Actually, CDR material does make a difference. Fuji, Sony & Imation media are the only one's I have that are still around. The other medias I used (cheaper), including Kodak, TDK, etc. Have all "faded" from existance. I use nothing but Plextor ROMs to do my work. I had a burner back when 1 & 2X were the only things you could get, and at $1000 a piece. The thinner CDR's, usually can be "seen through" when held to a light. These are the discs that have lost the burn as the foil that is adhered to the top relaxes. There are many programs you can get to check the error rate on a CDR. Try it sometime. You'll realize that these el-cheapo CDs will go away in about 4 years or so. At the least, bad sectors will show up.
Yes, this is all with NO USE of the CDs. Sitting in a case, in a 70F temp controlled environment. Plus, Music CDRs are basically rejects from the data line. They have a HIGHER error rate than data discs do. They just sell for more because the public will see the "music" label and think they need special discs for audio recording.
Try batch burning on TDK or Kypermedia media. About a dozen discs in, the heat from the ROM & sled assembly will cause foil to bubble up a bit. When you test the discs, the disc is unusable. I have about 5 dozen "prime peripheral" discs laying around here that are completely unusable, even in audio mode because the disc foil is so thin you can see through it in a dimmly lit room! Verbatim discs USED to be good, then they cheapened the production. I had 2 discs in a row where the foil popped off the cookie as I pulled it off the spindle. And, Mitsubishi Chemical, type 2 discs are the best lasting discs I've used. Fuji discs will sometimes be this medium.
I've got a pile of Kodak "barcode" gold media CD's laying around that are useless. They lost their burn and I can't read anything off of them, especially data between the center and edge of the disc. Totally useless. Luckily, these are all discs that I did drive backups to ages ago. And, since I run Ghost batches on my boxes every 3 months, they don't have to last more than that.
After 17 years in the computer industry, media is cheap. Floppies are so cheap, even Sony's, that you'll get at least one bad disk out of the package! Tape's are so sensitive now that dropping them can cause data errors. And, IDE hard drives are so cheap, they are expected to fail 14-18 months from the day of activation. I use all SCSI drives and I avoid getting any drive whose density is so high that they try to cram 36GB of data onto 1 or 2 platters. Cheap consumer drives will try to smash 100GB onto 2 platters. Higher end drives will usually have 4 platters to do 72GB or so. Beware of the "consumerizing" of the computer industry!
Another reason I've been transferring all my music to MiniDisc. My old MD's from 1989 are still working. Hmm. BUT, my FILM from ages ago are still perfectly usable. AND, my fiber prints are looking just as good as the day I printed them.