The inaugural 2005 Pitchfork Media thread

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can i just say '2up'.

Hari Ashurst (Toaster), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 13:03 (nineteen years ago) link

I guess I'll have to repeat myself Chris: my original post explicitly references the big dollar predictions and tie-ins that would make Pitchfork a competitor to the print world. I am pointing out that that's not happened, nor does it appear to be right around the corner.

Gotcha - we're actually pretty much in agreement! But you know, I think Ott's the only one who ever said we were going to topple Spin in the next year. So don't hold the whole publication to that.

Chris Dahlen (Chris Dahlen), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 14:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I'm not holding the whole publication to that at all. In fact, if you guys decide to topple SPIN, that's okay by me.

don weiner, Tuesday, 4 January 2005 14:51 (nineteen years ago) link

As I see it, the wrong way to evaluate Pitchfork's "place" is in terms of dollars and cents. The people I know who read Pitchfork trust the site more than any other publication. It still has a niche audience, but that niche, like, say, the alternative music niche of the late 80s, could very well decide the next mainstream (or at least the next rock mainstream). I don't know if Pitchfork will ever see a *huge* profit out of this - though they already see a modest one - but Spin or Rolling Stone or whoever never had to deal with a real online-only competitor until now. It's hard to predict how things will fall. Allmusic doesn't count - they were print first, and I have grave doubts that many people rely on their editorial content at all. I mean, I love AMG the same way I love an encyclopedia - it's useful, but it's not who I trust for music recommendations.

Dominique (dleone), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 14:58 (nineteen years ago) link

The people I know who read Pitchfork trust the site more than any other publication

To tell them what they should like, yes.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:06 (nineteen years ago) link

however you want to explain the relationship, I do believe there's a "trust" involved that's the key to understanding why many people read the site.

Dominique (dleone), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:14 (nineteen years ago) link

"Trust" = more or less commonly understood on all sides that Pitchfork's coverage is an adequate reflection of what's going on with a particularly listening group. And I think it's all wrong to think that that "adequate reflection" effect is simply a result of people just listening to whatever Pitchfork tells them to. I think what it comes down to is that this particular audience can be predictable, in a non-pejorative kind of way: it's an audience that "keeps up" with its music, and as such has history and trends, and as such it's possible for people within it to make pretty accurate predictions about what the audience as a whole will and will not manage to enjoy. "Trust" = people in that audience trusting that Pitchfork-as-entity knows who they are and can accurately tell them what, generally speaking, they might want to pay attention to.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:30 (nineteen years ago) link

=The Arcade Fire

Beta (abeta), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:37 (nineteen years ago) link

=Ryan going “this Broken Social Scene album, I’m gonna review this, what do you think?” and me standing there going “well of course, people will totally dig this.” (=not rocket science—the tough part is building up the track record to get that “trust” going in the first place)

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:56 (nineteen years ago) link

(nabisco OTM, but that's still not removing the unfortunate mental image of Ryan as a hobo with a website that that out-of-context sentence gave me)

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 15:58 (nineteen years ago) link

He is a hobo! I don't know why they don't mention that in the articles, it's really inspiring.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:04 (nineteen years ago) link

burning all those promo cds in a rusty oil drum does keep the office quite toasty.

Beta (abeta), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:20 (nineteen years ago) link

The photo that accompanied the Sun-Times article linked upthread was really amusing. Smile, you guys!!!

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:33 (nineteen years ago) link

(Sadly, this does not exist online anywhere.)

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:34 (nineteen years ago) link

Many people turned to stone upon viewing it, they had to look out for their readership.

Leon the Fratboy (Ex Leon), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:38 (nineteen years ago) link

"no star-struck fawning"

has obv. never read the interviews.

Beta (abeta), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 16:40 (nineteen years ago) link

indeed.

As I step back into the hallway, showtime quickly approaching, Paul Banks walks around the corner, and half-remembers me:

"Wait, you look really familiar."

"Yeah. Ryan." I extend a handshake. "I'm here from Pitchfork."

