

Another traditional entertainment medium that has recently adapted to the Internet is the music magazine, known in its digital format as a webzine or e-zine. Again, these companies fall into two main categories – consumer and industry titles. Industry titles include Rolling Stone Online, the digital equivalent of the century-old American music industry trade magazine, and Webnoize, a new magazine concerned exclusively with the music industry on the Internet, and its affiliated technologies. The magazine differs from Rolling Stone in that it is exclusively a Web-based journal (i.e. not available in a traditional published format). Consumer titles include the exclusively Web-based fanzine Addicted To Noise, which was one of the first music webzines and remains one of the most famous and largest-growing publications on the Internet. A recent addition is nme.com, the official site of the British music weekly NME, which has now extended beyond the dwindling readership of its print version, offering a rich multimedia experience of both unsigned and new music to a global audience.
There are hundreds (if not thousands) of smaller-scale digital fanzines dotted around the Web, written by music fans and small businesspeople, and these, as well as the major music webzines, all benefit from the medium in which they were created, by being updated daily, allowing the consumer or the casual browser to access the latest music news, listen to, as well as read, music reviews, and even buy selected music directly from within the (Web) pages of the magazine.
Logo for Internet-only trade magazine Webnoize |
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Logo for Internet -only consumer magazine Addicted To Noise |
Logo for the British pop music weekly, NME 's web-site |
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