Mail Archive sponsored by Chazzanut Online

jewish-music

<-- Chronological -->
Find 
<-- Thread -->

Re: Jewish music Magazine idea?




Judy Pinnolis wrote:

> Gideon:
>
> Getting to the idea of a Jewish music magazine.....in general I'm wanting
> to grow Jewish resources on the web...this may be an unpopular position,
> but I personally think in terms of a non-academic orientation, a web
> magazine would do just fine... instead of print. less cost to produce.
> (possibly?) and not dealing with mailing problems and all that....and can
> reach a very wide audience.  I also like the idea of interactivity that
> could eventually be worked in....
>
> Personally, I've cut way back on print subscriptions in recent years. I'm
> much more selective nowadays. Although there is obviously a place for print
> magazines in the home, one tends to get inundated. And not have the time to
> properly devote to any.....for right now, some people may feel a web
> magazine is too selective an audience, but that audience will only continue
> to grow in the coming years. If there was a Jewish music print magazine,
> I'd likely subscribe (or even contribute occasionally), but I'd still
> prefer the web.
>
> I like the idea of starting with reviews, both of recordings AND live
> performances would be nice... and then feature articles about people doing
> the music. news, information and a calendar are all features I'd like to
> see, which is why the web would work really well. discussion of performance
> techniques, trials and tribulations might be a fun column to read also.
> There are a lot of people who would know how to keep it "hip" or "cool" or
> whatever the word today is for young people.
> Judy

The word is "dope", or "phat", Judy --  though "cool" is still acceptable.

Wolf

>
>
> At 03:22 PM 7/14/99 -0400, you wrote:
> >Robert raises an interesting question regarding a print Jewish music
> >magazine.  Should it seek to be mass market or should it focus on the much
> >more limitted market of musicians who play, and organizations/companies that
> >promote, Jewish music?
> >
> >To some extent this is a marketing question.  If we want to create a broader
> >audience for Jewish music, we need to grab people with something they
> >recognize or something that will catch their attention.  This argues for
> >including celebrity profiles even if they may be secondary to core Jewish
> >music.  Barbara Streisand, the Beastie Boys, Dylan, etc would help sell
> >magazines in a store like Borders.  These features need not be total fluff,
> >but could involve serious discussions with popular artists on their Jewish
> >backgrounds and the impact of their Jewishness on their music.
> >
> >However, every piece on Kenny G's Jewish heritage takes away space from the
> >coverage of new liturgical music, traditional Klezmer, etc.  Also, these
> >pieces open up the danger of diluting people's definition of Jewish music to
> >a point where the music becomes an ethnic name game.  So, a nice small niche
> >publication might, as Robert says, be a better starting point rather than
> >seeking to expand.
> >
> >My question for the list is has anyone tried to estimate how small a niche
> we
> >really are discussing?  Is it large enough to support this type of print
> >publication?  I have some doubts if the examples of Davka or Pakn Treger
> >(both Jewish niche publications) are any indication.  Davka has become the
> >webzine Tattoo Jew and I am not sure what is happening with Pakn Treger
> since
> >it hasn't made it to Washington DC recently.
> >
> >Gideon
> >
> >
> >
>



---------------------- jewish-music (at) shamash(dot)org ---------------------+


<-- Chronological --> <-- Thread -->