"Ohhhh!! Man, thanks for putting us on your 2002 list. That paragraph was fantastic!"

Which was a surprising response, since the paragraph in question was something of a piss-take, noting the band's "skinny ties and terrible hair," and referring to them as "art-house darlings" whose "appearance was their most embarrassing aspect."

"Well, you know, it was you guys against Nellyville. He almost had it on affirmative action, but we couldn't forgive the Band-Aid."

"It was just-- it was like the opposite of what everyone else said. A lot of what's written about us is just, 'Great look!' I'd rather people said we looked like fucking tools and that the music was worthwhile."

This is one of the greatest aspects of Interpol The Band. Onstage and in glossy magazine spreads, they could not appear more stuffy, vain or arrogant. You will never catch them in a moment of dishevelment; it seems they live day-to-day lives of impeccable dress, going out at 2:00 a.m. for a bottle of milk in Italian loafers and white collars-- stodgy, 19th Century statesmen who've materialized as though straight from the moon gates of a noir Ultima. Anachronisms. And yet, beneath their lacquer veneer, they're more humble than bands with an eighth of their acclaim and record sales. They're friendly, unaffected, even cheerful-- a far cry from the funereal façade they flaunt like dour peacocks.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:14 (nineteen years ago) link

"Well, you know, it was you guys against Nellyville. He almost had it on affirmative action, but we couldn't forgive the Band-Aid."

Memories...

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:14 (nineteen years ago) link

I am now SOOOO depressed.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:16 (nineteen years ago) link

I suppose I should read the site more carefully.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:16 (nineteen years ago) link

From same interview.

Pitchfork: Cuddleworthy?? You guys?

Sam: Come here, buddy, I'll show you why. [Sam hugs Ryan]

Pitchfork: [Swoons]

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:17 (nineteen years ago) link

I had a dream last night that I saw the new pitchfork redesign and it looked really cartoony. I was impressed.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:23 (nineteen years ago) link

Pitchfork Suggestion.

One idea that I would like to see implemented is an ongoing Best of year database.

The rules are simple each critic has upto 100 albums in a year [2005] to nominate.

When a Pitchfork critic/ writer listens to album that is worthy of this status they nominate the album, and this is added to a database. This would be a simple tally system and not a Pitchfork rating.

They can only select upto 50 albums in the first half of the year, to ensure that the first half of the year isn't overloaded.

However as the year progresses they can deselect albums.

One of the problems with a music webzine such as Pitchfork only one writer gives an opinion on an album.

The readers can also see what each individual writer rates throughout the year.

With my system you could see which albums are collectively highly rated by the writers.

Someone pass this genius idea onto Ryan Pitchfork.

DJ Martian (djmartian), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:31 (nineteen years ago) link

Frankly I wish Nabisco and Tom Breihan would stop writing stuff so I wouldn't feel the need to check the review section. I heard Julianne Shepherd's gonna be writing for them too! WTF. STAY LAME.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 17:35 (nineteen years ago) link

That affirmative action bit was stomach-turning.

Leon the Fratboy (Ex Leon), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:00 (nineteen years ago) link

Holy shit.

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:14 (nineteen years ago) link

My sentiments above are redoubled.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:17 (nineteen years ago) link

That paragraph was fantastic!

Yet again, I hog all the glory.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:20 (nineteen years ago) link

Screw you, Ned, Chicago is fantastic!

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:28 (nineteen years ago) link

THEN EXPEL THE CANCER IN YOUR MIDST. Or, um, something.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:40 (nineteen years ago) link

I don't think Daley, the Cubs, or the Alumni Club can be gotten rid of that easily.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:47 (nineteen years ago) link

And as regards the whole "Pitchfork bigger than SPIN" argument, I don't know why that upset you so much, Dan, but, SPIN's rate base is 550,000 (+/-) a month. Pitchfork's is approaching 100,000 daily, and it's been growing at an alarming rate - readership has more than doubled over the last year. That's ridiculous success.

