Tuesday, 13 June 2017

Magazine Advert:

1. Look at the magazine adverts produced by pervious A2 students on their blogs. Which do you find most like real magazine adverts? 

















I believed this one to look really legitimate as the people who created it have included all the appropriate conventions in which allows it to look relatively professional. The fade out of dark at the bottom of the advert to the light could connote coming out of danger or rising from a dark place, the bold red writing further connotes to some form of danger.

With the use of the parental advisory sticker and the use of the fade and faded writing makes it appear edgier , the legitimacy is exentuated by the streaming options.



2. Research and collect adverts for newly released albums in a number of music magazines.




I could not find any up to date magazine adverts, due to the fact that most celebrities don't use famous music magazines as a means to promote their new and upcoming albums as it is not a piece of media that many people would choose to buy or even read anymore unless particularly interested in doing so. As a result I found the following adverts from artists from  the last few years which has helped to promote their newly released albums.







High street retailers

I went into a few high street retailers and what was evident was that Music Magazines were not as popular and there was little to none stocked in most shops that I entered. The ones I did see were mainstream ones such as rolling stones.



























































Target audiences:

 Different genres of music will target their audiences differently as each target audience will be different and will vary in interests ect.

E.G. One Direction will have a predominantly fan base of young/teenage females , therefore their marketing campaigns and album covers may include things that that specific group would be interested in.

But in Regards to genre they may portray themselves in a certain way, E.G. a rock band may have dark colours and heavy images in order to convey what genre of music they produce.















Thursday, 8 June 2017

Digipak:

What is a digipak?

A digipak offers the audience a lot more content than a disk with a regular cd cover. It is used as a marketing tool to provide an incentive for purchasing a hard copy from a high street or online rather than the seemingly more popular avenue of downloading/ streaming the music. It is now essential as sales of albums have dwindled as buyers now prefer to download their favorite track or tracks rather than having to pay out for a full album.



 They usually have a gate fold , similarly to a book and are often made of paper or card and inside plastic. especially used for special editions and albums, and became popular in the early 2000's with artists and record labels.



The incentive to buy is the added extras to the cd/dvd , as well as the actual disk and its case with front and back covers.




Including:
  •  front
  • back spine
  • at least four additional panels.


The Additional panels include:


  • Membership postcard/flier
  • lyric section
  • disk impression
  • Band information section and booklet
  • free image , poster and set of postcards



Elements of Digipaks:

Front Cover:
  • name of the album
  • name of the artist
  • an image (often related to the name of the album)






































Spine:

  • album name
  • artist name
































Back cover:
  • list of songs
  • name of the record label
  • barcode
  • distribution

















Internal panel

  • booklet
  • name of band
  • name of band members
  • instruments played
  • list of the featured songs
















































Booklets:


  • information on the artist
  • lyrics
  • pictures
  • insider information on the song











































Retailers:

Retailers such as HMV are renound for selling Dvd's, CD'S and Digipak's and their primary basis being offering such products. However in such a digital age it is quite surprising that such a store is  still up and running. its not without struggle, due to big contending music apps such as iTunes, Spotify and apple music.



In 2012, HMV had to close down 40 stores in a bid to save millions in cost, with 15 shut in the first half of the year.


These include Woolworths, once the nation’s biggest seller of DVDs, Zavvi (formerly Virgin Music),
All of these were trapped by the squeeze on household incomes (the biggest since the 1920s) and by the advance of technology and competition from supermarkets and internet giants.

As for the march of technology, too many managements of retail businesses were slow to recognise the threat of online sales and of MP3 players and iPads.



But a more sinister factor has also been in play. Digital giants Google and Amazon were initially welcomed by the Government .Yet by allowing consumers access to pirate download sites at no cost, Google has essentially deprived musicians and recording studios of their intellectual property rights








































Digital music revenues have surpassed the takings from traditional music formats , Worldwide, digital revenues ; from  subscriptions, downloads, and advertising revenue on sites such as YouTube – accounted for 45% of the total in 2015, compared with 39% for physical formats such as CDs and vinyl records.

The popularity of streaming, which has altered the way many people listen to music. The subscription value of streaming services like Spotify reached $68m (£47.7m) last year, a growth of 66% from 2014.


The problem is exacerbated by free websites like YouTube , which paid an estimated 70p per user to music rights holders in 2015.

















Digipak nets:














contextual analysis-