IF: you were the editor of NME/Pitchfork...

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
...what practical changes would you make to try and turn it into a more interesting magazine?

The constraints on this thought-experiment are that you are working for a company that wants to continue pleasing its advertisers and keep making money, and serving a readership that market research speculates is quite conservative.

(meta: this is the first step in my cornily poncey hunch that ILM might act more like an imaginative and experimental "pop think tank" and less like a hung jury if it began to ask more questions beginning with "IF..." and fewer questions ending "...Classic or dud?")

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Saturday, 22 March 2003 21:53 (twenty-two years ago)

Answers such as: "I would employ all the great writers on ILM" will have to justified on whether they would satisfy the constraints of the experiment :)

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Saturday, 22 March 2003 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

get liberty X to clone mark sinker and then see what happens.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 21:59 (twenty-two years ago)

actual ans: get mags to cover hip-hop, dance etc etc (and not just indie) and make it like it isn't a second priority to writing abt fucking post-rock.

That is v important!

Also write abt some technical stuff actually as many of course start bands (there was a good thread recently abt how noise is just being recklessly inserted into rock albs for instance that was informative but not too nerdy actually) but again the editor has to make it as if its this sort of thing is a part of what the paper does and not just put it at the back of the paper.

I like things like 10-30 word max reviews of albs (there's so much out there) but you'd have to get writers who are good at this.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:07 (twenty-two years ago)

I'd have the magazine officially apologise to mark over U2-debacle and instantly run the pulled review. I would ask some of ILM's writers aboard and have a major rethink of the staff who already write there.

Considering that the advertisers/my taste split is pretty even (NME just advertises bands, predominantly) there would be no clash between remit and advertising. Or even if there was that would be pretty interesting. In fact, yeah, I don't want to see a fawning Will Oldham review right next to his ad. So, I'd run the ad and have a piece on situationist-mindfucks.

I'd allow reviews of any albums in the review section. They need not be new. Or maybe have a separate section for reviews of records that people just want to review. Sort of saying, well, we're not secondary to the music: our criticism is equal to the thing we're crit-ting. (Ie, we're not just pushing new 'product' and the only reason we exist is to float/sink new rekkids). (I'm not making this point well.)

I wouldn't necessarily run 'People' on the cover. I'd get mitchlastnamewithheld to do my first cover actually, if he'd do it. I'm not sure what else. Good qn. though.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:07 (twenty-two years ago)

The NME and Pitchfork are so completely different in their coverage of music and their general attitude that you can't really compare them.

Evan (Evan), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:09 (twenty-two years ago)

''So, I'd run the ad and have a piece on situationist-mindfucks.''

heh, oh no you don't!

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:10 (twenty-two years ago)

No to Julio's short reviews, unless it's just one page, or two pages of the magazine. Make the reviews longer, says I.

(NME does write about Hip-Hop and pop and dance as well.)

(I'd employ Ronan, s'about time somebody paid him to write his little heart out).

An extension of Julio's technical things: get the writer's to cover real life interaction of real life and music. Er, what does that mean? For example, what mark s was saying about live reviews not chastising bad venues: realise that music does have an effect out in the world and that the world does have an effect within the music and try and manage these contexts.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:10 (twenty-two years ago)

I wouldn't really have a 'piece on situationist-mindfucks', btw. (Eww).

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:12 (twenty-two years ago)

NME: longer articles/reviews, more reviews, less advertising, less sensationalistic tabloidesque tendencies
Pitchfork: For God's sake, stop acting so fucking smug all the time

Evan (Evan), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:13 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm not really trying to suggest an equivalence, Evan - it was more that I wanted to keep the question open to both American and European ILM readers (ie I get the impression that Americans on ILM have broadly similar complaints about Pitchfork as Europeans do about NME - I am probably wrong).

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:13 (twenty-two years ago)

''(NME does write about Hip-Hop and pop and dance as well.)''

but does it give it equal importance to indie bands, say.

(Have they ever given a cover to up and coming hip hop acts for instance instead of chasing the next big thing).

I'd like to see coverage of lots of metal (or sludge type stuff).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:14 (twenty-two years ago)

(To derail slightly, I thought the complaint about pfork was Dead White Male Cocoonism whereas NME complaint was Build-em-Up Bash-em-Down Hype-ism.)

