This is an excellent magazine, as I suppose many of you have read it and still do read it.
"Fanfare" Magazine
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As a regular subscriber for the last 30 or so years, I concur. My main complaint is that there is to much to read. I pretty much skip the first 250 pages of each issue, which are primarily interviews with performers or composers, unless I see an interviewee that particularly interests me. If I didn't do this I would never make it to the reviews and finish those before the next issue.
Their index and archive is also well done. I've reread some interviews with performers who were featured in previous issues after I heard a subsequent recording or performance.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostAs a regular subscriber for the last 30 or so years, I concur. My main complaint is that there is to much to read. I pretty much skip the first 250 pages of each issue, which are primarily interviews with performers or composers, unless I see an interviewee that particularly interests me. If I didn't do this I would never make it to the reviews and finish those before the next issue.
Their index and archive is also well done. I've reread some interviews with performers who were featured in previous issues after I heard a subsequent recording or performance.
The reviews are the thing, and also the wonderful arguments that rage on the letters pages, they don't pull their punches and make the correspondence in our magazines look pale. It's a bit bulky to read in bed -another black mark!.
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It appears that the reasons the interviews are often with little known performers may be that the feature and review is paid for by the performer.
Norman Lebrecht on his blog has carried a number of stories which suggest an unhealthy connection between Fanfare's marketing and its reviewing practices:
NL claims that Fanfare Magazine operates the dubious practice of guaranteeing companies/performers that their CD will be reviewed in return for taking out an expensive advert in the magazine. For even more money, they will interview the performer and highlight the review. As the letter from the editor to prospective interviewees that NL quotes states:
"When you’re interviewed, the review of your CD will be attached to your feature in the front of the edition instead of being published in the regular classical CD review section of the issue."
If reviews are indeed guaranteed in return for cash (and if it is also true that Fanfare will try to find a 'sympathetic' reviewer), it does rather call into question the independence of their reviews. It might also explain why each issue features a certain number reviews of CDs that are little more than vanity publishing."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI have enjoyed reading some of their material online but the prospect of 250 skippable pages and rigged reviews doesn't make the magazine sound all that enticing.
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Originally posted by LHC View PostIt appears that the reasons the interviews are often with little known performers may be that the feature and review is paid for by the performer.
Norman Lebrecht on his blog has carried a number of stories which suggest an unhealthy connection between Fanfare's marketing and its reviewing practices:
NL claims that Fanfare Magazine operates the dubious practice of guaranteeing companies/performers that their CD will be reviewed in return for taking out an expensive advert in the magazine. For even more money, they will interview the performer and highlight the review. As the letter from the editor to prospective interviewees that NL quotes states:
"When you’re interviewed, the review of your CD will be attached to your feature in the front of the edition instead of being published in the regular classical CD review section of the issue."
If reviews are indeed guaranteed in return for cash (and if it is also true that Fanfare will try to find a 'sympathetic' reviewer), it does rather call into question the independence of their reviews. It might also explain why each issue features a certain number reviews of CDs that are little more than vanity publishing.
When I do read the articles, I am frequently tempted to purchase the recordings featured, only to be dissuaded by the negative review that follows the interview.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostExcept for one consideration: the accompanying reviews (of the articles) frequently criticize the performance.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostIt's also good that in the main review section some items are given full reviews by two different reviewers who give different takes on the performance.
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