Web ads are cheaper by thousands of dollars and Pitchfork is free to the reader, so they're more attractive to both camps. Major media companies all read Pitchfork, and what I was alluding to previously, a buy-in/takeover, that didn’t happen…but it could have, and from a SPIN perspective it really needed to. SPIN doesn’t have a massive media conglomerate’s support – they’ve all got their music magazines, and regardless of how little or much money those make they’ll always be around, because they’re corporate/brand extensions. Miller’s been trying to dump Vibe/SPIN for two years, that place has been a ****in employment blender (no pun intended) since 2001. They all but run SPIN’s website off child labor – interns – for God’s sake.

It's a completely shitty reality for SPIN, but this isn't Popular Science, it's not Sports Illustrated...you know, it's indie music, it's the cheapest, most volatile and fickle demographic out there, and it's changing so much faster now, monthly print magazines don't stand a chance. There's too many bands doing too many un-extraordinary things, as opposed to popular sports where there's still plenty of room for Daily (ESPN) and more in-depth Week/Monthly (SI) feature pieces. There just isn't enough money or mystery (or as time stretches on, un-mined history) in underground music to sustain Serious Criticism of it at the financial level mandated by a print magazine.

And that might be something we could blame Pitchfork for, if it didn't boil down to blaming ourselves first.

“Spin is me. I am Spin.” – Jake Hill, 2004
“Spin is dead.” – Chris Ott, 2002

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:50 (nineteen years ago) link

There's too many bands doing too many un-extraordinary things

Well, precisely.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:52 (nineteen years ago) link

I should point out that nabisco is still OTM; it's just that the M now stands for Maggots.

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Dude, are you implying that Chicago doesn't rule or that the Cubs aren't a cancer? If it's the latter, umm, well, the Cubs were responsible for my car getting towed and ticketed a few times, so I hold a personal grudge. ("No parking during Cubs games" -- what the fuck am I, ESPN? I have to know MLB schedules to park my damn car?) If it's the former, though, seriously, I will take you on, and it will not be pretty, what with Stencil and JMC and the Fake-Ass Ficciones hopping in to complete the beatdown.

nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 18:57 (nineteen years ago) link

This is a bit off topic, but when I was in college and just after college, I could not get enough of music criticism. I read pretty much everything of merit (Wire, Mojo, Big Takeover, Pitchfork, AMG, etc.) I could find. Five years later, I've reached a point where I only want to read -- at most -- interviews and features, and never want to go anywhere near a review. Those of you who have kept abreast of underground musics for a while -- Ned, Ott, etc. -- did you experience a renewal in your interest in rock criticism as you got older, or does some other aspect keep you writing and reading?

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 19:03 (nineteen years ago) link

I heard Julianne Shepherd's gonna be writing for them too!

She's written for them sporadically, hasn't she? My guess is that now Ryan can actually afford to have her write more regularly, heh.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 19:06 (nineteen years ago) link

Those of you who have kept abreast of underground musics for a while -- Ned, Ott, etc

Wait, I have? News to me!

You can burn out and I did, in both writing and reading. That I've kept going/received a bit of a renewal revolves in large part about doing other things of interest and not feeling a crushing (if self-imposed) need to keep up with everything/everyone. Attempting to do that these days in the world of millions o' blogs strikes me as an exercise in futility. If I wanted to read every blog I 'should' read, I would have no time for anything else.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 19:08 (nineteen years ago) link

I've really burned out for the most part. Back in high school I would devour new issues of Spin and Alt Press - this was the early 90s so you'd still get Jesus Lizard cover stories. Then in college it seemed like a golden age and there was just too much good music out there - having access to the radio station meant I could hear a lot of it for free, but I also spent nearly all my disposable income on records & shows. I started reading Pitchfork the year they launched the site & vaguely recall having corresponded with Ryan Pitchfork about writing for them, but I never had the time to follow through on that.

Now I don't hear nearly as much new music, and what I do hear mostly comes through.. attrition from the number of references here on ILM + the taste of the people giving the recommend. I spent an hour in a Borders the other day looking for something to buy with a gift card and couldn't find a single album I wanted.

