As you might know, CD players use some kind of error correction to skip bits of music CDs that couldn't be read.
Yes, and error-correction and a degree of data redundancy - not to mention the physical arrangement of how the data is written - are all part of the spec and design of the CD format. These features are not evidence of the physical fragility of the format; rather, they are what help make it so robust.
Eventually all CDs will become unreadable, because the clear polycarbonate layer that protects the read side of the disc breaks down in about 1,000 years. And PVC, which is used to make LPs, breaks down in about 450 years. There are all kinds of other factors that can make a particular CD or LP unusable long before that.
If you have some evidence that a significant percentage of the CDs made in the 1980s that play fine now are on the brink of becoming unreadable
en masse, please share it.
Oh, and to the point of this thread, I am a CD lover myself - aside from a few LPs of special personal value to me, CDs and similar optical audio discs are the only physical media I've held onto. But with that said, I have always been skeptical of the idea that CDs will have a revival that's anything like the LP revival. I believe the CD revival, if it happens at all, will be more niche and smaller in scope, more akin to the cassette revival. My reasoning is that CDs are not as different from digital files and streaming as LPs are - they and their covers are generally encased in 5" square plastic cases rather than in 12" square paper pieces of art; and people intuitively get that an LP will sound different from a CD and that a CD will sound essentially the same as a digital file or stream. So no one's going to be buying 1980s CDs to hang in their living rooms as art, and there's not going to be a widespread culture of audiophiles, young people, and everyday nostalgic people all seeking out the "unique" sound of CDs.