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:15 (twenty-two years ago)

IF: you were the editor of NME/Pitchfork...

...suicide comes to mind.

hstencil, Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:15 (twenty-two years ago)

I think interesting and damn enetrtaining things can be done with 30 word reviews.

There is a lot of stuff out there. Page after page of long reviews are a stretch for lots of ppl (I don't mind) (I'm not saying the ppl who don't like long reviews are idiots either).

(most ppl can't write long reviews anyway)

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:17 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't get why everyone hates NME's hype machine. Hey, at least sometimes they hype GOOD bands! They put Godspeed You Black Emperor! on the cover before ANYBODY had ever heard of them!! NOBODY else does that!!

Evan (Evan), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:17 (twenty-two years ago)

(One of the reasons I asked about jobs re:NME is because it is something I think I care about and I don't think it's beyond redemption, I think it is gutter-awful right now, yes. But I'd love to see it great. Love.)

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:18 (twenty-two years ago)

(600 words = optimum capsule review.)

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:18 (twenty-two years ago)

''Hey, at least sometimes they hype GOOD bands! They put Godspeed You Black Emperor! on the cover before ANYBODY had ever heard of them!! NOBODY else does that!!''

I have that issue and was pleasantly surprised when that came out but in retrospect it was a one off.

(Early godspeed was OK but silve mt zion is the better)

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Hey Nipper, what would you do? Rename it Careless Wanks Cost Kittens?

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I think interesting and damn enetrtaining things can be done with 30 word reviews.

but then the reviews become two sentences long with one sentence technical information and the other thrown away on an unfunny joke. Like Robert Christgau!

Evan (Evan), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:21 (twenty-two years ago)

''(600 words = optimum capsule review.)''

no!!!! ;-)

I think it should be a mix of 500 word reviews but mostly 10-30 words.

There just aren't enough recs with interesting or original angles that merit 100 words. really.

(i think its a big ask to get ppl to write long-ish reviews for years and years and expect good returns)

also this idea of writing on recs that are old doesn't make sense for a mainstream publication (online could be diff). it makes sense to get the review out the week it come out.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:24 (twenty-two years ago)

''but then the reviews become two sentences long with one sentence technical information and the other thrown away on an unfunny joke. Like Robert Christgau!''

as I said you need the writers to make it work.

it will come down to this a lot of the time.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:25 (twenty-two years ago)

more words

dave q, Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:27 (twenty-two years ago)

Well it makes sense in the conceptual meaning I'm trying to further Julio. By having reviews chasing release dates you're making the words the slave of the record. Whereas what I'm saying (I suppose it's a standard postmodern line, anti-Christgau line) that by running reviews of any record regardless of release date we're showing, in some way which I'm unable to fully articulate right now, that the record crit is not a secondary art.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:27 (twenty-two years ago)

Well, I don't know what I'd do - why is why I asked the question! Part of me feels that the need for the NME is over: there are so many more interesting ways of getting information/opinion/fantasizing etc. But another part of me thinks: it'd be much more interesting to try and change it than to complain about it or ignore it. This question was sort-of about me wondering: can indie ever becoming interesting again? What kind of prodding/encounters would it need to have?

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:29 (twenty-two years ago)

('Ever' is always interesting.)

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:30 (twenty-two years ago)

TS's

dave q, Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:32 (twenty-two years ago)

Get rid of a lot of 'use other thoughts please' or in fact, get indie to justify these thoughts. Kinda like pinefox's thread on "well, wait, what if these anti-populists have a point - let's listen to them". But don't take the oppositional, forceful stance of indie. That would be to subsume yrself to that system. We need a new system. And instead of just getting rid of 'use other thoughts please', have arguments about them - write out why to get rid of them.

Let writer's talk about other writer's ideas in print. Let them play fun and dance with, be tender and hard to, grim, soft, cute, cuddly , cold at the ideas.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:33 (twenty-two years ago)

Damn right, TS's.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:33 (twenty-two years ago)

another good post from q there. I think the ans has to be: make dave q write for any mag and the circulation will shoot up.

