 1970: Reprise on Tonkin Gulf Resolution | — | ||
| 41 | February 1965: Malcolm X Defines Black Power, Mrs. Malcolm X Describes His Assassination | — | ||
| 42 | May 2, 1965: Santo Domingo Intervention | — | ||
| 2-1 | January 28, 1966: Senate Hearings on Vietnam and Dominican Republic | — | ||
| 2-2 | Government Officials Voice Optimism About Vietnam | — | ||
| 2-3 | August 5. 1965: Burning of Village of Cam Ne | — | ||
| 2-4 | November 1965: Great Power Blackout | — | ||
| 2-5 | Contrasts in Music of the Decade | — | ||
| 2-6 | October 4, 1965: Pope Paul VI at United Nations | — | ||
| 2-7 | Riots and Civil Disorder | — | ||
| 2-8 | February 29, 1968: Report of President's Commission on Violence | — | ||
| 2-9 | Bob Dylan: 'The Times They Are A-Changin' | — | ||
| 2-10 | Six-Day War | — | ||
| 2-11 | June 5, 1967: Gamal Abdel Nasser Calls for Holy War of Vengeance Against Israel | — | ||
| 2-12 | June 5, 1967: War Comes to Cairo | — | ||
| 2-13 | June 5, 1967: First Reports of Israel's 'Instant Victory' | — | ||
| 2-14 | June 7, 1967: Israeli Troops at Wailing Wall of Ancient Temple | — | ||
| 2-15 | June 9, 1967: President Nasser Resigns | — | ||
| 2-16 | January 1968: New Hampshire Primary: Senator Eugene McCarthy Challenges President Johnson | — | ||
| 2-17 | March 16, 1968: Senator Robert Kennedy Decides to Run | — | ||
| 2-18 | March 31, 1968: Lydon B. Johnson Announces He Will Not Seek Another Term | — | ||
| 2-19 | April 4, 1968:Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. | — | ||
| 2-20 | We Shall Overcome', King's Last Speech, Atlanta Funeral | — | ||
| 2-21 | April 5, 1968: Robert (F. Kennedy Interrupts Campaigning to Speak of Dr. King and Violence) | — | ||
| 2-22 | June 4, 1968: California Primary and Robert (F. Kennedy Victory Announcement, Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy) | — | ||
| 2-23 | June 8, 1968: Senator Edward M. Kennedy Delivers Robert (F. Kennedy Eulogy) | — | ||
| 2-24 | August 8, 1968: Republican National Convention, Miami: Richard M. Nixon Accepts Nomination | — | ||
| 2-25 | August 28-29, 1968: Democratic National Convention, Chicago | — | ||
| 2-26 | August 20, 1968: Invasion of Czechoslovakia | — | ||
| 2-27 | May 1968: Demonstations at Columbia University | — | ||
| 2-28 | April 28, 1969: President Charles de Gaulle of France Resigns | — | ||
| 2-29 | September 11, 1968: George Wallace Campaigns for President | — | ||
| 2-30 | September 30, 1968: Hubert H. Humphrey, Salt Lake City | — | ||
| 2-31 | November 6, 1968: Richard M. Nixon's Victory Statement | — | ||
| 2-32 | December 24, 1968: Apollo Eight Orbits Moon | — | ||
| 2-33 | Apollo Eleven: First Moon Landing | — | ||
| 2-34 | July 24, 1969: President Richard M. Nixon Greets Astronauts Aboard Aircraft Carrier 'Wasp' | — | ||
| 2-35 | August 1969: Woodstock Festival | — | ||
| 2-36 | July 25, 1969: Incident at Chappaquiddick: Edward M. Kennedy | — | ||
| 2-37 | January 20, 1969: Richard M. Nixon Presidential Inaugural Speech: 'We Are Caught in War, Wanting Peace' | — | ||
| 2-38 | November 3, 1969: Richard M. Nixon Vietnam Policy Speech | — | ||
| 2-39 | October 15-November 15, 1969: Peace Demonstration and Moratorium | — | ||
| 2-40 | November 13, 1969: VP Agnew Castigates News Media | — | ||
| 2-41 | April 29, 1970: Eric Sevareid Answers Vice President: Elmer Davis Memorial Lecture | — | ||
| 2-42 | Chief Justice Earl Warren in One of Has Rare Replies to Congressional Critics | — | ||
| 2-43 | January 20, 1969: Richard M. Nixon: 'We Find Ourselves... Reaching for the Moon, Discord on Earth' | — | ||
| 2-44 | Epilogue | — | ||
| 2-45 | December 25, 1968: 'To See the Earth as It Truly Is...' | — |
What other identifiers does this connect to?
Creative Contributors (ISNI)
Credits Graph
People also ask
Verified on
What is UPC 074646590720?
074646590720 is a Universal Product Code (UPC) assigned to I Can Hear It Now / The Sixties by Walter Cronkite, Fred W. Friendly. UPCs (also called EAN barcodes) are unique numeric identifiers assigned by distributors to identify music releases — albums, EPs, and singles — across all digital and physical retail platforms.
This release contains 87 tracks. Each track has its own ISRC (International Standard Recording Code) that identifies the specific sound recording, while the UPC identifies the release as a whole. Knowing your release's UPC is essential for neighboring rights collection societies like SoundExchange and for transferring music between distributors.
Learn more about UPCs · Data powered by Notes.fm