UPC · Album

The Last Winter Story

Deegie

8809051660520
22 tracksReleased 2001-12-19

Last verified:

8809051660520 is the Universal Product Code (UPC barcode) for the release The Last Winter Story by Deegie, released 2001-12-19. 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 22 tracks, each with its own ISRC.

Format

880GS1 prefix
9051Company prefix
66052Product
0Check digit
GS1 prefix:
Country/region prefix assigned by GS1 (e.g. 060/061 = USA/Canada, 50 = UK).
Company prefix:
Label/distributor identifier assigned by the local GS1 office.
Product:
Unique product number assigned by the company.
Check digit:
Modulo-10 check digit that validates the rest of the barcode.

What other identifiers does this connect to?

Creative Contributors (ISNI)

People also ask

What is UPC 8809051660520?
UPC 8809051660520 is the Universal Product Code (barcode) for "The Last Winter Story" by Deegie.
What is a UPC code in music?
A UPC (Universal Product Code) — also called an EAN barcode — is a unique numeric identifier assigned to a music release by its distributor. It identifies the release as a whole (album, EP, or single) and is required by every digital storefront and physical retailer.
How is a UPC different from an ISRC?
A UPC identifies a release (the bundle of tracks sold as one product). An ISRC identifies a specific sound recording (a single track). Every track on a UPC release has its own ISRC, but they all share the same UPC.
How many tracks are on UPC 8809051660520?
UPC 8809051660520 contains 22 tracks.
SourcesMusicBrainz

Verified on

What is UPC 8809051660520?

8809051660520 is a Universal Product Code (UPC) assigned to The Last Winter Story by Deegie. 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 22 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.

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