Drano Wrote:
billy g Wrote:
Drano Wrote:
Mick seems to be making a concerted effort to be as wrong as possible in as many topics as possible.
I mostly agree with him. There are good magazines out there (eg Mojo, Uncut, Wax Poetics). But he described most of the indie rags well.
He contradicts himself in two consecutive posts.
There's no point reading about music (and music writers are inherent failures), and yet printed music magazines have a future?
Music magazines are already transient and throwaway.
There may be some good articles written in Rolling Stone or maybe even Spin from time to time, but they're more general culture commentary than music-centered. And I'd bet most of the writers responsible for those have or will soon find more relevent venues to publish their opinions and reach more people.
Magazines in general may have a future (they've got to put
something on the table at doctor's offices), but I don't see printed magazines devoted solely to music having much of a market. Rolling Stone is barely even about music anymore anyway, right?
Everyone likes to crap on the publishing industry and say it's a dying industry. I disagree that everything goes to the web.
I can't ever see myself reading a book via a Kindle and I'd rather not sit in front of a computer for hours on end reading in depth articles either. I still subscribe to close to ten magazines and I pick more up at book stores and newstands on occasion.
I used to subscribe to about 5 music magazines but I'm down to Wax Poetics. I dropped Songlines because exchange rates drove the price up, not because of a change in quality or an ability to replace it with internet fare. I'd think about subscribing to Uncut and/or Mojo and Stop Smiling but the price differential between buying at the newstand vs subscribing is not enough to justify subscribing to me. There's a big difference to me between these magazines and your typical indie rag. They do in-depth and well researched articles of a much greater quality than you'll easily find on the web for free. In addition, because of the article lengths and the general consistency and quality, they take me hours to read which makes the portability of a magazine valuable and the idea of staring at computer screen less than ideal. Your CMJ's, Magnets and their ilk are nothing like that. I could read what i was interested in a CMJ or Magnet in 15 - 20 minutes, their samplers mostly sucked, and the quality of writing and length/nature/focus of their copy was easily found on the web for free. Its no suprise that magazines like that are disappearing. That doesn't mean though that there isn't a demand for better journalism on music.
I don't see the inconsistency you do if you assume he's talking about the throwaway mags one minute and the quality ones the next.