| Big Cheese | If punk rock and heavy metal is your forte then you need Big Cheese. It is a UK magazine that is owned independently to make sure you get nothing but the truth on reviews and gigs around the world. | | Billboard | Billboard the most recognized and widely cited name in the music industry. Billboard magazine is the international newsweekly for the music, video, and home entertainment industries. The magazine reports on the artists, events, music, marketing and new media developments that impact the sales of a wide range of audio and video products, including CDs, records, tapes, recording equipment, accessories, home video products, ancillary merchandise and services. Other editorial including analysis and featuresfocuses on the news affecting retail, programming, music sites, publishing and licensing activities. Charts reflect radio airplay and retail sales. | | Blunt | Blunt magazine understands that everyone's life has a soundtrack and Bluntalso knows what sort of tunes are belting out from the stereos of the youth of Australia - hard hitting, alternative rock. At the cutting edge of the alternative music scene, Blunt continues to push the envelope on what a music magazine can offer. Delivering irreverent coverage of the very best alternative music from Australia and the world, Blunt has established a distinct, independent voice that continues to turn heads in the rock & roll world. | | Echoes | The essential black music magazine offering intelligent, informative and in depth features on a variety of genres of music. | | Goldmine | Goldmine is the worlds largest marketplace for collectible records, CDs, and music memorabilia covering rock n roll, blues, country, folk, and jazz. Goldmine also features extensive For Sale and Wanted ads & more. | | Making Music | Making Music is a bimonthly magazine for adult amateur and recreational musicians. Our readers make music simply because they enjoy it - it helps them to relieve stress, connect with their loved ones, and express themselves creatively. Many have played all their lives, while others have only discovered music recently. We publish articles on music theory, practicing and performing techniques, and the heatlh and wellness benefits of playing a musical instrument. Our stories feature real people who find ways to fit music making into their lives, and is intended for musicians of all playing abilities. | | Mojo | Designed for those who truly love music, every month MOJO magazine provides you exclusive encounters with music’s greatest icons, while celebrating tomorrow’s stars today. A hand-compiled collector’s CD soundtracks every issue, while MOJO’s magazine definitive reviews section provides you with the ultimate buyer’s guide. All in all, it adds up to the world’s finest music magazine. Mojo magazine includes interviews of famous personalities in the world of music. If you are old enough and wants to know about your favorite at that time, then Mojo is the right magazine for you. | | Nme | NME is a weekly magazine that's a must for right?thinking music fans. And very wrong?thinking music fans. We have the best access to your favourite bands. We have the greatest music writing and photography. We're the ultimate source for discovering the best new music first. In our pages recently you'll have read about Klaxons meeting God via drugs, Bombay Bicycle Club unsuccessfully busking in Ibiza, Jack White's war on the internet, Arcade Fire's financial woes, Liam Gallagher revealing his Beady Eye. This stuff happens every week. Please Note: Payment by Visa Electron is not accepted for this magazine. | | Paper | The Los Angeles Times calls Paper 'The hippest publication on Earth'. It is for readers everywhere who want to plug into the energy, the style and the intellectual currents of New York. The style, fashion, theater, clubs, restaurants and most of all the people the--up-and-comers whom Paper discovers before the rest of the world. Fresh, daring, graphically exciting. | | Plan B | Alternative music and culture monthly magazine. | | Q | Q magazine is inventive, insightful and irreverent, it is the UK’s biggest selling music magazine and the world’s best music guide. Q magazine gets the interviews and exclusives that no other magazine can. Couple this with the famous Q magazine Review section and new Entertainment section, featuring everything you need to know about films, DVDs, radio, books, games and gadgets, and you’ve got what amounts to the most essential music/entertainment guide there is. Q was first published in 1986, setting itself apart from much of the other music magazines with monthly production and higher standards of photography and printing. | | Relix | The only music magazine with exclusive coverage of jambands, non-mainstream, and improvisational music including genres as divergent as blues,reggae, bluegrass, and jazz. Also, addresses issues such as environmental and political activism. Provides a community for lovers of 'music for the mind.' | | Terrorizer | If you love Heavy Metal and Extreme Music then a Terrorizer magazine subscription is for you. Terrorizer magazine prides itself on its reputation across the globe as the world’s authority on all forms of Heavy Metal and Extreme Music: Terrorizer magazine has pioneered forms of music and covered artists that no-one else would touch, if you name it, Terrorizer was there first. | | Under The Radar | Under the Radar Magazine does not accept money for good reviews or for having a major label's new band on the cover. Under the Radar is run by true music fans that only interview bands that they're personally passionate about. Under the Radar tries to interview bands you won't find covered elsewhere, as well as going deeper in-depth on the bands you will find in the pages of other indie-rock magazines. | | Word | Word is a monthly magazine dedicated to music and entertainment. It was started in 2003 by an independent company, Development Hell, which was started by a number of refugees from Big Publishing. It's published on the second Thursday of every month and comes with a free Word Of Mouth CD, which prides itself on bringing together the best of emerging talent. Word was described, not by us, as being 'for people too old for the NME and too hip for Q'. |
|
|