Thursday, 20 September 2012

History of Music Magazines


The first issue of Billboard magazine was printed in 1894 but it was in 1936 that it became well known. This gradually evolved into radio airplay and record sales charts (The Billboard charts). TBC provided different music genres and was the foundation for slots on the radio for programs like ‘American Top 40’. The magazine is aimed at music professionals however; it is available to the general public.

Melody Maker began in 1926 and covered all aspects of the jazz scene. By the 50’s it had competition from New Musical Express, which was appealing to more of a younger generations it had coverage on the up-and-coming rock n roll scene. They both offered weekly information on upcoming record releases. The magazines had newspaper formats but ‘music inkies’ provided detailed coverage of independent label artists not mainstream chart music. A glossy magazine format for Melody Maker was introduced in 1999 and merged with NME in2000 which are both owned by IPC media.


The music fanzine is said to have emerged in the 60s from sci-fi and comic related amateur publications. Craw daddy and Bomp are examples in rock folklore today. The arrival of amateur publications highlights the relationship between music, fan-based creativity and the want to manuscript a ‘scene’.
In 1967 Rolling Stone magazine was created and documented music as an important part in the culture of youth with reflective articles about music and social change, and the political concerns about music. Rolling Stone was less about factual information and more about the culture of music.
Smash Hits was created in 1978 and was aimed at teens. This magazine is important to the development of music because it covered music in a different way as it was designed as a genre-specific magazine (pop). Kerrang was introduced in 1981and compared to Smash Hits, it is more of a music orientated magazine. Kerrang’s monthly competitor is Metal Hammer. In the 90s genre specific magazines were produced, like Mixmag (dance/clubbing music coverage), The Source and Hip-Hop (hip-hop/rap music) and Classic Rock(rock music for an older audience).
The Face was launched in 1980 by Nick Logan The Face was a monthly magazine that offered the colourful layout of Smash Hits but aimed at a slightly older audience, embracing music and also fashion and lifestyle. The layout consisted of lots of images and detailed articles, pages full of celebrities, musicians, fashion shoots advertising. This magazine stopped being published in 2004 however it influenced other magazines such as Q magazine, Mojo and Uncut.

What I have learnt?
I have learnt about the history of music magazines and when all the major music magazines came out and what has happened to them since and how the first ones have faded out and the newer ones have taken their place leading the music magazine market. 

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