Tuesday, 16 November 2010
Final Photograph Choice - Double Page Spread
Final Photograph Choice - Front Cover
Monday, 15 November 2010
Sunday, 14 November 2010
Saturday, 13 November 2010
Representation
How the models for my photographs will be represented:
The theme for my music magazine ‘Uncut’ is popular culture music, for example, chart artists – for dedicated fans that study the charts and are aware of the latest ‘big’ acts. I would like the models to be represented as slightly messy hair look, with dark eye make up and seductive clothes. The models will in-keep with some of the latest fashions, with often their own personal twist if the artist so chooses. I have taken this into account and had my model pose in a long white shirt and black knee high socks. Along with large heels and messy hair, the dark eye make up is sultry and the model was told to pouse with a smouldering sort of expression. I think this has been represeneted in my photos.
I want my audience to be able to instantly recognise the style of the model on the front cover, to be of a popular culture style – using the fashions of the artist’s genre of music. For example, rebellious pop – dark smoky eye make up and seductive clothes (rebellious).
Thursday, 11 November 2010
Mode of Address Analysis – Double Page Spread Interview
Charly Semark has taken the UK by storm and has smashed through straight to the top of the US charts. On the brink of her first UK tour she is up bright and early to meet up with UNCUT. The pop perfectionist journeys down to The Palm hotel in Lancaster Square, London. Her new single ‘Destruction’ is out on 11th November and her new album will be released in the first week of December. Could this fresh faced sensation be the biggest breakout artist of the year? We chat to her and find out!
So Charly, we’ve listened to your new single ‘Destruction’ and it is fantastic! How did you come up with the name and the song itself?
Thank you! (She blushes) The song really did not take me long to write if I’m honest as I had been working on it for quite a few months at the point that I was lucky enough to be scouted for a record deal one night when I was out in London performing at a local pub! The support from my family, friends and fans has been fantastic and I can honestly say that I could not have got to this stage without them! I’m absolutely loving what I’m doing right now, and am so thankful for the opportunities I have been given. I have stayed committed to my songs from the start – they are all from my own personal experience so they’re very close to my heart. You can’t be afraid to share your songs; you just have to believe in yourself.
Here at UNCUT we have been told only a small amount about your tour in a few weeks, can you tell us about your plans beyond this?
Well I am so excited to kick-start my tour in Manchester Arena especially because this was where I went to my first gig and it’s a dream come true to think that in a few weeks i will be up on that stage tracing the footsteps of my music idols! I am training very hard at the moment for the tour and working out a lot more in the gym much to my reluctance! (She laughs) so at this moment I think I will be taking a short break after the tour. Everything’s just so crazy recently – all the press releases, interviews, appearances and costume fittings I never know where to begin when trying to explain! I think we’ll just have to see how the tour goes and how the fans receive the songs from my new album – you can’t always be lucky the third or fourth song to have such a successful reception so I’m hoping for the best.
That sounds brilliant for someone who likes to keep busy! How do you like to celebrate your success?
My idea of a brilliant night out is loads of mates and great music! We like to hit the main clubs and bars. I love getting absorbed in the bright lights and music – we all love the lively atmosphere in the most popular places. They are expensive at times but it’s well worth it once we’re inside! I often get recognised at some of the more high profile places, and that’s a fantastic feeling. I thought I would find it overwhelming but it has become a big part of the evening and helps me to really interact with my fans. I am just loving how everything is going currently and can’t wait to travel this year hopefully further afield – I’ve heard the basements in Malia are amazing.
Some of our UNCUT club representatives have admitted to seeing you and about recently so you really are becoming a regular on the London club scene! Did you know from a young age that this is the sort of career you wanted to aspire to?
Hmm, I can’t honestly say I began singing until I got into secondary school! When I was younger I used to want to be a police woman so it’s quite a change (She laughs). After I begun singing I began writing my own songs. They began as poetry, however when I began to learn the guitar when I was eleven I re-wrote the poems as songs. Writing songs was my way of getting away from all the stresses and pains of everyday life! When I began my exams at sixteen I had to really cut back on the time I spent writing songs, so I began to pick it up again when I started my A-levels. I knew from the time I started writing songs that I had a big desire to perform them one day. My dad used to be a pub landlord – The Sheep Dog – and he used to hold open mic nights for anyone who had a burning desire to share songs they had written. I am so thankful for the opportunities that came from those small town performances as they lead to me being discovered in larger clubs in London! Although I believe not everyone will have these opportunities – it is never impossible if you don’t stop believing!
We’re sure you would have made a smashing police woman, however stick to performing for now! Who would you say has been your main inspiration?
Definitely Katy Perry. Although she’s American so a different style of artist to myself I believe she is fabulous! She is a brilliant role model and has a real connection with her fans. We fall into the same genre of songs, and we both write our songs from personal experiences.
