Welcome to Würth Industry For trade customers only

Mac DeMarco’s live performances are known for relaxed interaction with audiences, stage antics, and an approachable, sometimes absurdist sense of humor. He often breaks the fourth wall, telling anecdotes, making jokes, and encouraging singalongs. Musically, his bandmates provide tight rhythmic support while retaining the slack, elastic feel of the studio recordings.

Touring exposed DeMarco to global audiences and strengthened his reputation as a charismatic frontman who could translate intimate home-recorded sensibilities into engaging live experiences.

Let’s be honest: when you think of Mac DeMarco, your brain probably goes straight to a few specific visuals. A cigarette tucked behind a sweat-drenched ear. A goofy, gap-toothed grin. A pristine green golf course. Or maybe the warble of a slightly out-of-tune synth.

But for the physical media nerds among us (the ones who actually read the liner notes while the album spins), Mac DeMarco is also the king of the Compact Disc.

In an era where vinyl gets all the glory and Spotify playlists rule the background noise of our lives, the humble Mac DeMarco CD is the perfect artifact for the die-hard fan. Here is why you should snag one for your dashboard or your Discogs cart.

If you are staring at a shelf at Amoeba or scrolling through Discogs, here is the chronological roadmap of Mac’s studio albums on CD.

Before diving into the discography, it is important to understand why the CD format specifically suits Mac DeMarco. Mac’s production style relies heavily on "flanging," tape wobble, and a distinct high-end roll-off. While vinyl adds a warm crackle, and streaming can make the highs sound brittle, the 16-bit/44.1kHz CD format captures Mac’s weird, warbly middle ground perfectly.

CDs offer a consistency that vinyl lacks (no inner groove distortion) and a depth that MP3s compress. When you listen to the CD version of Another One, you hear the subtle hiss of the Tascam 388 tape machine exactly as Mac intended.

The most controversial album of his career sounds surprisingly better on CD than digitally. The intentionally dry, deadpan recording style can sound grating on low-bit Spotify streams. On a CD played through a good DAC (Digital-to-Analog Converter), the space in the mix—the silence between the plucks of "Finally Alone"—becomes audible.


To truly appreciate a Mac DeMarco CD, do not listen to it out of a laptop drive spinning at max RPM.

In an era dominated by 24/7 lossless streaming and the bulky resurgence of vinyl, the humble Compact Disc often finds itself as the "forgotten middle child" of physical media. But for fans of slacker rock pioneer Mac DeMarco, the CD is not just a relic of the 90s—it is the perfect artifact for his specific brand of lo-fi warmth and DIY ethos.

Searching for a Mac DeMarco CD today is a different experience than picking up a new release on Spotify. It is a hunt for fidelity, artwork, and a tangible piece of the "Jizz Jazz" universe. Whether you are a longtime fan looking to complete a collection or a newcomer trying to decide between Salad Days or This Old Dog, here is everything you need to know about collecting Mac DeMarco on CD.