This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. (October 2022) |
Rock Sound is a British magazine that covers rock music. The magazine aims at being more "underground" and less commercial, while also giving coverage to better-known acts. It generally focuses on pop punk, post-hardcore, metalcore, punk, emo, hardcore, heavy metal and extreme metal genres of rock music, rarely covering indie rock music at all. The tag-line "For those who like their music loud, extreme and non-conformist" is sometimes used. Although primarily aimed at the British market, the magazine is also sold in Australia, Canada and the United States.
Categories | Music magazine |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
Circulation | 14,057[1] |
First issue | 1999 |
Company | WhyNow |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Website | www.rocksound.tv |
ISSN | 1465-0185 |
History
editThe British edition of Rock Sound was launched in March 1999 by the French publisher Editions Freeway. The magazine was bought out by its director, Patrick Napier, in December 2004. The magazines offices are in London. Separate titles with the same name have been published under the same umbrella company in France since 1993,[2][3][4] and in Spain since 1998.[5][6]
The first issue was published in April 1999. Issue 2 featured British band Reef on the front cover, and later issues 3 and 8 featured Terrorvision and Foo Fighters respectively. In July 2011 a host of "Through The Years" articles were written to celebrate the 150th issue of the magazine.[7] 2017 witnessed the first annual Rock Sound Awards where £1 from every magazine bundle sold was donated to the One More Light Fund in memory of Chester Bennington.[8]
The magazine was known for including a free CD in most issues, which had tracks from bands' new albums that have not been released as singles. These were called '100% Volume' or 'The Volumes', with other past compilations named 'Music With Attitude', 'Bugging Your Ears!', 'Sound Check' and 'Punk Rawk Explosion'.[9] Sometimes whole albums were included with the magazine, particularly from bands wanting to gain exposure, including Futures' debut album The Holiday in March 2010, and Burn The Fleet's debut album The Modern Shape in May 2012.[10]
In more recent years, exclusive artist merchandise including t-shirts have been sold alongside the magazine via the Rock Sound web store.
In 2023, Rock Sound became part of WhyNow media group and a special edition magazine was published in partnership with Slam Dunk Festival featuring headliners Enter Shikari and The Offspring on the cover. A weekly digital cover feature, The Album Story, was also launched on ROCKSOUND.TV.[11]
Rock Sound's 300th issue was published in September 2023 with Fall Out Boy, Corey Taylor and Motionless In White appearing on the cover. The magazine will celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2024.
Audience
editYear | Circulation |
---|---|
2009 | 16,374[12] |
2010 | 15,005[13] |
2011 | 14,227[14] |
2013 | 13,220[15] |
2015 | 13,924[16] |
2016 | 14,057[17] |
The magazine had a circulation figure of 15,005 from January to December 2010 auditored by ABC. This includes 10,162 sales in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and 4,843 from Other Countries.[13] The same auditing body said the magazine had a slightly lower circulation figure of 14,227 from January to December 2011, with sales of 10,053 from the United Kingdom and Ireland, and 4,174 from Other Countries.[14] The majority of sales come from newstrade, with some coming from subscriptions.
The main rival to the magazine in Britain is Kerrang! because of the similar types of music both magazines cover.[citation needed]
Album of the Year
editAt the end of every year the magazine lists their favourite 75 albums released in the previous twelve months.
- 1999 – Filter – Title of Record[18]
- 2000 – A Perfect Circle – Mer de Noms
- 2001 – System of a Down – Toxicity
- 2002 – Isis – Oceanic
- 2003 – Hell Is for Heroes – The Neon Handshake
- 2004 – Isis – Panopticon
- 2005 – Coheed and Cambria – Good Apollo, I'm Burning Star IV, Volume One: From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness
- 2006 – The Bronx – The Bronx[19]
- 2007 – Biffy Clyro – Puzzle[20]
- 2008 – Genghis Tron – Board Up the House[21]
- 2009 – Mastodon – Crack the Skye[22]
- 2010 – Bring Me the Horizon – There Is a Hell Believe Me I've Seen It. There Is a Heaven Let's Keep It a Secret[23]
- 2011 – Mastodon – The Hunter[24]
- 2012 – The Menzingers – On the Impossible Past
- 2013 – letlive – The Blackest Beautiful[25]
- 2014 – Lower Than Atlantis – Lower Than Atlantis[26]
- 2015 – Bring Me the Horizon – That's the Spirit
- 2016 – Panic! at the Disco – Death of a Bachelor
- 2017 – All Time Low – Last Young Renegade
- 2018 – Twenty One Pilots – Trench[27]
- 2019 – Waterparks – Fandom
- 2020 – Yungblud - Weird!