Ok cozen i see yr point but I'm still saying that most recs do not inspire interesting reviews bcz there aren't enough 'aspects' to them to make it so.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:34 (twenty-two years ago)

("My two cents on what's wrong and what could be right: Music isn't news and music criticism shouldn't have to be reporting. Music is love and desire and flirting and fighting and wop-bop-a-lu-bop, and music criticism should be the same. Institutional context: publishers don't get it. They probably think they've got economic justification for their current practice, but I don't believe those justifications. I think these guys are bound by habit, that's all. Music criticism's being ensconced in "journalism" doesn't mean that criticism need take news as its model, artist profiles and reviews of current product as the (usually) unvarying format, and journalistic dead style for its default prose. Which isn't to say that good news reporting, artist profiles, and record reviews can't contain the wop-bop-a-lu-bop." -

Frank Kogan, 'Get Back, JoJo', The Village Voice)

I think that's a crock of shit, Julio, but I won't say it. A lot of writers don't 'get' music X so that's why you employ write A to write about it. To see those aspects, you need a broad range of intellectual pedants clever writers who can see all the aspects that maybe you don't appreciate. I think every record ever made could have a book written about it.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:36 (twenty-two years ago)

''Let writer's talk about other writer's ideas in print. Let them play fun and dance with, be tender and hard to, grim, soft, cute, cuddly , cold at the ideas.''

It would be nice to see it but do most ppl want that (we are talking abt publications here)?

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:37 (twenty-two years ago)

Sorry, that wasn't meant to be rude at all I just really wanted to use 'crock of shit'.

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:38 (twenty-two years ago)

''A lot of writers don't 'get' music X so that's why you employ write A to write about it.''

its abt finding the right writer to the right record. that could be diff in practical terms

''I think every record ever made could have a book written about it.''

there's a lot of thrash published already. lets not add to the pile.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:42 (twenty-two years ago)

I'd get them working a 9-5, no extra pay for overtime, and introduce Performance Related Pay.

jel -- (jel), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:44 (twenty-two years ago)

Quality or quantity, jel?

Cozen (Cozen), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:44 (twenty-two years ago)

NME and pitchfork are weekly publications.

sorry if i'm being a dick again.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:46 (twenty-two years ago)

well, it'd be based on the number of responses that the article receives from readers, as well as a big brother style phone vote, and index linked to subsequent record, concert and merchandise sales.

jel -- (jel), Saturday, 22 March 2003 22:48 (twenty-two years ago)

It's a lovely pipe dream, that the NME (Pitchfork I don't know/care about) wld benefit (materially, I mean) from longer reviews, or better, more 'thoughtful' (ILX) writers, etc. I'd certainly want to read an NME like this - and in fact I did, when Penman, Morley, Cook, Sinker etc. etc. were writing for it (or substitute the Reynolds etc. era of Melody Maker, according to taste/age.) If I remember, reader response was generally hostile to Morley and Penman's play w/ style/ideas, and sales certainly slipped (of course, the current editor of the NME wld kill his nearest and dearest to sell half as many copies now.) I don't want to use the phrase 'dumbing down', but over the past 15 years reviews/articles in the NME have inarguably got shorter, pithier, more laddish, less open to 'theory' and ambiguity. I suspect that if the NME hadn't gone in this direction, the results (sales) wld still be abt the same. A weekly music paper devoted to the current pop hits feels woefully anachronistic in the age of the internet blahblah, where info is free, fast and far less mediated. 'Stars' don't need the NME at all now, if they ever did, so access and ads almost invariably have to be fairly supine/complimentary. The possibility of another Ferry/Murray or Bangs/Reed or Gabriel/Morley 'feud' seems v. remote - hacks are soon put on a publicist's shitlist if they 'cut up rough'. Also, the Wire is in many ways NME-in-exile (and has been ever since Richard Cook took over as Ed.) - longer, more 'serious' pieces, a relatively wide range of music covered - and even now I imagine it struggles to survive.

One of the things I used to like abt my 'golden age' NME was the way that Fela Kuti rubbed up next to Kid Creole next to PIL next to Miles Davis next to... Q and Mojo have, to a (very) limited extent, taken on this polymorphous peversity, but within the EMAP, Hornbyesque discourse of 'let's not take things TOO seriously, eh boys?'. So, if I was appointed Ed of the NME tomorrow, I'd probably try and broaden the focus just a little beyond guitar indie rock/pop - cover every kind of new release and reissue - country, jazz, blues, hiphop, techno, reggae, etc. etc. - and bite on some of that Uncut action, only w/ better gags and a less reverential, if no less 'informed', attitude.

