翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ L.A. Law
・ L.A. Live
・ L.A. Lopez
・ L.A. Louver
・ L.A. Love (La La)
・ L.A. Mass Choir
・ L.A. Meyer
・ L.A. Midnight
・ L.A. Mix
・ L.A. Noire
・ L.A. Paul
・ L.A. Plays Itself
・ L.A. Posse
・ L.A. Quartet
・ L.A. Rebellion
L.A. Record
・ L.A. Reid
・ L.A. Reid discography
・ L.A. Requiem
・ L.A. Rush
・ L.A. Salami
・ L.A. Screenings
・ L.A. Slasher
・ L.A. State of Mind
・ L.A. Story
・ L.A. Story (song)
・ L.A. Style
・ L.A. Style (album)
・ L.A. SWAT
・ L.A. Takedown


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

L.A. Record : ウィキペディア英語版
L.A. Record

''L.A. Record'' is an independent music magazine originally published weekly as a broadsheet poster. The poster usually depicts a local Los Angeles musicians and according to the magazine editors is meant to recreate an iconic album cover. In March 2008, it began publishing as a monthly magazine with a poster inside. The magazine is available to the public free of charge at local community spots in Southern California.
== History ==
The magazine was founded in 2005 by publisher Charlie Rose (not the TV personality), DJ and writer Chris Ziegler, Fuck Yeah Fest promoter Sean Carlson (involved from 2005–07) and photographer Dan Monick. Their first issue featuring the Rolling Blackouts was set up as a parody of the New York Dolls' self-titled album cover. The cover and concept was chosen because the Rolling Blackouts were playing with the New York Dolls at the 2005 Sunset Junction Street Fair. The tradition of recreating album covers was developed by other bands who also wanted to recreate their favorite record cover. While there is no official rule, it has appeared in every issue. Now the publication is known for interviewing many local LA bands before they become popular in the mainstream〔(Paper Magazine )〕 including the Cold War Kids, Spindrift, Health, Flying Lotus, Moonrats, and Blank Blue. In January 2009, the Los Angeles Times recommended the L.A. Record as a resource to readers who would like to "separate the wheat from the chaff in the world of striving L.A. musicians" and lauded it for its "photography, promiscuous taste from avant-noise to vintage soul, eager but not worshipful writing and rad pull-out posters of RZA."〔(Los Angeles Times )〕
It concluded its first volume, a 29-issue run which began in August 2005 with the Rolling Blackouts, in March 2006 with Melvins collaborator and solo artist David Scott Stone. The second volume of 46 issues, also a weekly broadsheet, began in February 2007 with Big Business and concluded in December 2007 with AntiMC, leaving 75 total poster issues.
For the third volume, which began in March 2008 with Pocahaunted on the cover and BARR on the poster, L.A. Record began publishing monthly as a sixteen-page newsprint magazine with a poster as the centerfold. The website was also redesigned to make room for more content in February 2008.
Other visual contributors include photographer Chrissy Piper who shot several covers for Volume 1 and Erik Brunetti (owner and founder of FUCT), Ashkahn who did design work on several covers.
In August 2008 the magazine printed what may have been Isaac Hayes' (last known interview ).〔(L.A. Observed reporting L.A. Record's Isaac Hayes interview. )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「L.A. Record」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.