Music Disc

Music discs, also known by their item IDs as records, are items that can be played in jukeboxes. By default, they play music made by C418; however, custom music can be added with the use of a resource pack.

Creepers
When killed by a skeleton's arrow, a creeper drops a random music disc in addition to any other items.

Legacy Console Edition tutorial world
Music discs can be found in naturally generated chests in the legacy console edition tutorial world.

Discs
Please note, these tracks (except for "11") have been shortened to 30 seconds on this wiki, due to an agreement with the author.

Raw music files
The 12 music tracks created for records by C418 can be found in:
 * Windows:
 * Linux:
 * macOS:

All music disc files are in  format.

Trivia

 * One of the disc names, stal, is in Swedish; "stal" means "stole", but can also be "stål" with the ring diacritic, which means "steel".
 * Music disc "11", based on its data value, is the 11th disc in the game, is the only music disc that is shattered to pieces (this is why the end is static), lasts for 1 minute and 11 seconds, and outputs 11 when put in a comparator jukebox.
 * Chirp uses a sample from the Optigan disc "Bossa Nova Style". It also sounds very similar to the song "The Orb Of Dreamers" from the PlayStation game series LittleBigPlanet, which also uses the sample. You can compare the two here.
 * In Legacy Console Edition, if you play the music disc "Cat", then after it is finished playing "Cat", it will play "Dog", which is a remix of Cat by C418 and is part of the Minecraft - Volume Alpha soundtrack album.
 * If the .ogg file for the music disc "11" is turned into a spectrogram in an audio editor, the static at the end displays what seems to be the Steve's face and the numbers 12418.
 * The numbers are a visual signature, where "12" is hexadecimal for "C", and combined with "418" creates "C418".
 * The data values used by music discs range from 2256 - 2267, while all other blocks/items use the first free data value available.
 * The discs appear to be based on older 78 rpm records. These usually held a single 2-3 minute song on one or both sides, were made out of a noisy material called shellac (which was notorious for its fragility and hissing sound when no music was playing, both of which can be seen in "11"), and were larger than later, 45 rpm vinyl records which replaced them.