I also wonder if there's any kind of room for a London Review of Music, or whatever - a pro-pop gazette w/ 'think pieces', long reviews, highbrow personal ads, v. few 'interviews' or hype jobs. That cld be yr ILM-in-exile weekly.

Andrew L (Andrew L), Saturday, 22 March 2003 23:05 (twenty-two years ago)

I also wonder if there's any kind of room for a London Review of Music, or whatever - a pro-pop gazette w/ 'think pieces', long reviews, highbrow personal ads, v. few 'interviews' or hype jobs. That cld be yr ILM-in-exile weekly.

Much as I know I would love to read something like this in print rather than just online, I think the potential audience who are both pro-pop and willing to read longer pieces would be so incredibly small that it could never fly. Then again, maybe the people who read things like LRBooks would become more interested in pop if they read something that offered a different and more considered perspective on it.

Dave M. (rotten03), Saturday, 22 March 2003 23:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Well, I think the first thing I'd do with Pitchfork would be to insist that EVERYTHING is fact-checked extensively before it sees print. The second thing would be to insist that all 'news' content on the site is as unbiased as possible and devoid of their catty little comments. If you're reporting news, it should be done seriously, I think. Then I'd only allow reviews written in the most serious, objective way possible to be published.

So, in other words, it wouldn't be Pitchfork anymore.

Matthew Perpetua (Matthew Perpetua), Saturday, 22 March 2003 23:46 (twenty-two years ago)

The second thing would be to insist that all 'news' content on the site is as unbiased as possible and devoid of their catty little comments.

Oh FUCK YEAH!! I can't STAND that. It's NOT FUNNY!

Evan (Evan), Saturday, 22 March 2003 23:48 (twenty-two years ago)

Ha!: one of my new year's resolutions was to try and start a "London Review of Pop" style magazine (working title: 'The London Eye' - possible copyright issues, I know) - kind of along the lines of old-style The Modern Review, but...erm, better. I've sort of "parked the idea" (as they say in my managment team meetings these days) because:
i) nobody I spoke to seemed that enthusiastic about the idea (it would be a lot of hassle)
and
ii) things like 'Word' magazine and the new IoS supplement 'Talk of the Town' have kind of already applied the ideas I had.
:(

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Sunday, 23 March 2003 00:54 (twenty-two years ago)

I think NME-level popular music journalism has to find a way out of this maze of irony and cynicism which it has been in since the glory days of Smash Hits in the mid-80s. The NME itself has been unreadable for many years mainly owing to this predicament, and this faux-camp/imbecilic tone infects virtually all music criticim these days, viz. The Guardian, Q etc etc. At the same time, 'pop music' can never be taken too seriously without deconstructing the suspension of disbelief that makes it special in the first place. Nevertheless, does anyone actually need the NME these days? From its steadily decreasing sales and increasingly desperate attempts to insinuate itself with whatever sells, be it Slipknot or Blue, it appears not. Anyone really interested in music these days gets all their info. off the web, and why read some jaundiced critic's opinion when you can go online and share your views with others? Ultimately people learn about music in a different way these days.

Gatinha (rwillmsen), Sunday, 23 March 2003 01:25 (twenty-two years ago)


Sorry, I realise now Ive repeated a lot of what's already been said.

Gatinha (rwillmsen), Sunday, 23 March 2003 01:27 (twenty-two years ago)

NME and pitchfork are weekly publications.

Pitchfork is daily.

And I don't know what the 'Fork has in common with NME, aside from the fact that we both take ads. The criticisms people make of the 'Fork are very different from the criticisms of NME. And nobody can blame us for the Vines.

Chris Dahlen (Chris Dahlen), Sunday, 23 March 2003 02:55 (twenty-two years ago)

the man has a point, folks

M Matos (M Matos), Sunday, 23 March 2003 05:13 (twenty-two years ago)

In both cases, hire all of ILX. Geir can have a column called "Geir's Grooves."

Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 23 March 2003 08:56 (twenty-two years ago)

'Ned's Noodling'

Andrew L (Andrew L), Sunday, 23 March 2003 08:57 (twenty-two years ago)

Two ideas to help fix the music press, one vague, one specific.

