Sunday 15 April 2012

Audience Profile and Response (Question 5)


How did you attract/address your audience?

The audience was attracted the main model on the front cover holding a guitar displaying the rock genre being presented and the one that in my preliminary work was the genre that people overwhelmingly said was their genre of preference, and throughout the copy in the cover, contents and double page spread an effort was made to address some things brought up in the audience profile, for example, when Urahara is being interviewed he speaks of wanting to continually change his style of music, which addresses what the audience aggrees partially with in that people should live in the moment and in essence live impulsively, while also addressing the other part of the readership who say some consideration should be taken for the future, as he is not only being spontaneous with his change in music but also is looking to the future and doesn't want to be seen as stale and become forgotten in a sense. The pictures of Urahara working on his music further cement that he is someone who wants his music to be what he wants it to be which fits in with the profile of the Riffs audience. Finally, the tour box was used and implemented after it became clear that Riffs readers were overwhelmingly interested in going to gigs and would find it helpful for information on their favourite artists to be easily displayed in the piece allotted to them.

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Preliminary Work


This is a very early design for a music magazine that I made in preparation for the real coursework, mainly done to familiarise myself with, and gain and display skills (or lack thereof) with the Adobe Photoshop Programme.

Basic cropping of a picture of a fellow classmate was used for the main image, and a basic background taken from Google stock photos. The magazine was based upon an idea for a school magazine.

Friday 6 April 2012

Double Page Spread Analysis 1


Half of the second page in the double spread is devoted to promoting other artists, a useful way to deliver on a spread that successfully focuses on the artist at hand (The Teenagers) and cleverly uses the lure of the interview with the hit band to draw the audience’s attention to other artists, perhaps a promotional tool requested by a label to bring attention and a wider audience to said artists. At the bottom left of the page rests a information box that highlights characteristics of the band in a short and snappy manner that would be extremely helpful for readers unaware of or new to the music of the band, and is certainly a possible option for a music magazine as a quick “catch-up” of sorts so that some readers don’t feel alienated and that all can enjoy the piece to differing degrees. The pull quote mentions how The Teenagers are seen as a sexual band, and this was specifically chosen as sexuality is one of the key aspects of the band’s image and success, as well as the fact that sex sells so it made the most sense to put an enticing pull quote such as that on such a prominent position. The picture of the band is also important, it illustrates the three casually lounging on a bed with sexually suggestive pictures on the wall behind them, again highlighting the band’s main image as a sexual band as well as relating to its target audience of teenagers.

Wednesday 4 April 2012

Double Page Spread Analysis 3


The article presented, featuring a main piece revolving around the music artist Professor Green, utilises several different presentational devices as well as language features to further add to the overall composition and layout of the article, which in turn creates a better image for the artist and makes them seem more interesting and is likely to grab hold of the reader’s attention. The most striking aspect of the piece is the main image of the article, which displays Green rapping into a microphone, and the picture is taken while Green is in motion to create a blur effect behind him. This blur effect was not just captured deliberately but also used deliberately to create the image for the reader that Green is proactive and takes an active interest into creating his music, as supported by the caption below the picture which states that the picture of Green was taken at a music studio, which also suggests that Green takes any musical activity as a performance. The photo is not doctored in any way and this is deliberate, as an exposition piece on an up and coming artist would usually involve a professional photo shoot and what inevitably comes afterward with liberal use of photo shopping, but it is not used here to make Green seem more down to earth and focused on simply creating his music rather than having the perfect photo op and conforming to the standards expected by music magazines when an artist seeks exposition, as well as making Green seem more focused on pleasing his fans rather than making money unlike many other musical artists, so Green is taking a defiant stance against this convention and in a way staying true to his underground roots, and ensuring the reader that he is a normal, down to earth person.
After the main image, the heading of the piece is the second most striking aspect of this piece. The heading reads: “The Nutty Professor”, which is not only a pun on his stage name but is also an example of intertextuality, by referencing other pop culture, but the effect of this is to draw in the reader and make them interested in the piece as well as the artist by using the heading to connote that Green is in some way crazy, obviously this is not real but is more used for effect and to suggest that the following copy will have information on something surprising about to be undertaken by Green. In the additional text below the heading a rhetorical question is used to further this belief and to add to intrigue created by the heading and has the exact same function of the heading: to draw in the reader and to want to make them explore the article further, as well as creating the image that the artist is quite enigmatic.

Sunday 1 April 2012

Front Cover Analysis 1.


The most important aspect of any front cover of any magazine is the main image. The main image for this cover depicts the main attraction of that particular edition of Blender, Jay Z. The image of his is set to a pure white backdrop has him dressed in an expensive suit as the caption below his name reads, “The fly life of an American gangster”. While the stereotype of a rap “gangster” is usually someone akin to a thug and usually dressed “appropriately” to draw those comparisons, in this image of him supposedly being a “gangster” depicts him in a much more classic Hollywood style of gangster, brandishing his wealth at his pleasing.