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DJ Magazine (also known as DJ Mag) is a British monthly magazine dedicated to electronic dance music and DJs. [2] Founded in 1991, the magazine is adapted for distribution in the United Kingdom, the United States, Spain, France, Italy, Latin America, China, South Korea, Brunei, Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Oman, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Germany, Canada, Russia, Belarus, and the ...
Future Music (stylised as FutureMusic) was a monthly music magazine, published by Future plc in the UK between 1992 and 2024. It was aimed primarily at record producers working in the electronic music field. Future Music included hardware and software reviews, [1] tutorials, [2] royalty-free samples and loops, [3] and music by electronic ...
Careless Talk Costs Lives (magazine) Cathedral Music; Chainsaw (punk zine) Charts Plus (1990s publication) City Fun; Clash (magazine) Classic FM Magazine; Classic Pop (magazine) Classic Rock (magazine) Classical Music (magazine) Classical Recordings Quarterly; Comes with a Smile; Computer Music (magazine) Crack (magazine) Cronicl y Cerddor
It covers UK, US, and international music and youth culture topics, with particular focus on electronic, pop, rap, and experimental artists. Having started as a bi-monthly print magazine, Fact went digital in 2008, focusing on its website and online TV channel Fact TV, which produces documentaries and videos including the series Against the ...
Cadence; Canadian Musician; Canadian Review of Music and Art; Careless Talk Costs Lives (also known as Careless Talk or CTCL); Cashbox; CCM; CD Review (also known as Digital Audio and Digital Audio and Compact Disc Review)
Primedia's business magazines were spun off as Prism Business Media in 2005; Prism merged with Penton Media the next year. NewBay Media bought the magazine in 2011. [1] EQ Magazine was merged into Electronic Musician in May 2011. [2] Future acquired NewBay in 2018. [3] The headquarters is in San Bruno, California. [4]
Computer Music was a monthly magazine published by Future plc in the UK. It covered the topic of creating digital music on a computer. In the past, each issue included a DVD-ROM with samples, plug-ins, software demos, tutorials, and other content related to the issue. Later, downloadable content was offered via a dedicated webpage. [2]
Shook magazine did not have a set slogan, but it covered jazz music at the center, with other black musics from around the world—especially soulful electronic music—forming the core of its focus. While some of the magazine contained charts from eminent DJs on the scene or articles on underground music scenes around the world, it also had an ...