Pfork should do some city guides. Serious. As in, I'm going to Boston for a week, where are the cool clubs? Where are the good record shops? Where are the thrift stores?

daria g (daria g), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 19:38 (nineteen years ago) link

Pfork should do some city guides. Serious. As in, I'm going to Boston for a week, where are the cool clubs? Where are the good record shops? Where are the thrift stores?

Phil-two to thread.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 19:44 (nineteen years ago) link

Awesome that we are going to go through this one again, Mr. Ott:

SPIN's rate base is 550,000 (+/-) a month. Pitchfork's is approaching 100,000 daily, and it's been growing at an alarming rate - readership has more than doubled over the last year. That's ridiculous success.

No, those are apples to oranges.

As you hint at, SPIN is a lifestyle magazine, and narrow in that regard compared to, say, Rolling Stone. Pitchfork is a narrowly-focused music website, something the Internet can address very well and extremely cheaply. However, it also seems that it would be easy to replicate Pitchfork's content, and if Pitchfork was significantly profitable you can be assured that competition will arrive soon. Pitchfork's done a good job developing an audience, but I'm not sure how loyal that audience is given the price of admission. You may feel that there "just isn't enough money or mystery (or as time stretches on, un-mined history) in underground music to sustain Serious Criticism of it at the financial level mandated by a print magazine" but if that's the case, then the premise of Pitchfork is on shaky ground and serious efforts to fortify it as an entity are required.

don weiner, Tuesday, 4 January 2005 20:06 (nineteen years ago) link

Totally burned out on reviews. It's inevitable. Reviews are hype.

I think the curve does have to do with being young, insofar as unavoidable ignorance (mine, anyone's) fuels you to learn more; depending on your personality, you may then want to assert your take on things, and in a lot of cases that's also part of learning - it certainly was and still is for me (there's no quicker way to find out if - and more importantly how - you've got things wrong than to put your thoughts out there for "everyone" to read).

But it's a cycle that's repeated itself so many times now: up and coming writers fade into their personal lives or die or move on to bigger things...you look at a book like In Their Own Write, that documents at least three cycles right there (and one really interesting passage in it, I forget from whom, laments that more writers in the 80s didn't take the next step, didn't write personal books and didn't continue to challenge themselves...get the book if you haven't already).

We know who the Elder Statesman are today - some post here - and of the few younger critics trying to go the legitimate route - e.g. Get Paid to Write - a LOT of them post here, but that's a fray I could never enter, for both personal and financial reasons. I mean "freelance," sure, but tying my opinion on pop music to a salary, I just could never, ever do that. Which might be my loss, but, you'll have to ask Matos or Scott PL or I how our choices worked out in ten years. Chuck Eddy could obviously shed a lot more light on this subject.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 20:27 (nineteen years ago) link

"However, it also seems that it would be easy to replicate Pitchfork's content, and if Pitchfork was significantly profitable you can be assured that competition will arrive soon."

I'm not arguing that Pitchfork is "significantly profitable," I'm arguing that it is successful on terms comparable to SPIN's at zero cost: that is what's significant.

The "cost of admission," as you say, is unbeatable, but so is the cost to advertisers. Peanuts compared to print costs, and that's where Pitchfork is so relatively deadly. It's the only website that's fulfilling that dread prophecy about web killing print: a 24x7 website requires maybe two or three full time employees and incurs zero production costs (hosting and overage). If they've got anywhere near the numbers SPIN has, and their content changes *every day*, that's a far more attractive audience to advertisers, and to top that, it's cheaper. You just cannot beat that (without a corporation behind you, and SPIN doesn't have that kind of backing). This is as much about SPIN's vulnerability as it is Pitchfork's success, because SPIN is so exposed, but it also points up that professionally printed independent magazines are a probably losing bet from here on out.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 20:45 (nineteen years ago) link

Now 28 and running his burgeoning cyber empire from a cramped, bare-bones, CD-stacked basement in Wicker Park

m1cc1o, Tuesday, 4 January 2005 20:51 (nineteen years ago) link

Ned, I did a quick bit of dirty mulitplication just now and I think you've already got close to 75,000 words written for that 90s book. And "morass" is one of them so it's definitely up to snuff.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:00 (nineteen years ago) link

Don, you also keep mentioning that Pitchfork is incredibly vulnerable to competition. I think that's true, for all the reasons you describe, but I also think that the web has failed to produce many music webzines that even try to compete; what you're talking about could've happened anytime in the last four years, but didn't.