- 2021 – Twenty One Pilots - Scaled and Icy
Hall of Fame/Throwback
editRock Sound inducted numerous albums into its Hall of Fame, as part of a long-running feature. The main criterion for inclusion was thought to be influence – even within a particular genre – and for that reason many of the albums have been commercially successful as well as critically successful because they have then gone on to influence large numbers of bands or the music scene. Thus this differs from the Yearly Top Albums lists which do not take influence into account. In each article there was normally an interview with band members, a commentary on the album's release, a look at its initial success, and reaction from other musicians or participants in the album's creation - such as producers, engineers, and music video directors. Towards the end of this section's run it was renamed to "Throwback".
Album | Artist | Nationality | Year | Issue | Guest Writer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Shape of Punk to Come | Refused | 27 October 1998 | #136, June 2010[28] | ||
Jupiter | Cave In | 8 August 2000 | #138, August 2010[29] | Jacob Bannon of Converge | |
Weezer | Weezer | 10 May 1994 | #139, September 2010[30][31] | Gustav Woods of Young Guns | |
Smash | The Offspring | 8 April 1994 | #140, October 2010[32] | Frank Turner | |
White Pony | Deftones | 20 June 2000 | #142, December 2010[33] | ||
Jane Doe | Converge | 4 September 2001 | #145, March 2011[34][35] | Winston McCall of Parkway Drive | |
Queens of the Stone Age | Queens of the Stone Age | 22 September 1998 | #146, April 2011[36] | ||
Hello Rockview | Less Than Jake | 6 October 1998 | #149, July 2011[37] | ||
Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation | Funeral for a Friend | 20 October 2003 | #151, Summer 2011[38] | ||
Tell All Your Friends | Taking Back Sunday | 26 March 2002 | #152, September 2011[39] | ||
Relationship of Command | At the Drive-In | 12 September 2000 | #153, October 2011[40] | ||
From Under the Cork Tree | Fall Out Boy | 3 May 2005 | #155, December 2011[41] | ||
New Found Glory | New Found Glory | 26 September 2000 | #158, March 2012[42] | ||
The Artist in the Ambulance | Thrice | 22 July 2003 | #159, April 2012[43] | ||
Good Mourning | Alkaline Trio | 13 May 2003 | #160, May 2012[44] | ||
Start Something | Lostprophets | 2 February 2004 | #161, June 2012[45][46] | Aled Phillips of Kids In Glass Houses | |
Ideas Above Our Station | Hundred Reasons | 20 May 2002 | #162, July 2012[47][48] | Rou Reynolds of Enter Shikari, Frank Turner | |
Suicide Season | Bring Me the Horizon | 29 September 2008 | #164, Summer 2012[49] | Sam Carter of Architects | |
A Fever You Can't Sweat Out | Panic! at the Disco | 27 September 2005 | #165, September 2012[50] | Pete Wentz of Fall Out Boy Mike Ferri of We Are the In Crowd | |
The Used | The Used | 25 June 2002 | #166, October 2012[51] | Chris Pennells of Deaf Havana | |
The Young and the Hopeless | Good Charlotte | 30 September 2002 | #167, November 2012[52] | ||
Alive or Just Breathing | Killswitch Engage | 21 May 2002 | #168, December 2012[53] | Matt Heafy of Trivium | |
Ascendancy | Trivium | 15 March 2005 | #171, March 2013[54] | ||
What It Is to Burn | Finch | 12 March 2002 | #172, April 2013[55] | ||
The Bronx | The Bronx | 26 August 2003 | #173, May 2013[56] | ||
Love Metal | HIM | 14 April 2003 | #174, June 2013[57] | ||
Infest | Papa Roach | 25 April 2000 | #175, July 2013[58] | ||
Tomorrow Come Today | Boysetsfire | 1 April 2003 | #176, August 2013[59] | ||
As the Palaces Burn | Lamb of God | 6 May 2003 | #177, Summer 2013[60] | ||
Bleed American | Jimmy Eat World | 24 July 2001 | #178, September 2013[61] | ||
Take to the Skies | Enter Shikari | 19 March 2007 | #179, October 2013[62] | ||
