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Pages in category "Online music magazines published in the United States" The following 68 pages are in this category, out of 68 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
M Music & Musicians; Magnet (magazine) Matter (music magazine) The Maud Powell Signature, Women in Music; Maximum Rocknroll; Mean (magazine) Metal Edge; Metal Maniacs; Metronome (magazine) Mix (magazine) Modern Drummer; Music Connection; The Music Trades; Musical Courier; The Musical Leader; The Musical Messenger (Montgomery, Alabama) MusicRow
Goldmine, established in September 1974 by Brian Bukantis out of Fraser, Michigan, [1] is an American magazine that focuses on the collectors' market for records, tapes, CDs, and music-related memorabilia. [2] Each issue features news articles, interviews, discographies, histories, current reviews on recording stars of the past and present.
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)
BrooklynVegan is an American online music magazine founded in 2004 by David Levine. [1] [2] The company is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York, and originally focused on vegan food and the music community in and around New York City, before broadening its scope to covering musical artists and events worldwide. [1]
Dark Regions Press staff, authors, artists and products have appeared in FANGORIA Magazine, Rue Morgue Magazine, Cemetery Dance Magazine, Dark Discoveries Magazine, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Booklist Online, LA Times, The Sunday Chicago Tribune, The Examiner, Playboy, Comic-Con, Wired, The Huffington Post, Horror World, Barnes & Noble ...
Works originally published in music magazines (1 C, 3 P) B. Blues music magazines (10 P) C. Classical music magazines (1 C, 39 P) Music magazine cover images (107 F) D.
The site was first hosted by the pre-Earthlink ISP Pipeline, and included articles covering politics, music and fiction. The name Perfect Sound Forever originated in an early 1980s [ 3 ] ad campaign about the first generation of CDs , promising the highest fidelity possible, and that the discs would outlive their owners.