1) Don't simply cover an artist because they have a new record out. Look for good stories, look for good angles, not for the latest hype down the pipe (I hate using the h**e word cause it's almost meaningless at this point, but still...). Focusing on Tha New over everything else causes too many features about, say, dull modern-rock band, dull rapper, dull country singer, dull pop star who have nothing to say (hence all cliches or pieces that just say nothing) and are generally written by people with little investment or insight into the actual piece. There have to be ways to make features interesting again, but I'm having my doubts. Maybe have one person who likes the artist interview them and have someone who hates them write the piece? Straight Q&As can have their moments, but by and large it's just the writer showing off with wordy questions or by transcribing the thing to make themselves look smarter or make it feel as if there was more of a vibe in the room than there really was (I'm guilty of this). But maybe the biggest fault of features is the nature that they have devolved into: Fluff, promo pieces where the artist gets to say whatever he/she/they want without any critical questioning by the writer in the piece itself. I love to see a writer contradict what the piece's subject has just said; to see the writer's voice come pouring out suddenly and unexpectedly (the ARE Weapons piece in the latest Fader does this -- after an appropriately glowing piece in the last graf the writer states that despite all of this they still suck live, they have many faults and they have bad songs but it doesn't really matter. And the writer is completely right and it immediately gives the piece much more credence).

2) Ira Robbins and I have had many long talks about what a new magazine would need, and the No. 1 thing he would want to do is establish close relationships with his writers and his readers. To do this, he wanted to hire five or six record reviewers and give them each a page or two of the mag each month, allowing them to write about whatever they wanted, but stressing that he would like to see them write about things they like, don't like and should be written about. By having the same people each month, the hope is that readers will have an emotional investment in the writers, and thus care more about their opinions and eventually creating some sort of give and take between the two. I think this is a great idea, provided of course that the writers ARE interesting and do have something to say, which is the hard part. Still, finding five people on ILX alone who could do this would not be hard at all...

Yanc3y (ystrickler), Monday, 24 March 2003 00:04 (twenty-two years ago)

yanc3y's second idea is otm
make readers care about the magazine,and wonder what it will say about something,but avoid it having an entirely predictable reaction to something
allow writers to argue-if someone loves an album,let them write about why,and if someone else hates it,let them explain why
also,the idea about not just reviewing new music is obvious but brilliant

robin (robin), Monday, 24 March 2003 02:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Yancey,

Interesting second point because this is exactly what I am attempting to do with my site. Attempting being the most important point in that sentence because, thus far, it seems like the writers that are emerging as the best regular writers for the site simply don't write enough.

Thus with the amount of reviews that we print each week we get what I, and I'm guessing most people think, is a sever watering down of the product. In any case, I'm trying. And I totally agree that it's a key portion of a good magazine.

todd burns (toddburns), Monday, 24 March 2003 02:41 (twenty-two years ago)

if i was editor of any of the above i'd insert my band's name surreptitiously throughout the publication like little fnords and then sit back and wonder why sales of Fortdax and Desert Hearts records all of a sudden went through the roof..

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Monday, 24 March 2003 02:52 (twenty-two years ago)

Re: Ice - I've written a few articles for the mag, which is now being put together by many of the ppl who launched Bizarre mag (I also used to write for that before the current 'regime change'.) Ice's target audience is 'squaddies and adolescent boys who can't buy topshelf jazz mags', do I don't really think it's the venue for sensitive pop think pieces (the music coverage in Ice is miniscule and rub)

Andrew L (Andrew L), Monday, 24 March 2003 16:07 (twenty-two years ago)

NME needs to rediscover the joys of writing about bands people actually care enough about to buy their records instead of lauding these mediocre, faceless, nameless shitty shoegazing bands that some student in a London suburb is convinced are The Next Big Thing. They never are and probably never will be. And why should we care?

It's no wonder no-one buys the rag anymore.

russ t, Monday, 24 March 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I'd stop treating the non-electroclash-based dance scene as if its entirely moribund and solely an excercise in mass cultural nostalgia for thirty-something young marrieds, for one. I'd revamp the news section from being the half-arsed collection of press-releases and endless self-referential pieces that smack of desperation. I'd introduce regular club reviews as a section in their own right (not just 'indie' clubs, the whole sprawling headfuck which is still how many people throughout the country find out about new music). I'd run PROPER On pieces that are longer than 400-word collections of soundbites for idiots, and include people outside the latest major-label-sponsored Next Big Thing or the predictable, inward-looking Camden indie scene. I'd revamp the reviews section and have people actually looking further than Chalk Farm Road for up and coming talent. I'd allow individual writers to champion bands they really feel passionately about again. I'd stop aiming apparently solely at 14-19 year olds and acknowledge that there are older readers who aren't interested in reading about Craig Nicholl's arse. I'd run a free CD every month full of the writers' favourite tunes of the month. I'd sack virtually everyone writing on it - they're all useless and half-arsed.