Miss Machine | The Dillinger Escape Plan | 20 July 2004 | #180, November 2013[63] | ||
Good Apollo, I'm Burning Star IV, Volume One: From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness | Coheed and Cambria | 20 September 2005 | #181, December 2013[64] | ||
Gutter Phenomenon | Every Time I Die | 23 August 2005 | #184, March 2014[65] | ||
Perseverance | Hatebreed | 12 March 2002 | #185, April 2014[66] | ||
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water | Limp Bizkit | 17 October 2000 | #186, May 2014[67] | ||
A Place in the Sun | Lit | 23 February 1999 | #187, June 2014[68] | ||
The Trees Are Dead & Dried Out Wait for Something Wild | Sikth | 18 August 2003 | #188, July 2014[69] | ||
Superunknown | Soundgarden | 8 March 1994 | #189, August 2014[70] | ||
Punk in Drublic | NOFX | 19 July 1994 | #191, September 2014[71] | ||
Hollow Crown | Architects | 26 January 2009 | #192, October 2014[72] | ||
Slaughter of the Soul | At the Gates | 14 November 1995 | #193, November 2014[73] | ||
Get Some | Snot | 27 May 1997 | #197, March 2015[74] | ||
Follow the Leader | KoЯn | 18 August 1998 | #198, April 2015[75] | ||
Crisis | Alexisonfire | 22 August 2006 | #202, August 2015[76] | ||
Nothing Personal | All Time Low | 7 July 2009 | #203, Summer 2015 | ||
The Gift of Game | Crazy Town | 9 November 1999 | #204, September 2015 | ||
Menace to Sobriety | OPM | 15 August 2000 | #205, October 2015 | ||
This War Is Ours | Escape the Fate | 21 October 2008 | #206, November 2015 | ||
Anthology | Alien Ant Farm | 6 March 2001 | #207, December 2015 | ||
The Best in Town | The Blackout | 25 May 2009 | #210, March 2016 | ||
Nightmare Anatomy | Aiden | 4 October 2005 | #211, April 2016 | ||
Saosin | Saosin | 26 September 2006 | #212, May 2016 | ||
Ocean Avenue | Yellowcard | 22 July 2003 | #213, June 2016 | ||
Billy Talent | Billy Talent | 16 September 2003 | #214, July 2016 |
Rock Sound Records
editIn 2019, Rock Sound introduced a new venture titled Rock Sound Records, a sub-brand of Rock Sound offering and distributing music in limited physical formats, such as cassette tapes and vinyl records. Generally, this involves the exclusive physical release of a record released by a band that is signed to a different (major) record label. For instance, the first Rock Sound Records release was a cassette tape version of Simple Creatures′ debut EP Strange Love, while the band is currently signed to BMG.[77]
Discography
edit# | Artist | Title | Release date | Format |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Simple Creatures | Strange Love | 22 March 2019 [77] | Cassette tape |
2. | PUP | Morbid Stuff | 27 March 2019 [78] | Cassette tape |
3. | Boston Manor | Welcome to the Neighbourhood | 10 May 2019 [79] | Cassette tape |
4. | Real Friends | Even More Acoustic Songs | 17 May 2019 [80] | Vinyl record |
5. | Sum 41 | Order in Decline | 31 May 2019 [81] | Cassette tape |
6. | Crown the Empire | Sudden Sky | 24 June 2019 [82] | Vinyl record + magazine |
7. | Knocked Loose | A Different Shade Of Blue | 7 August 2019 [83] | Cassette tape |
8. | Issues | Beautiful Oblivion | 12 August 2019 [84] | Vinyl record |
9. | Waterparks | Fandom | 30 August 2019 | Vinyl record + cassette tape |
10. | Grayscale | Nella Vita | 3 September 2019 | Cassette tape |
See also
editReferences
edit- Citations
- ^ "Rock Sound Announces Fourth Consecutive ABC Increase". Rock Sound. 11 February 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ Rock Sound France – Oasis Cover
- ^ Rock Sound France – Marilyn Manson
- ^ Rock Sound France – Choix Des Critiques
- ^ Rock Sound Spain – Foo Fighters
- ^ Rock Sound Spain – Rammstein
- ^ Rock Sound – Covers 150
- ^ "Meet The Winners Of The First Ever Rock Sound Awards! – News – Rock Sound Magazine". Rock Sound Magazine. Retrieved 2018-06-05.