Today in the photo shoot you seem at ease and like you were having a lot of fun! Are you enjoying the publicity side of being a new and upcoming artist in the industry?
I loved the photo shoot today. I prefer simple clothes – good quality jumpers and cardis and pieces that really go the distance and last a long time. Most of the time I am just chilling and relaxing at home in sweatpants so it’s quite an adjustment to have the opportunity to get all made up and wear glamorous clothes! Normally I hate having my photo taken, but now it feels like work. All the work I’ve been doing these past few weeks is about promoting my album and tour so I’m having to find a connection between the music itself and the style I portray with myself.
Your tour dates have already been released; it must be such an exciting experience! Here at UNCUT we can’t wait to hear about your next moves after your tour. Sounds like you’re having a fantastic time and it certainly is nowhere near coming to an end yet. We can’t wait to catch up with you soon after your tour has finished and see how everything’s going – good luck!
Mode of Address Analysis - Cover Lines
An exclusive, tell-all interview with Charly Semark: “I hate having my photo taken!”
PLUS
BAND 1
BAND 2
BAND 3
BAND 4
Gig reviews à Band 1 and Band 2
*Win tickets to see Pixie Lott ++ backstage passes!
Breakout Acts of the year – top 10
Indie acts to look out for!
New album – James Blunt
10 minutes with ... The Saturdays
Is punk rock making a belated comeback?
Live radio reports
+ Most downloaded song of the month
Website -> radio channel -> issue number -> date ->barcode/price
Mode of Address Analysis - Letter from the Editor
Uncut would be nowhere without its exclusive interviews and access all areas articles. We are providing a shift in movement for all genres of popular culture music. We will give anything a listen to and love hearing from our readers! To quote Kate Marsh, Co Editor of Uncut “The public are speaking out of their love for all types of music, why not compile a magazine dedicated to members of the public deeply interested in music and the style beyond the notes! We define and create popular culture – handbag size!”. In this very first edition of Uncut, we will be searching for the breakout act of the year, spending 10 minutes a week with a favourite chart topping artist and asking the question: ‘is punk making a belated comeback?’. We are letting our readers in to popular cultures private eye, behind the scenes – access ALL areas.
Allie x
Alison Wolsey
Editor, Uncut Magazine
Cover Lines for Magazines
Kerrang
World Exclusive
Blink 182
Blast Back!
Death!
Drugs!
Despair!
NME
The State of Music Today by ..
Rihanna
Jack White
Florence and the Machine
LCD Soundsystem
Kasabian
Laura Marling
Foals
MIA
Biffy Clyro
Magnetic Man
Rolling Stone
SHOWDOWN
50 CENT vs KANYE WEST
Who will be the king of hip-hop?
Fall album preview:
Springsteen
Kid Rock
Foo Fighters
Alicia Keys
Neil Young
Lil Wayne
Sunday, 17 October 2010
Magazine Language Analysis
Example taken from Q Magazine, interview of Plan B
ANY OTHER PROJECTS ON THE PIPELINE?
"I'm working with an English singer called Delilah [not to be confused with French chanteuse Sophie Delila, who he recenly appeared onstage with] She's fucking amazing.
- Fairly open ended question
- Varied sentence lengths
- Use of swear words
- Lexical Field of music
- Use of brackets
- Opinion
- Facts
- Conversation seems friendly - long answers instead of one word answers
Features that could be included
- Emotive language
- Pronouns
- Introduction about the appearance of the artist
- Promotion
- Informal
- Use of varied punctuation
Font Audience Feedback
UNCUT
|
This is the font that my audience chose out of the four options. I do really like this font because it is contemporary and simple. It successfully portrays style and tune to the text in the flow of the curves. It is a unique style of font and should therefore be easily recognised by the audience.
Magazine Name Font Analysis
UNCUT
I quite like this font because it is simple, and slightly contemporary. The curls add a sense of style to it. I may use this for my magazine because I think that is successfully portrays style and tune to the text in the flow of curves.
UNCUT
I like this font because it is simple, clear and modern. It would be easily recognisable as a brand font because of its block colour and bold style. However it does not really portray the idea of a music magazine.
UNCUT
I really like this stencil style font. I think it looks contemporary and bold. The style of it means that it would be recognisable and unique to differentiate between other music magazines. I may use this.
UNCUT
I really like this font. I think that the black and white outline around the text and the style makes it look ‘cut’ out. It has a stencil effect, and is stylish and bond. I think it is similar to the style of font used on the ‘Rolling Stones’ magazine and has an appearance of class. It is recognisable and will be unique in the reader’s eyes and portray not only music, but style among music.
