The Gramophone is a musical institution with all that implies. I first bought it in April 1960 and kept buying until around 20 years ago when I disposed of them all along with an identical run of Hi Fi news and a somewhat shorter run of Audio and Record Review (anyone remember it?).
Gramophone at 100
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe normal cover price is £6.95 and the centenary edition, which is much larger, has a cover price of £9.95.
I'll try and buy it when I come over to the UK next week.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostAs do, respectively, Luister in the Netherlands and Rondo in Germany. Fanfare in the USA is a slightly different case in that anyone can get a good review there if they pay for it!
The 50th anniversary edition of Gramophone was one of the first ones I read. I learned a great deal about music from it before the inevitable dumbing down set in.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostIt isn't unusual to see two reviewers pan a recording and have the third wax lyrical over it. Guess which review gets quoted in the promo for the recording?
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostWhen I said you can pay for good reviews in Fanfare I meant it literally. That's part of their business model.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostUsually the negative reviews are the one that I choose to believe and the positive ones are there for the schill value.
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While a student 50 years ago I started buying every issue of two magazines, Gramophone and Private Eye, and later took out subscriptions to both. I still subscribe to Private Eye but gave up buying Gramophone in 2007. I had kept all issues to be able to refer back to them using the Gramophone catalogue which included the date of the original Gramophone review. One reason for giving up was that the Gram catalogue a) stopped giving a reference to the review date and b) became very expensive. Since I was now never looking at them and they took up a lot of space, I dumped the whole lot - somewhat reluctantly, since I had gained so much pleasure and insight from the mag over the decades. For nostalgic reasons I kept a few copies as souvenirs - including the first two, Oct and Nov 1971 (price 15p) and the last one, Feb 2007 (price £4.40).
I shall certainly buy the 100 year issue but otherwise I find I can happily get by using the internet and of course this forum for reviews and comment.
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Originally posted by RichardB View Poston the basis of mentions here (which I'm assuming aren't the result of commercial pressures!).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostWhich makes one wonder why people bother paying for the reviews! Although something like this goes on less visibly in all review magazines, which is one reason why the Gramophone tends to favour British performers. When I was reviewing for The Wire many years ago, I was informed that I'd better not write anything negative about releases on certain labels on account of the amount of advertising space they bought in the magazine's pages. It was an experience that led me not to place too much trust in reviews from then on. But nowadays, as has been pointed out before, the existence of streaming services means that you never need to make a purchase on the basis of a reviewer's opinion. For example, I've found it very enlightening to check out recordings of Janáček's first quartet on the basis of mentions here (which I'm assuming aren't the result of commercial pressures!). So I don't feel the need to wade through all the stuff in the Gramophone that I find annoying, which is most of it. One's mileage may vary of course.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhere do you think we get our revenue from? [Heh, heh, only joking . We keep the forum as far as possible free from all advertising and spam]
You don't want everyone to know that you write nice comments on my posts only because I've offered to use my Co-op dividend points to help buy your purple sprouting broccoli, do you?
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostHush!
You don't want everyone to know that you write nice comments on my posts only because I've offered to use my Co-op dividend points to help buy your purple sprouting broccoli, do you?
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostWhile a student 50 years ago I started buying every issue of two magazines, Gramophone and Private Eye, and later took out subscriptions to both. I still subscribe to Private Eye but gave up buying Gramophone in 2007. I had kept all issues to be able to refer back to them using the Gramophone catalogue which included the date of the original Gramophone review. One reason for giving up was that the Gram catalogue a) stopped giving a reference to the review date and b) became very expensive. Since I was now never looking at them and they took up a lot of space, I dumped the whole lot - somewhat reluctantly, since I had gained so much pleasure and insight from the mag over the decades. For nostalgic reasons I kept a few copies as souvenirs - including the first two, Oct and Nov 1971 (price 15p) and the last one, Feb 2007 (price £4.40).
I shall certainly buy the 100 year issue but otherwise I find I can happily get by using the internet and of course this forum for reviews and comment.
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As I've often said, Gramophone itself is very aware of how streaming removes the need for writers to offer only a buyers guide - Cullingford says so again in his April editorial; it's there if you need it.
But other opinions from experienced reviewers and listeners (we all become reviewers as soon as we pass musical comment on this or any other forum; experience, wisdom and insight, not to mention good writing, are much rarer commodities) are inherently interesting, as is the chance to look at several decades of how a given recording was commented upon; the changing view of an artist as it evolves through time.
Gramophone has always been about far, far more than reviews; this was actually the problem with IRR, that reviews were almost all it had to offer; features were few and far. Some months could be pretty dull.
I still discover plenty thanks to the magazine, especially in the monthly Contemporary Composers feature, which often has figures I didn't know or not know much, about; offers a listening guide....
I would remind anyone who gave up on the magazine a few years back that a subscription does give you access to the archive of every single issue, and very rewarding it can be. I usually find myself delving around in there several times a week; a quite unique resource of high quality writing.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 05-04-23, 17:20.
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostIts a shame you just can't purchase access to the archives - they've been very useful, and interesting, over the years.
Given the declining reader base none of this is to be wondered at, of course; but how are the mighty fallen! A sad way to pass the 100 mark.
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