- kennocha
- Posts : 103
Join date : 2023-04-18
The high-end magazines making a vinyl-style comeback.
Sat Sep 23, 2023 1:56 am
Throughout the second half of the 20th Century, the weekly trip to a local newsagent to pick up your favourite music magazine was a rite of passage for millions of British teenagers.
The iconic covers of titles like NME, Melody Maker and Sounds were graced by everyone from the The Beatles to The Clash, Nirvana and Oasis.
Then came the internet and, like the music industry, the magazine business would never be the same again.
But fast forward to this century and vinyl has done something that very few expected - like an ageing, once-huge rock star it made a comeback.
As records have returned, albeit in a different form, now British music bible NME is back with a similar twist.
The new NME magazine has a £10 cover price, will be published every two months, with a small print-run - in the hundreds rather than the hundreds of thousands.
Its owner - Singapore-based Caldecott Music Group - says the new print version is aimed at "super-serving our super fans".
"The NME as a whole is something where we believe it is much more than just a product, it's more than a service, it's more than the audience," Caldecott's chief executive and founder Meng Ru Kuok told the BBC.
"In fact, it's the eternal teenager, that should always be young."
ป๊อกเด้งออนไลน์
The iconic covers of titles like NME, Melody Maker and Sounds were graced by everyone from the The Beatles to The Clash, Nirvana and Oasis.
Then came the internet and, like the music industry, the magazine business would never be the same again.
But fast forward to this century and vinyl has done something that very few expected - like an ageing, once-huge rock star it made a comeback.
As records have returned, albeit in a different form, now British music bible NME is back with a similar twist.
The new NME magazine has a £10 cover price, will be published every two months, with a small print-run - in the hundreds rather than the hundreds of thousands.
Its owner - Singapore-based Caldecott Music Group - says the new print version is aimed at "super-serving our super fans".
"The NME as a whole is something where we believe it is much more than just a product, it's more than a service, it's more than the audience," Caldecott's chief executive and founder Meng Ru Kuok told the BBC.
"In fact, it's the eternal teenager, that should always be young."
ป๊อกเด้งออนไลน์
- Were old cartoon magazines translated quickly?
- caulking question exterior vinyl siding
- caulking question exterior vinyl siding
- Before making bets and making profits in online poker gambling games Gambling online poker games in online casino websites have the opportunity to access and make profit 24 hours a day, every day.
- What's your learning style?
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|