I'd still shameless court sales though. At least one lengthy feature (ie at least four of five pages) with someone massive, who should go on the cover.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Monday, 24 March 2003 16:26 (twenty-two years ago)

nameless shitty shoegazing bands

*lip trembles* Shoegazing bands that are shitty? Do not make me cry. *cries anyway*

Although if you're referring to some sort of post-Coldplay nonsense, yes please, kill them all.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 24 March 2003 16:27 (twenty-two years ago)

Erm, and longer album reviews are a necessity, as ever, but only if they're going to be intelligently written and not just the usual fawning/lazy demolition.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Monday, 24 March 2003 16:40 (twenty-two years ago)

SWYGART TAKES CHARGE OF NEW MUSICAL EXPRESS -

WEEK 1:

Issue proceeds as normal. Cover stars are The Libertines. Main Album Review... The Strokes, or something.

Swygart lets this pass as he spends the first half of the week wanking to orgasm at the joy of having a source of income that isn't his parents, and the second half creating a really big shiny badge that says "I EDIT THE NME. HA! HA! HA!"

WEEK 2:

Swygart recoils in horror at WEEK 1's issue. Wallops Mark Beaumont over the head with a metal 30 cm ruler. As penance for the rubbishness of WEEK 1, Swygart decides to convert entire issue into gigantic fold-out poster of Libertines, Strokes, Vines etc. gazing in wonderment as the sun shines out of The Delgados' arses. The other side consists of classifieds, crossword and a join-the-dots picture of ABC.

WEEK 3:

As WEEK 2, except with The Delgados replaced by ballboy. Join-The-Dots this week is 2Unlimited, as Swygart gets freakishly nostalgic for when he was nine years old.

WEEK 4:

By popular demand, Swygart reverts to the boring old 'magazine' format. He replaces the entire live section with a picture of what Craig Nicholls would look like after getting done by a combine harvester, and the entire news section is filled by him ranting about how he wishes people would FUCKING SHUT UP about how good a drummer Dave Grohl is.

WEEK 5:

Swygart goes on Liquid News and is subtly removed 15 minutes in after cussing Mis-Teeq for having weird noses then repeatedly lobbing aniseed balls at Colin Paterson.

The day after, Swygart is taken out and battered to pieces for saying that the Datsuns have crap hair, and is never let back into IPC towers again.

Instead, he becomes a minor albums reviewer for the Daily Telegraph, i.e. he gets to do 50-word pieces on Cat Power in exchange for handjobbing Neil McCormick on demand. Swygart still believes this is better than getting a real job, because he will never learn...

THE END.

William Bloody Swygart (mrswygart), Monday, 24 March 2003 21:07 (twenty-two years ago)

Do any of us buy NME?

If not, how are we going to know when all these ideas start mysteriously showing up there?

mei (mei), Tuesday, 25 March 2003 10:52 (twenty-two years ago)

Does anyone, anywhere, still buy it?

NME desperately needs a designer, too. The layout and overall look is desperately shoddy.

russ t, Tuesday, 25 March 2003 11:02 (twenty-two years ago)

A lot of people think that the problem with the NME is that it frivolously invents scenes - I think this is its strength!, or at least its unique selling point, and it should do more of this - not less So this means hiring the sort of people who are imaginative enough to do this, and giving them the proper space in which to fantasize.

the nipper is otm once again.

toby (tsg20), Tuesday, 25 March 2003 11:53 (twenty-two years ago)

As usual, I agree with the Nipper. (And it seems that nowadays I'm not alone in this.)

I am touched to read that he likes the IoS's new supplement (as I am by their own editorial: 'we hope you like it - please tell us'). LRM is one notion; but the LRB itself could cover pop a deal better than it does.

