Impressed by the Christmas edition of the new statesman my mother in law bought me for Christmas, what magazines do you like to read ?
Magazines you like
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One Christmas I received a year's subscription to Private Eye, which was alright except for the presence of the odious Nick Cohen AKA 'Rat Biter'.
Mid-teens I spent a year or so buying the NME. Thereafter it was Guitar Techniques, which is the last magazine I bought, though it's not as good as it was 15+ years ago when most of my copies date from. However, I still use several of these for practice exercises - how many magazines could claim to have that kind of value over time?
I also have half a dozen or so of the BBC Music Magazine.
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I reckon I'm pretty much addicted to magazines. Currently subscribe to New Scientist, Your Cat, Gramophone, HiFi News, love the Guardian Saturday and the Observer Sunday, love the columns and the Agony/Advice Pages.....
I usually have print+online and get everything delivered now, but when I used to go shopping in humanoid form I couldn't pass a newsagent without browsing, leafing and coming away with an Elle, a Vogue, a HiFiChoice or HIFiWorld; BBC Wildlife.
Back in the day, the NME was tucked under my arm, then read ostentatiously as I rode the train into town to scour for the New Releases (But like many people, I loved Smash Hits more & got that too...). I repeated this showing-off later with the Gramophone.
After extreme ill health and hospital stays recently, the experience of chronic pain, my life has changed. "Back to Books".....
Latenight boredom as everything shut down around the Ward and I could never sleep was just a killer. All those hours....! I ordered some Booker shortlisters (on the step next Morning!) and my visitor brought them in next day. I am now a devoted fan of Elizabeth Strout (the Lucy Barton books), also reading a Schumann Biography and a Mahler Guide.
But the magazines will still come each month, that glossy, transient fix of news and info, the latest on planets and black holes and nuclear fusion, What is the Self, streamers, speakers, vintage CD Players and symphonies....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 29-12-22, 21:14.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostMy partner used to give his godson an annual subscription to Private Eye, but had to stop when his (i.e., godson's) son got a bit too interested in it and started asking questions.
Subscription got changed to the Beano!
Gramophone is the only magazine I read regularly.
I see they are featuring this year’s big Rachmaniversary in the current edition.
A new thread would be appropriate perhaps.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI see Peter Quantrill reviews classical recordings in Hi-Fi News now.
Jayne/Pasters : Did you read anything about Christopher Breunig retiring?
I rather liked him, with good pointers on audio quality too.
I also read Gramophone and Fanfare.. Non music reads are Foreign Affairs and the New York Review of Books
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I used to subscribe to the spectator, philosophy now magazine and the idler magazine but was too much reading material. I tend to buy the telegraph on Mondays. Used to read the weekend ft. Now I go to the shops with my four year old we sometimes come away with an Andys dinosaur adventures magazine.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI reckon I'm pretty much addicted to magazines. Currently subscribe to New Scientist, Your Cat, Gramophone, HiFi News, love the Guardian Saturday and the Observer Sunday, love the columns and the Agony/Advice Pages.....
I usually have print+online and get everything delivered now, but when I used to go shopping in humanoid form I couldn't pass a newsagent without browsing, leafing and coming away with an Elle, a Vogue, a HiFiChoice or HIFiWorld; BBC Wildlife.
Back in the day, the NME was tucked under my arm, then read ostentatiously as I rode the train into town to scour for the New Releases (But like many people, I loved Smash Hits more & got that too...). I repeated this showing-off later with the Gramophone.
After extreme ill health and hospital stays recently, the experience of chronic pain, my life has changed. "Back to Books".....
Latenight boredom as everything shut down around the Ward and I could never sleep was just a killer. All those hours....! I ordered some Booker shortlisters (on the step next Morning!) and my visitor brought them in next day. I am now a devoted fan of Elizabeth Strout (the Lucy Barton books), also reading a Schumann Biography and a Mahler Guide.
But the magazines will still come each month, that glossy, transient fix of news and info, the latest on planets and black holes and nuclear fusion, What is the Self, streamers, speakers, vintage CD Players and symphonies....
A number of people have mentioned gramophone magazine, I may pick up a copy when I next browse WH Smith's.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post...Vogue, a HiFiChoice ...
I had a subscription to the LRB for a while recently but it got a bit exhausting. I listen to podcasts rather more nowadays, which probably makes me a bad person.
I have had subscriptions to Gramophone and Mountain magazines. The former will be familiar, the latter did what it says on the tin, except the tin said hardly anything at all: the minimalist design and typography were so distinct as to identify it instantly to the cognoscenti. The Gramophones have been pulped but I've kept the Mountains as they exemplify what a magazine can do, the fusion of text and image, like Elle or Vogue with ice or granite instead of tulle or organza.
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I pick up The Big Issue pretty regularly from the friendly headscarved Bosnian gipsy girl, who comes several times a week all the way from Woolwich by buses to stand several hours outside Tesco's mini branch in W Dulwich. This year she had a card for me, in which she had inscribed "Jesus loves you". I used to have The Wire magazine on order, back in the 1980s when, under Anthony Wood, it covered jazz better than any other publication. Then it became fashionably devoted to Techno and Ambient, and I may pick up a copy if one happens to be available at the WH Smiths branch in Forest Hill, having first perused the contents to see if there is anything of interest: there may be something on free jazz or improv, an interview with a leading light or obituary these days. Similarly JazzWise.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI used to have The Wire magazine on order, back in the 1980s when, under Anthony Wood, it covered jazz better than any other publication. Then it became fashionably devoted to Techno and Ambient
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