Friday, 15 October 2010
My Music Magazine Name Choices
Shuffle – iPod phrase/variety
Uncut – not edited, includes everything
M – Stands for music
Wire – headphone wire
Icon – music icon
Amplified – music term, amp, exaggerated
Encore – play again, concert phrase
Interval – musical interval, break in a concert
411 – American phrase meaning gossip
‘Uncut’ is the magazine name my focus group chose.
Thursday, 14 October 2010
Music Magazine Names
Music Magazine Name & Connotations:
· Heat – ‘hot’ news
· Now – current news
· Look – you’ll see what you want to see/easily remembered
· Instyle - up to date
· Glamour – tackier edge/fashionable/clothes off
· Shout - loud news
· Mizz - teenage/youthful
· Rolling Stones - music
· Vogue – high fashion/glamorous/fashion houses
· Kerrang – guitar term/reflecting sound/font
· Q – from Men’s quarterly/unisex/opulence/answers/forming a queue/worth 10 points/difficult letter/unique/musical Q
· Cosmo – 21st century name/handbag size (A5)/diverse content
· Elle – feminine/for women/French for ‘she’/positive/beautiful
· NME – changed name/contemporary
· Woman’s Own – just for women/relevant content
· Nuts – body/sexuality/outrageous
· FHM - for him magazine/radio
· OK – accepted/up to date news/positive
· Hello – speaking to the reader/
· Closer – closer to lives of celebrities/relationship
· Pick me up – easy to pick up/
· Grazia – posh/glamorous/opulence
· Tops of the Pops -only the best music/positive connotations/younger audience/radio + tv show
· Take a Look – look inside for news/gossip
· Bella - young beauty/Italian culture
· Men’s Health – just for men
· Smash Hits – 70’s phrase/hit music of time/charts
· Woman’s Weekly – just for women/will have relevance
· Country Living – information relevant to living in the country/help make your life better
· Horse and Hounds – upper-class/related to hunting
· Red – ‘hot’ news/easy name to remember
· Marie Claire – for women/glamorous sounding/delicate
· Radio Times – upper class connotations/
· You - information just for ‘you’/something everyone will be interested in
· Bazaar - glamour/opulence connotation
· Gentlemen’s Quarterly – 4 times a year/
· Lucky – lucky to be able to read this news
· Shape – health related/can help, encourage you to get in shape
· Nylon - fabric of fashion/fashion main contents
· Vanity Fair – opulent connotations/fashion/upper class women
· Newsweek - news weekly
· The New Yorker – a magazine for people living there/relevant topics + information
· Yorkshire Life - relevant to readers who live in Yorkshire/improve your life there
· Good Food - the magazine will only be relevant/decent/positive connotations
· Good Housekeeping -life improvement/self-help/positive connotations
· Bliss - positive connotations
· Diva – attitude/youthful
· Playboy -for men/sexual reference
· Entertainment – energetic/relevant content
· Empire - grand/opulent
· New York – city stories
· People - for everyone/about everyone
· Reader’s Digest – digest information given to the reader
· Jackie - big sister/for younger audience
· Forbes - upper class connotations/appeals to men/wealth
· Private Eye – contemporary/political events/view of what is going on/alternative opinion
Tuesday, 12 October 2010
Magazine Research Analysis
The style of music magazine I am going to re-create is the style of 'Rolling Stone'. I like the vintage style of this magazine and how each issue appears to have a colour theme. The main image on the front cover acts as a background and there is only a pale colour behind the image or non at all. The cover lines are kept brief - neat and tucked to the side separated by lines. 'Rolling Stone' tends to shoot images for their front covers in a raunchy, sexual style and this striking style really attracted me to the design of the magazine. The style of magazine is basic and therefore there is nothing to distract the audience from the main image.
Monday, 11 October 2010
Denotative & Connotative Analysis - Q Double Page Spread
Denotative & Connotative Analysis - Q Double Page Spread
There is a border around the article going over the gutter of both pages.
The border which goes around the article is creating cohesion between the two pages. The pattern of it goes all around the edge yet the main image on the left overlaps it showing the dominance and power of the photograph.
The whole page conducts a negative, plain white background.
By giving the article no colour for a background and simply using a negative white, it makes the feature appear clean, fresh and modern. The text and the main image stand out against this somewhat boring background, and therefore it gives the image the attention of the article.
The main image on the left has been cropped.
The main image is cropped at the legs and it overlaps the border at the bottom and the top. The powerful stance the artist is photographed in represents the artist herself. She is posing in a seductive manner, and wearing very little clothes - this radical appearance reflects the artist and her music. The artist is wearing one of the main colours featured - black - this contrasts with her skin and the background making it stand out vividly to the reader.
The only three colours featured are red, white and black.