The one thing people always say re. this sort of question is, roughly: "improve / extend / intensify coverage of genres like hip-hop / rap / dance, beyond their present mediocre treatment by these sad white boys".

I disagree with those people.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 2 April 2003 10:19 (twenty-two years ago)

Why PF?

Cozen (Cozen), Wednesday, 2 April 2003 15:55 (twenty-two years ago)

two months pass...
VISIONS OF ABUNDANCE

NME Cover - Wednesday, June 11th, 2003

Michael Mayer, Luomo, Kompakt: Shufflewha?? Microwhere?1

Neuromanticism: The Anxiety of Influence2

Dead White Males: Will Oldham, (smog), Malkmus3

Good/Bad/Good/Bad Taste: A Politics of Taste4

Alasdair Roberts: A Weekender's Idea of Britain?5

The Blogosphere: Discussion's Swarming6

The Stro... urgh: The Geneaology of an Embarrassment7


1 A futurespective!

2 (Why did New Pop 'fail'?) (How did New Pop 'fail'?) Was New Pop absorbed, a recessive gene?

3 We Have 96 Theses to PIN TO YOUR DOOR! (Sascha Frere-Jones adapting his White Noise Supremacists argument).

4 oh, dear, oh dear oh dear.

5 "Welcome to the desert of the real": AVANT FOLK vs UK GARAGE; a FULL STOP vs a LINE?

6 or Why the NME is all but redundant as a NEWS source (the internet: 100 Monkeys, 100 Typewriters) and has to adapt to TALKING about IDEAS and STUFF, taking the Blogguratt as the exemplar.

7 How / why we built an EMPIRE.

Cozen (Cozen), Monday, 2 June 2003 19:02 (twenty-two years ago)

I would never buy your magazine, Cozens. Your too much of an anarchist!

Me? I would put the Strokes/Oasis/Radiohead on the cover.

doom-e (Jam), Monday, 2 June 2003 19:35 (twenty-two years ago)

There must be two long-ish reviews each issue, never more than that, and sometimes there can be only one. But John Coltrane's A Love Supreme must be reviewed in every issue so when there's only one review it's just a longer review of A Love Supreme.

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Monday, 2 June 2003 19:48 (twenty-two years ago)

What about Big Brother?

doom-e, Monday, 2 June 2003 20:01 (twenty-two years ago)

Anarchism is good, doom-e! (Tho' I'm not sure I agree that I'm an anarchist).

More Big Brother!

Cozen (Cozen), Monday, 2 June 2003 20:23 (twenty-two years ago)

Chatlines, ringtones, used car ads, TV tie-ins, porno URLs, stuff about Big Brother, roadshows, telephone numbers, competitions, ideas from Springer and Kilroy Silk adapted to music journalism, stuff about being working class designed to appeal to students, promo for NME-sponsored gigs, an NME roadshow, lots of reviews of ironic hair metal bands, use of drop shadow type and the colours purple and acid yellow, inserts that flutter out when you try to read the mag in a shop, free CDs of useless fluff that nobody wants to listen to, reviews that rewrite the press release, features written in exchange for a bag of coke from the head of press at BMG, footballers relaxing at home, Jim, lots of electric guitars, bass and drums, old bands with 'your new favourite band' written across them, more ringtones, more chatlines, and, finally, liquidation.

Momus (Momus), Monday, 2 June 2003 20:48 (twenty-two years ago)

Momus we are not talking about your new album again!!! Are we???

: - D

doom-e (Jam), Monday, 2 June 2003 20:52 (twenty-two years ago)

You know, I once made an EP about death because I read Peter Greenaway in the NME saying 'Death is the last pornographic frontier of the bourgeoisie'. Now I ask you, what kind of song ideas would I get from a current issue? The website is all ears. It doesn't seem to have much to say, but it's very interested in getting me to send in my opinions on stuff:

'With PJ Harvey soundtracking ads for T-Mobile and even '60s revolutionary rockers MC5 playing for Levi's, has adland finally seduced your alternative favourites? Check out this week's NME, Issue May 17, for our feature on the artists and the ads behind them. In the meantime let us know what you think about it. Selling out or putting food in the mouths of bairns? C'mon - let it out!'

No, NME, why don't you let it out and tell me what you think of this phenomenon you so amply illustrate in your own pages? I'd really like your feedback on this for my market research. In fact, I'd like you to make some kind of statement like 'Marketing is the last pornographic frontier of the bourgeoisie'. But you won't, because the advertisers might not like it.

