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My Music Magazine

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Page 1: Evaluation point 1

My Music Magazine

Page 2: Evaluation point 1

● conforms to the stereotype of metal genre magazines, by representing itself as a strictly male product

● I used McMahon and Quinn’s Symbolic Code to decide on what colours to use for my magazine

● I wanted the general feel of the magazine to be quite dark and eerie because it is typical of the metal genre music magazine style, and I wanted mine to be recognised as a metal magazine at first glance

● main theme colour is red because it symbolises danger and masculinity, which is what the metal genre stands for

My Magazine (SONAR) Kerrang!

How Does My Magazine Use Existing Media Products?

Page 3: Evaluation point 1

● For my cover photo, I did an outdoor photoshoot with a local hardcore band

● I did lots of research on existing products in the market and determined that my photo would have to be rather dirty looking, dark, and unposed

● shadows fall on the model’s faces so that they look threatening and serious, whilst having enough light on the faces to show the facial expressions

● photo had to be taken at an eye-line shot, because the audience need to feel equal to the bands on the covers of these metal magazines

How Does My Magazine Use Existing Media Products?

Page 4: Evaluation point 1

● From my research of existing metal music magazines, I found that all of them used images to accompany their articles and the majority of the photos were at a slant or had a bold border around it

● From this information, I made the decision to do the same to the photos that would accompany my double page spread.

How Does My Magazine Use Existing Media Products?

Page 5: Evaluation point 1

● I wanted to keep the general feel and theme of it similar to existing magazines of the same genre because it needed to attract the same audience and the existing metal magazines on the market already attract a large number of metal fans.

● I decided not to change or develop many aspects of the typical metal music magazine.

● However, there were some things that I decided to do a little differently. For example, many metal magazines tend to have extremely crowded covers, filled with tilted photos and bold subtitles, but my magazine was aimed towards getting publicity towards new, local bands - so I tried to keep my cover as simple as possible in order to attract as much attention as possible to the band on the cover.

How Does My Music Magazine Develop or Challenge Existing Media Products?

Page 6: Evaluation point 1

● Many metal music magazines use over-exaggeration and short, simplistic sentences. ● Along with the fact that their articles tend to be picture-heavy and they use large fonts, I

thought that metal music magazines tended to assume a young, un-intelligent audience● From my audience research, I found that 90% of the metal fans were either in college or

university and 10% were working a full-time job● contradicts what existing metal music magazines, so I decided to make my magazine more

intellectual in terms of wording, and made the text smaller to make intelligent or older fans feel less patronised by the media

How Does My Music Magazine Develop or Challenge Existing Media Products?

Page 7: Evaluation point 1

Front Cover Comparisons

Page 8: Evaluation point 1

Technical Code

● camera angles on both magazines are eye-line matches, which make the readers feel equal to the band members, which attracts metal fans to this type of magazine

● both main members of the bands (vocalists) are juxtaposed on top of the magazine title, to make them seem important and to make the band stand out rather than the brand

● both have adverts on the covers to attract a larger audience● both have smaller cut-outs of images overlapping the larger cover photo, which attracts

further audience as they are advertising other things such as other bands and festivals● Kerrang! has used shadows on the main band member and not on the other two which

suggests that they are not as mysterious or interesting, which is transferring the attention from the whole band to just one member, whilst with SONAR I have tried to ensure that I made everyone involved in the magazine equal, between band members and between the audience as well

Front Cover Comparisons

Page 9: Evaluation point 1

Front Cover Comparisons

Written Code

● both the existing magazine and my magazine have large titles that are in plain, block colours, which would grab the attention of someone browsing a magazine rack, but do not take the attention off of the band on the cover

● both magazines use large fonts for the band names on the cover, to attract attention to them, even if a photo of the band is not featured on the cover

● both magazines have a certain font(s) as part of the house style and use it/them all over the cover and throughout the magazine to secure a familiar style that the readers will like and recognise

● black and white lettering contrasts with the full, colourful backgrounds of each magazine which attracts the attention of the readers without taking too much of the attention away from the main cover photo

Page 10: Evaluation point 1

Front Cover Comparisons

Symbolic Code

● both magazines use red as the main colour theme. Red suggests danger, anger, rage, courage, etc - connotations associated with masculinity, which would attract the mainly male target audience

● the facial expressions and body language of all the band members on each magazine look quite threatening and powerful - again, associated with masculinity, which would attract a male audience of young men who aspire to be like the members

● Comparing my cover (photo and editing) to Kerrang!’s cover, it is quite clear that my magazine is not meant to be flashy and expensive-looking, but a magazine that helps young male fans relate to the members

Page 11: Evaluation point 1

Contents Page Comparisons

Page 12: Evaluation point 1

Technical Code

● both contents pages feature images● however, my contents page has photos of bands blended into the background, so that they

leave enough room for the page to be text-heavy, to attract the more intelligent audience that my audience research showed

● the images on the contents page of Metal Hammer are all photoshoot images with the bands, so they are all objective, but the images on my contents page were both taken from the crowd at gigs, which makes them subjective, giving the reader a sense of belonging and involvement in the metal music scene

Contents Page Comparisons

Page 13: Evaluation point 1

Contents Page Comparisons

Written Code

● like the front cover, both magazines use a certain font(s) that is part of the house style● both contents pages address the audience directly, and informally, e.g in Metal Hammer -

‘Download Preview - You’ve got your ticket, now you just need to plan your weekend.’● both magazines have an editors letter, which makes the whole magazine much more

personal and friendly towards the readers● both contents pages have the title of the magazine at the top, to emphasise the magazine

and to reinforce the house style

Page 14: Evaluation point 1

Contents Page Comparisons

Symbolic Code

● both magazines use red again somewhere on the page, to symbolise masculinity and to keep the house style and colour scheme running throughout the magazine

● from looking at existing metal magazines, I found that the vast majority of them used red as their colour scheme for this same reason

● Metal Hammer features a few women in the pictures on the contents page. One female is in one of the featuring bands, but the other 6 are used to advertise merchandise and as ‘props’ for one of the bands, portrayed as sex objects or trophies

Page 15: Evaluation point 1

Double Page Spread Comparisons

Page 16: Evaluation point 1

Double Page Spread Comparisons

Technical Code

● Metal Hammer has used a huge photo as part of their double page spread, which takes up a whole page

● I feel that existing metal magazines were too picture-heavy, used over-sized fonts and worded their articles so simply that they seemed almost patronising

● for this reason, I wanted to make my magazine seem more intellectual by making it much more text-heavy, which is why I used up as much of my two pages as possible for text

● images in Metal Hammer are also all posed, professional and objective, which suggest it is an upmarket magazine that only feature the biggest bands

● my magazine is targeted towards getting publicity to up-and-coming bands, so the subjective images from inside the crowd fit perfectly

Page 17: Evaluation point 1

Double Page Spread Comparisons

Written Code● I chose Metal Hammer’s double page spread to compare with

my metal music magazine because, in terms of font size and the amount written, it is surprisingly different to typical magazines of the same genre

● the other page is filled with small font text in columns - shows that Metal Hammer assume they have an older, more intelligent audience than other metal music magazines, for example Big Cheese

Page 18: Evaluation point 1

Double Page Spread Comparisons

Symbolic Code

● use of blood spatters on a black background on both articles suggests violence, danger and anger, which attracts the male target audience of metal magazines

● both magazines continue the red colour scheme over the double page spread, continuing to symbolise danger and rage to keep the male readers interested