There aren't that many good and cheap writers out there (ignoring whether anyone thinks the 'Fork staff is "good," it looks a hell of a lot better if you read other webzines). And where we've faced serious competition, it's only been, in my mind, a good thing. Popmatters, Stylus and PSF were kicking our butt on features for the past few months, but that's spurring us to respond, which is good for everyone.

Sure, someone could surpass and even destroy the 'Fork. But someone could also unseat the Onion - how hard is that, you just tell jokes and post 'em on a website - anyone could do that, right? And anyway, few publications stay vital for more than a few years regardless. I guess I just don't worry about it. Of course, I'm also just a staffer.

Chris Dahlen (Chris Dahlen), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:05 (nineteen years ago) link

don't forget

Dusted
http://www.dustedmagazine.com/

DJ Martian (djmartian), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:10 (nineteen years ago) link

When I visit Pitchfork, I skim for articles or reviews that interest me and ignore everything else, including the advertising. When I purchase a magazine for $5.50 or whatever, I'm a much more active reader, reading almost every article and absorbing an ad or two.
That said, I still don't read SPIN.

Bruce S. Urquhart (BanjoMania), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:15 (nineteen years ago) link

I thought Dusted was competition for CMJ.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:24 (nineteen years ago) link

Re: print vs internet ... Pitchfork's archives are a big asset, which makes them a useful reference source as well. No, it's not as complete as AMG, but it's still helpful. A new start-up site couldn't compete with them on that level, and neither can print media.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 21:26 (nineteen years ago) link

Do people actually read Stylus? I barely read it even when I used to post on its now-defunct message board. Does it get traffic? I know a few of the writers post here, so I'll shy away from any value judgements.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:39 (nineteen years ago) link

Speaking as a member of the Dusted staff, I wouldn't say we're competing with Pitchfork at all. Not only is the coverage different (our coverage area is much more similar to those of the Wire or, yeah, Signal to Noise than to Pitchfork), the editorial outlook at Dusted is pretty different from Pitchfork's. Most of us aren't interested in being tastemakers in the way Pitchfork clearly is, either - anyone coming to Dusted with the hope of seeing opinions like Pitchfork's will probably be disappointed.

I also think there are a LOT of music writers on the web who are better than the most of the ones at Pitchfork, too, and they're not that hard to find - but most of them aren't interested in doing what Pitchfork does. Dahlen is right, I think, in that most of the other websites aren't trying to compete with Pitchfork.

charlie va (charlie va), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:49 (nineteen years ago) link

I never read (or knew about) Stylus before I read ILM, but now I do. At first, it was just to read articles by ILXors, but there's some others who I've grown to like, too. Mostly, I like a lot of its lists and regular features (Pop Playground, Rubber Room, etc.) (not to mention the Stypod) -- none of which Pitchfork is doing on any level.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:54 (nineteen years ago) link

I think the apparently-mandatory length of Pitchfork's reviews cripples the site. Every once in a while, someone will really use the 800 words effectively, but many (if not the majority) of the reviews just feel like space-filling and creative writing experiments to me (although less than in the brent d through bowers era). It seems like the current writers have a more traditional approach to writing reviews, but the length of the reviews is still the same.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Quick aside here in re: "unmined history"...

Q, January 2005: "THE STONE ROSES: They could have ruled the world."

MOJO, May 2002: "THE STONE ROSES: 'We could have ruled the world.'"