The combination of these three colours is featured throughout the magazine. The red is the brand promotion of the identity of the magazine and is the main colour which stands out over the two pages. Q wants this colour to be a constant advertisement and reminder to the reader that the magazine they are reading and have chosen to purchase is Q.
The statements the interviewer makes are in red, capital letters.
The statements are in red so that they stand out and by using capital letters the reader can distinguish between the statements and the answers of the artist.
The article is set out in three main columns with no full stops at the bottom of them.
By arranging the interview in columns it makes it easier for the buyer to read as a full page of text can be off putting. Breaking it down into short paragraphs makes it far more approachable as a piece of writing everyone will want to read. By not ending with a full stop at the bottom of the each column it means the reader has to go to the top of the next one to continue reading the article.
The website of the magazine is on the bottom left of the right hand page.
The logo is featured three times over the double page spread. Q does not want the reader to forget they are reading and enjoying their magazine. By placing it where the article concludes it makes it the last feature the reader sees before they turn the page.
The magazine logo is in the bottom left corner, bottom right corner and straight after the full stop which concludes the article.
By featuring the website it is another way of Q showing they are up-to-date with the media and the most recent events. They are advertising yet another way the reader can get involved with the magazine and feel a personal connection to the writers and its contents by explaining how they can easily subscribe.
The pull quote is centred within the article in the middle of the right hand page underneath a thick, red strip.
After the reader has first noticed the main image the feature that stands out most on the right hand side is the pull quote in bright red capitals underneath a thick, red strip. By showing the pull quote they have chosen central to the article it makes the buyer want to read the interview - the magazine will tend to choose one of the slightly more outrageous or enticing statements from the interviewee to feature as a pull quote to encourage readers to read on.
Denotative & Connotative Analysis - Q Contents Page
Denotative & Connotative Analysis - Q Contents Page
The magazine logo is brand promotion - they do not want the reader to ever forget they are reading and enjoying their magazine. The strip is red which is the same colour as the logo and as it goes over the gutter of the magazine it creates a sense of cohesion between the two pages. It is a thick strip and is bright compared to the plain white background therefore, the reader’s eye is drawn to it. The shade of red is a sign of brand identity.
There is a large photo on the left hand side with a page number written on it larger than the other numbers.
By making an image dominate the left side of the two pages it is showing to the reader that the artist featured in the photograph is included as one of the main articles in the magazine. They have placed this image on the left side as this column of pages is headed ‘Features’ therefore these stories will be individual to this issue and might be slightly different to their usual content. The photograph is the same shade of red as the logo therefore it is achieving cohesion with the brand identity of the magazine. By making the page number larger it is showing it is one of the main articles and a longer, extra special feature.
The pages are listed in columns with red lines between each one - on the left hand and right hand side of each page.
By separating the columns into ‘features’ and ‘regulars’ it is showing to the reader that the magazine is consistently bringing out different articles to their usual issues and featuring more ‘special’ stories to other competing music magazines. The brand identity and cohesion is once again featured by using red lines to separate the page numbers and their stories.
There are smaller images with larger page numbers pulled out from the list.
The page numbers that are larger than the others and placed on small photographs are showing the reader that these articles are features of the magazine and are therefore longer, more important or on the front cover. For example the Lady Gaga article - she is featured on the cover and by placing an image of her on the contents it means the reader could skip straight to reading her article as some buyers may often just purchase the magazine for the cover stories.
Next to the issue number there is a small version of the front cover with a page number on it.
By featuring a smaller image of the front cover next to the issue number it is used a reference for the reader to pick out if they wish, the main cover stories they would like to read first (maybe). The contents page is about advertising what is contained within the magazine and the layout appears busy and the page is made full of text and images to show the reader just how much is featured in the magazine.
The date and page number is in the bottom right hand corner.
By placing the date and the page number in the bottom right hand corner it is showing that these pieces of information are not the most important features of the contents.
The text on the page is considerably smaller than the images featured and the headlines of the columns are in bold and capital letters.
By using photographs of features within the magazine the page is made to look full and appear exciting to the reader. The titles of the contents are in bold and capital letters - against the white background this makes them stand out and therefore it is a quick one or two word summary of the articles within the magazine. The contents page is clear as some readers may have only purchased the magazine for something advertised as a cover story and wish to find where it is in the magazine quickly.
The main colours of the page are red, white and black
The combination of the three colours featured (red, black and white) are considered chic and appear up to-date and modern. By contrasting these bold colours on a plain white background without leaving a lot of negative space helps the text and the images stand out more. By only using these three colours it creates cohesion over the two pages.
The website of the magazine is on the bottom left of the right hand page.
The logo is featured three times over the double page spread. Q does not want the reader to forget they are reading and enjoying their magazine. By placing it where the article concludes it makes it the last feature the reader sees before they turn the page.
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