I'd definitely agree - I remember when the first edition of Muzik came out, and they were giving copies away at the 1995 Tribal Gathering. By that time I'd kind of stopped reading magazines for information on the music *I* liked, but occasionally bought magazines like Muzik or Mixmag for the sake of gauging the state of the larger dance and electronic music scenes.
As the years went by, however, the amount of "music talk" on the internet grew to the extent that I could get a feel for the state of the wider dance/electronic music scene more quickly, more cheaply and more effectively than I could from buying the mass-circulation magazines. That combined with the general descent of these mags into lifestyle/drugs coverage eventually led to me not buying any magazines whatsoever. I *did* buy a copy of Sleaze Nation earlier this year, but only because I was in it! :) From over-the-shoulder readings on trains and tubes, though, I get the sense that Jockey Slut is the only one of the mass-circulation magazines in the UK that's stuck to its guns. Magazines like NME and Mojo aren't just getting readers from older ex-dance-music people, though, I don't think - rock music as a whole is being pushed by the majors as the "hot new thing" and so I wouldn't underestimate the amount of 17 or 18-year-olds who are buying them, and who probably see electronic/dance music as a bit of an old person's thing! (I have certain opinions on this whole rock-renaissance thing too, which I won't bother to share with this list ;) Brendan > -----Original Message----- > From: Robert Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: 03 July 2003 17:18 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Tom Churchill > Cc: 313; Cyclone Wehner > Subject: RE: (313) Muzik (was 7 Magazine) > > > I think the net and lists like this one have taken over as > the source for information on dance music. > The mags did not realise this and thought they had to include > more and more "lifestyle" articles at the expense of record > reviews and their sales slumped even further, hence the crisis.
