Pocket Rockers thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Pocket Rockers

Accessories
1988-1991 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Bubble pack of accessory clips for Pocket Rocker personal cassette player tapes, moulded from plastic to resemble musical instruments: a pink keyboard, a black drum with drumsticks, and a pink electric guitar. The plastic packaging is much-yellowed with age, and contains a printed card insert detailing product information.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 4 parts.

  • Packaging
  • Accessory
  • Accessory
  • Accessory
TitlePocket Rockers (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Injection-moulded plastic, printed card
Brief description
Accessories for Pocket Rocker personal stereo
Physical description
Bubble pack of accessory clips for Pocket Rocker personal cassette player tapes, moulded from plastic to resemble musical instruments: a pink keyboard, a black drum with drumsticks, and a pink electric guitar. The plastic packaging is much-yellowed with age, and contains a printed card insert detailing product information.
Dimensions
  • Height: 270mm
  • Width: 166mm
  • Depth: 35mm (approx)
Production typeMass produced
Object history
Purchased by the museum in 2018/19 [2019/355]
Historical context
Portable music players have been utilised as fashionable accessories since they first became available. Some were designed specifically with this intent, such as 1960s and ‘70s bangle-style transistor radios worn around a wrist (see W.29-1992). Sony launched the first portable cassette-playing ‘Walkman’ in 1979 (see W.22-1992 and CD.95-2016), it revolutionised people’s relationships with music, creating a private space in which to enjoy music publicly. Its appeal over transistor radios was largely due to the offer of user control provided by interchangeable audio cassettes, which was not possible with radio. In the 1980s, the portable Walkman offered a more personal and private counterpoint to the brash territorialism of large battery-powered ‘boombox’ stereos.

The ability to make something portable relies on an ability to manufacture smaller, lighter components. Examples have included transistors developed in the post-war years which replaced glass vacuum tubes, Compact and Mini-discs, MP3s, to contemporary broadband cellular network technology for streaming music directly from the internet.

Hoping to develop a stake in the portable market, Fisher-Price developed the Pocket Rocker. Launched in 1988 and targeted at children of primary school age, it was marketed a mode of self-expression through a combination of popular music choices and visual style. It utilised a unique type of cassette which was, essentially, a miniature version of an 8-track tape, which would play on a continuous loop. Each cassette carried two songs, one on each side. The units were decorated with bold, colourful graphics of a typically 1980s mode, and the even the tapes could be accessorised and worn on clothing using clips. Pocket Rockers were equipped with a built-in loudspeaker and an audio jack, creating opportunities for both public and private enjoyment.

Pocket Rockers were briefly popular but diminishing sales in the face of competition from ‘traditional’ portable audio cassette players (for which there was significantly more choice) meant they were discontinued in 1991.
Subjects depicted
Collection
Accession number
B.13:1 to 4-2018

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Record createdMay 9, 2019
Record URL
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest