Archive for the ‘music’ Category

99 problems. Should Jay Z really be designing logos?

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012

Hey sports fans, good news: the Brooklyn Nets have introduced their new monochrome color scheme and logos, as the team prepares for its relocation to the Barclays Center for the next NBA season.

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Job Idol (Britain’s Got The CV Talent X Factor?)

Saturday, April 28th, 2012

I’m a bit of a sad case. I like American Idol. There, I’ve said it. I prefer it to the UK version of The X Factor, largely because it hasn’t got that buffoon Louis Walsh on it but also because I feel that the singing talent in America is better than in Britain. And I vaguely fancy Jennifer Lopez. That said, I quite like Simon Cowell, in fact – the TV giant and “talent guru” we love to hate. But the thing that’s wrong with most of these shows – and Cowell is in no small way responsible for this, because he puts people through who are simply good telly – is that the best people don’t always win. Or, in employment terms, the best candidate doesn’t get the job. See where this is going?
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Offloading. Does Loaded’s decline mark the end of an era?

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

Loaded, the title from which all lads mags sprang, is to be sold for the second time in as many years. Its publisher, Vitality, was taken into administration last week, owing creditors £1m and liquidators Cooper Young have been tasked with dispensing with Vitality’s assets. By all accounts there has been some interest in the magazine, but its currency has never been lower.

Loaded’s latest circulation figures show a 30% year-on-year fall to an average of just 34,505 copies. For those unfamiliar with magazine sales, that is not good. Not good at all.

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Land of the free. Has charging for things become taboo?

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

HM Government and Tesco must have thought they’d found the Holy Grail. In an era of high unemployment and a conspicuous absence of career opportunities, the idea that the jobless could somehow be coerced into working for the ubiquitous supermarket for nothing (excepting benefits) must have caused so much hand rubbing, it’s a wonder there wasn’t a large fire.

Of course, once the giant grocer (and plenty others) realised the shocking damage slave labour would inflict on their brand, they retreated quicker than a worm from a hungry blackbird. But I can’t help thinking the whole escapade was symptomatic of a much larger trend. The closer I look, the more I notice the concept of paying for stuff being treated with contempt.

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When busking meets big business

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

In the eighties and nineties I lived in London and throughout that time, London Underground put buskers on a par with the small, grey, dusty mice running between the rails. That is, vermin ripe for extermination. Okay, maybe not extermination, but certainly eviction. Signs and notices festooned every station, threatening fines, arrests and stern words for anyone who tuned up within earshot of passengers.

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Wedded bliss – discovering an inspiring media hub.

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

It’s a college. No it’s not, it’s a record label. Sorry, it’s a TV studio. Hang on, no, it’s a computer games firm.

Let’s start again. Confetti is definitely a bar and meeting place. And all of the above, it seems.

Nestling in the centre of Nottingham, Confetti is quite unlike any media company I’ve ever encountered. And I’ve encountered a few. Established in 1994, the organisation launced as a well-equipped, creative technology school for college students and school leavers. It was the vision of Craig Chettle and initially worked with The People’s College of Further Education. As Craig puts it, “We wanted to create a place and an opportunity that was not available to us when we were in further education.”

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The 40 best sites, tools & apps of 2011

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

40 Best Sites

During 2011 we discovered some unbelievably cool and useful sites and apps and shared the best we found in our fortnightly newsletters. Here we have condensed these into an even more exclusive list of the forty coolest sites, tools and apps of the year. Google+, Instagram and all the other obvious choices are here. But there’s also a few wildcards thrown in along the way just to spice things up a bit. Enjoy!

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Ronnie Wood – I Can Get Art Satisfaction

Monday, December 5th, 2011

You can’t get much more rock ‘n’ roll than the Rolling Stones…and you can’t be more rock ‘n’ roll than Ronnie Wood, with his former lifestyle of drink, drugs, sex and out-and-out hedonism. But I recently stumbled across a gallery just off London’s Oxford Street, exhibiting some of Ronnie’s art – a serious hobby which he’s had for the past 35 years. We’re not just talking about a hobbyist, though; Ronnie Wood can really, really draw. When I stepped through the door and saw his work for the first time, I was amazed.
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One of the good guyz

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

Being born Colin Fulcher in Middlesex, halfway through the Second World War, was a rather inauspicious start for one of the most progressive and impressive graphic designers of the 20th century. Perhaps that’s why he changed his name to Barney Bubbles.

Trained as a retail display designer in the art school of Twickenham College of Technology, Colin began his professional career at Michael Tucker Associates, which he described as ‘very Swiss; very hard; unjustified; very grey’. It wasn’t an insult because he also asserted that it was here he learned ‘everything about typography’. But he had to wait until 1965 for his big leap forward – a position as senior graphic designer at The Conran Group. It’s amusing to note that Colin – who became so associated with the counter culture and new wave – actually created items for the utterly middle class Habitat store and a logo for Strongbow cider, while in this role.

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