Momus (Momus), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 12:17 (twenty-two years ago)

I notice that in yesterday's Guardian, the NME are advertising for an News Editor.


DJ Martian (djmartian), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 14:19 (twenty-two years ago)

actual ans: get mags to cover hip-hop, dance etc etc (and not just indie) and make it like it isn't a second priority to writing abt fucking post-rock.

How much indie- and post-rock coverage does The Source or Jockey Slut provide? NME pitches itself as a generalist (I'd call it the U.K. Spin/Rolling Stone but I'm not sure who would be more insulted) and therefore should pay a certain amount of attention and respect to all the pop genres out there.

As for Pitchfork, what's the problem with regarding it simply as cocooned indie boys writing for other cocooned indie boys?

j.lu (j.lu), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 16:32 (twenty-two years ago)

nothing, IF they'd stick to indie and leave us and the rest of our technicolor world outside alone

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 16:38 (twenty-two years ago)

haha i think ilm should sue for copyright infringement.

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 16:47 (twenty-two years ago)

four years pass...

As for Pitchfork, what's the problem with regarding it simply as cocooned indie boys writing for other cocooned indie boys?

-- j.lu (j.lu), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 16:32 (4 years ago) Bookmark Link

nothing, IF they'd stick to indie and leave us and the rest of our technicolor world outside alone

-- jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 3 June 2003 16:38 (4 years ago) Bookmark Link

Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 12:52 (eighteen years ago)

dude got borged

blueski, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 13:05 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, I agree - Pitchfork should just stick to the indie ... whenever they do talk about electronic music or hip-hop, they speak about it as if everything's like the lame indie scenester world.

TB-303 retro + skinny cropped jeans and fixed gear cruisers = DESTROY

uhrrrrrrr10, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 14:05 (eighteen years ago)

ASSIMILATE

David R., Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:23 (eighteen years ago)

Sacred cows are getting slaughtered.
We're having beef tonight.

Wrinklepaws, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:43 (eighteen years ago)

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/08/The_Simpsons_5F10.png

"they drove a dump truck full of money up to my house! i'm not made of stone!"

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:48 (eighteen years ago)

also dom, it's kind of late in the game to be zinging me about writing for pfork now when it's been 2+ years and 100,000+ words.

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:51 (eighteen years ago)

I don't want to always be Frozen Caveman Lawyer whenever old threads are revived, but TWO YEARS?

David R., Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:56 (eighteen years ago)

i'm not even sure what the hell i've been doing for those two years

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 15:56 (eighteen years ago)

Get in line.

David R., Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:01 (eighteen years ago)

why you frontin harvell

Ronan, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:04 (eighteen years ago)

17,531.6255 hours

logged 5,840 hours sleeping
logged 4,380 hours drinking
logged 2,920 hours masturbating
logged 2,391 hours playing cell phone tetris
logged 760 hours waiting for bus
logged 240 hours eating
logged 134 hours fantasizing about murdering my enemies

hours spent on ilx: uncalculatable

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:07 (eighteen years ago)

logged 2,920 hours masturbating
logged 2,391 hours playing cell phone tetris

PRIORITIZE

David R., Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:09 (eighteen years ago)

he did those simultaneously

Wrinklepaws, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:14 (eighteen years ago)

How much overlap is there between time on ILX, time spent on murder fantasies and time spent masturbating?

Matt DC, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:27 (eighteen years ago)

(Not all three at once, I'm not sure anyone's out there wanking while imagining hacking apart Lord Custos with an axe).

Matt DC, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:28 (eighteen years ago)

don't be too sure.

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:29 (eighteen years ago)

Not an axe, no.

Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:37 (eighteen years ago)

Now I wish I'd picked a poster who hasn't been AWOL for over two years...

Matt DC, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:37 (eighteen years ago)

custos lives within us all

strongohulkington, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 16:38 (eighteen years ago)

He's not in my ass.

Scik Mouthy, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 17:53 (eighteen years ago)

I'd commission OP to review MBV's loomer.

voice of truth, Wednesday, 6 June 2007 02:01 (eighteen years ago)

is wp all over this because it says pf, or because the thread mentions u2?

mh, Wednesday, 6 June 2007 02:12 (eighteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.