- ^ Discogs – Rock Sound
- ^ Rock Sound – Digital Compilation
- ^ "whynow Media acquires Rock Sound". InPublishing. 2023-04-04. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
- ^ "Standard Certificate of Circulation: Rock Sound" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations (UK). Retrieved 5 September 2012.
- ^ a b "Standard Certificate of Circulation: Rock Sound" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations (UK). Retrieved 2 October 2011.
- ^ a b "Standard Certificate of Circulation: Rock Sound" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations (UK). Retrieved 5 September 2012.
- ^ "Consumer Magazines Combined Total Circulation Certificate: January to December 2013" (PDF). Audit Bureau of Circulations (UK). Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ^ "We Have Some Good News". Rock Sound. 11 February 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ Rock Sound (9 February 2017). "Rock Sound Announces Fourth Consecutive ABC Increase". Rock Sound. Freeway Press Inc. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
- ^ Rockmusiclists RS 1999–2006
- ^ RS MySpace Top 75 2006
- ^ Reuben Forum RS Top 75 2007
- ^ RS Top 75 2008
- ^ RS Top 75 2009
- ^ RS Top 75 2010
- ^ RS Album of the Year Countdown 2011
- ^ "The 50 Best Albums Of 2013 Part Five: 10 – 1". Rock Sound. 6 December 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ^ Bird, ed. 2015, p. 30
- ^ "Introducing Your 2018 Rock Sound Awards Winners – News – Rock Sound Magazine". Rock Sound Magazine. Retrieved 2018-11-30.
- ^ Rock Sound – June 2010
- ^ Jupiter Inducted Into Hall Of Fame
- ^ Rock Sound – September 2010
- ^ Rock Sound – Blue Album Indicted Into Hall Of Fame
- ^ Rock Sound – Smash Inducted Into Hall Of Fame
- ^ Rock Sound – December 2010
- ^ Rock Sound – March 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – Jane Doe Inducted Into Hall Of Fame
- ^ Rock Sound – April 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – July 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – Summer 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – September 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – October 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – December 2011
- ^ Rock Sound – March 2012
- ^ Rock Sound – April 2012
- ^ Rock Sound – May 2012
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 161
- ^ Rock Sound – June 2012
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 162
- ^ Rock Sound – July 2012
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 164, p.54-57
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 165, p.54-57
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 166, p.48-51
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 167, p.54-56
- ^ Rock Sound Issue 168, p.46-49
- ^ Rock Sound – March 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – April 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – May 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – June 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – July 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – August 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – Summer 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – September 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – October 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – November 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – December 2013
- ^ Rock Sound – March 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – April 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – May 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – June 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – July 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – August 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – September 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – October 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – November 2014
- ^ Rock Sound – March 2015
- ^ Rock Sound – April 2015
- ^ Rock Sound – August 2015
- ^ a b GET YOUR WORLD EXCLUSIVE CASSETTE COPY OF SIMPLE CREATURES’ DEBUT EP FROM ROCK SOUND RECORDS
- ^ There's only 500 of these PUP 'Morbid Stuff' cassettes in existence! Don't miss out – they're exclusively available from Rock Sound Records., from Twitter.
- ^ Boston Manor Welcome to the Neighbourhood exclusively from Rock Sound Records
- ^ World Exclusive Real Friends 'Even More Acoustic Songs' Variant
- ^ ROCK SOUND RECORDS WORLD EXCLUSIVE: SUM 41’S ‘ORDER IN DECLINE’ ON CASSETTE
- ^ Crown The Empire on Twitter
- ^ Knocked Loose on Twitter
- ^ Rock Sound on Twitter
- Sources