Re: Revolutions magazine

From: aspeitia axel arturo barcelo (abarcelo@indiana.edu)
Date: Tue Aug 08 2000 - 01:13:08 MET DST

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    My opinion of 'Revolution' does not diverge much from Bethany's. When I
    got it, I thought somebody had taken the music section of Details magazine
    and made it fill a whole magazine. Very little substance in the texts,
    indeed. Furthermore, the promo CDs are very low quality in material. They
    started skipping at the second play. Also, it doe snot seem to decide
    whether it is interested in 'dance' or 'electronic' music, or being able
    to tell the difference. . .

    -axel

    On Mon, 7 Aug 2000, Bethany A. Johnson wrote:

    > Here is my opinion of Revolution.
    >
    > I picked up Revolution based solely on the fact that they helped bring
    > Swayzak to Atlanta last month. Once I got home and started reading, though,
    > I was utterly appalled. Madonna on the cover? "Dance music is the new
    > rock." as the heading??
    >
    > The entire magazine seemed hopelessly behind the times. An article "The Toys
    > of Summer" featured a Flat Eric puppet. Hasn't he been around for over a
    > year now? The feature "Hip Factor" was a complete rip off of the Face's
    > barometer and wasn't particularly funny. "Slanguage" lists "PLUR" as a
    > term - I thought everyone knew PLUR!? The layout and design of the mag is
    > neither revolutionary or eye-catching. The reviews, were, ok...I shouldn't
    > bash on the reviews too much, because we all know that reviews boil down to
    > opinions and of course everyone is entitled to one...but giving Fila
    > Brazilia's "Brazilification" 2 stars out of 5 is just WRONG. Other than that
    > the reviews were well-written but not particularly insightful. The review of
    > Suba's "Sao Paolo Confessions" is nice and even gives Suba a generous 4
    > "r"s.
    >
    > As for the CDs, the Thievery Corporation was a mild pleasant suprize, maybe
    > like finding a lost sock or something. The other one, "Deep Summer",
    > included some incredible artists, but they were all those artists most
    > mediocre tracks. I may be a new initiate to the works of A:xus/Abacus, but I
    > think that "You Make Me Feel Like" (included on Deep Summer) is one of his
    > worst tracks.
    >
    > On a positive note: Revolution carries a plethora of URLs. Even if the
    > magazine blows you still have plenty to amuse yourself with. :) This month
    > also had a nice article on Larry Levan/Paradise Garage which is an excerpt
    > from "Keep on Dancin'" by Mel Cheren (the new book about the Garage).
    >
    > In conclusion, I wouldn't recommend this magazine for anyone who has had any
    > sort of familiarity with the scene for more than a year. It is simply trying
    > to cover too many genres, spreading itself too thin and assuming that the
    > reader knows too little about electronic music. If you are, or know someone,
    > who is just breaking out from their rock-and-roll shell, maybe Revolution
    > would be a solid investment.
    >
    > hoping I don't sound too negative,
    > B.
    > ---
    > Bethany A. Johnson
    > http://www.rawkawn.com
    > http://www.thedownbeat.org
    > ----- Original Message -----
    > From: "Cyrus, Kevin" <Kcyrus@cvty.com>
    > To: <acid-jazz@ucsd.edu>
    > Sent: Monday, August 07, 2000 5:52 PM
    > Subject: San Diego Happenings? And AJ topic: Revolutions magazine
    >
    >
    > > What's hot for this weekend on the San Diego acid jazz scene? I'll be
    > > visiting from 8/9 - 8/14. Tips on where to go or at least a resource to
    > > check out either online or hard copy would be greatly appreciated.
    > >
    > > Also, has anyone seen a magazine called "Revolutions"? It's about
    > internet
    > > dance music but it covers some hip hop, international, electronica and
    > other
    > > genres. The premiere issue included two CDs. One was an eleven track mix
    > > disc from Thievery Corp. The other was a sampler of eight tracks talked
    > > about in the magazine AND an internet toolkit. A monthly subscription is
    > > $20 US and includes a sampler CD per issue PLUS the net CD.
    > >
    > > The magazine believes in getting music off the net and putting it into
    > your
    > > PC, an MP3 player or just burning a disc. They give you internet sites to
    > > put together a full CD each month. They even provide the jewel box
    > artwork.
    > > Based on the first issue, it's worth checking out.
    > >
    > > I bought some of the featured/reviewed discs to check out:
    > > LTJ Bukem - Journey Inwards
    > > Femi Kuti - Shoki, Shoki
    > > Slum Village - Fantastic, Vol. 1
    > > Jurassic 5 - Quality Control
    > > Dilated Peoples - The Platform
    > >
    > > The Thievery disc was definitely nice.
    > >
    > > Couldn't really get into the J5, maybe it will grow on me later. The rest
    > > of the lot is hittin'. Still need to get Gilles Peterson and Francois K.
    > >
    > > Anyone checked out Jill Scott? She is coming out of the Roots camp and
    > her
    > > CD is NICE!
    > >
    > > It's been a while since I've posted, hope this isn't old news. Peace.
    > >
    > > Thanks for any San Diego feedback. I especially want to catch DJ Greyboy,
    > > Fattburger and any LOCAL act I wouldn't ordinarily see on the east coast.
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    >
    >

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