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:56 (nineteen years ago) link

writes from everywhere post on ILX! No point in avoiding value judgements.

miccio (miccio), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Also re Stylus, I like that it skews sorta-indie, but (and maybe just because it hasn't cultivated the indie niche for the last ten years like PFM has) it doesn't feel forced when it spotlights pop or even showtunes (yay, Clem). I also like that its editorial voice feels less monolithic than PFM -- Swygart has his column, there's the movie reviewers over there, etc.

jaymc (jaymc), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 22:59 (nineteen years ago) link

hey what i want to know is what's the story with that daniel robert epstein guy? ott you know him?

blount, Tuesday, 4 January 2005 23:01 (nineteen years ago) link

Based on the very limited reading I've done of each, I think P-fork has improved a lot over the past few years. I'm especially impressed w/Mark and Dominique and Scott P and Nabisco (as always) and more recently Nick Sylvester. I like Stylus too, which I find more consistent but not as peaky as P-fork at its best. I'm happy both exist. I'll have to trust Ott on the money stuff, something I know nothing about. And the fact that I found lots of good new stuff on Pitchfork and Stylus' 2004 lists that I hadn't heard of yet says plenty, too; plus I dug lots of the write-ups on P-fork's year-ends. But again, I'm not reading them all the time so take this w/as much salt as you want.

Matos W.K. (M Matos), Tuesday, 4 January 2005 23:37 (nineteen years ago) link

jaymc OTM on stylus' broad opinion base. I read it for the features and lists, which are, more often than not, really wonderful. I like the apparent spontenaity of a lot of the commentary and the 'on second though' section, I think it's called, for things like Swygart's Sing Sing re-review and Dom's Brothers in Arms piece.

Actually, reviews of older albums like those are the only pieces of music writing I find really compelling these days. It's due partly to my own focus, which has been more on re-evaluation and re-appreciation than discovering brand-new music, and the joy of reading people writing about records that they know really, really well, instead of music they've just run into. A sober second thought is always more interesting than a first impression, for my money.

derrick (derrick), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 00:08 (nineteen years ago) link

even Russians read Pitchfork:

http://evermusica.com/ever/music/ehm_2004_end.html

DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 00:21 (nineteen years ago) link

Ned, I did a quick bit of dirty mulitplication just now and I think you've already got close to 75,000 words written for that 90s book. And "morass" is one of them so it's definitely up to snuff.

Er? Oh, you mean the 136 list? That would take a lot of revising to actually bring anywhere to print, and I honestly can't imagine who'd be interested!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 00:51 (nineteen years ago) link

Don't hate the playerz, hate the game.

Nancy Boy (Nancy Boy), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 02:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Why not hate everything?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 03:01 (nineteen years ago) link

I'd be interested, Ned!

Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:02 (nineteen years ago) link

But how much do I charge?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:03 (nineteen years ago) link

I mostly just read Stylus reviews of (a) records/artists I'm interested in or (b) any review by rollie, micco, and a handful of other ILMors.

Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:08 (nineteen years ago) link

If their redesign breaks any of their URIs and my carefully catalogued bookmarks to Pitchfork reviews stop resolving, I'll be upset.

Snnap Dragon (snnap dragon), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 22:51 (nineteen years ago) link

matos is on the money. i've been visiting both stylus and PF almost daily for over a year, and stylus just seems like a british PF to me, almost like the UK version of an american fashion magazine. they have similar tastes and demographics, but stylus still swoons for acts like The Junior Boys. i'm glad they both exist, too, but i trust pf over stylus always, and both of them over the AMG. those bastards and their check marks. i only go to them when i need information. if i listened to every album they championed, i'd be spinning goddamn ABERFELDY! blech. i am glad that they pointed out the 90 Day Men, though-- i can'tt get enough of 'em.

poortheatre (poortheatre), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:20 (nineteen years ago) link

Oh, so now we're hating on The Junior Boys?!?!

Nancy Boy (Nancy Boy), Thursday, 6 January 2005 10:53 (nineteen years ago) link


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