This was the second to last music magazine I analysed and after the experience of the first one I had a bit more content to analyse and alot more analytical language to do so. I found this was simialar to the to the first as they both have quite busy covers but this was approaching more towards my audience style that looked as though it was a more mature appreciation of music.With the text it adds a slight drop shadow to every piece of text and caption which I thought was a nice effect and eventually utilized this in my final magazine to create different effects on individual captions and create a professional effect which I think I eventually managed after multiple trials and errors.
This magazine was a lot harder to analyse as until a later date I didnt realise that it was actually an advert rather than an actual magazine cover. Although now looking back it had some amazing graphical effects such as splitting the page into thirds with the christmas lights and the sideways portrait of Leonard Cohen. It creates a huge effect and keads the eye in a landscape view despite the portrait layout. I didnt realise it yet but this was the exact audience I was aiming for as it had a much more retro appreciation of music that follwed the same maturity of music that I was aiming at emulating their design choices so I could suit the audience. This was my first step on a long road of editing to follow the strict design and colour palette that MOJO followed.
With every different music magazine and music style there is always alternativedesign styles, this is more increasingly so with modern magazine. Retro, taking up sepia images and a 3 tone colour palette, Rock: Generally a stamped text style and distorted images with a typically dark colour palettes. R&B and rap generally have a more fancy reflective text type to suit the genre it is tied in with. Each and every magazine has something different and I think that mimicking these styles was key to making my magazine look professional. I wanted a basic style that was mainly Bold or Arial, just to create a stand out effect of prestige and a more mature generation. On the front cover with almost ever magazine had a max of about 3 people and almost always in direct mode of adress,this was more to do with the target audience rather than just coincidence due to the retro audience being more into smaller bands/ artists rather than massive orchestras of people, It always had the Masthead about 1/4 of the way down the magazine and about 90% of the time had the central image overlapping the lettering in some form or other. I decided that the other 10% of the time is when there is more than 1 band member on the front cover and due to the triangular compositional shot type of my final mag's cover I decided to not overlap the band members as it didnt look professional.
Contents pages were quite intresting as these were alot more varied in styles as with mojo they tended to have switched them completely in the last few years, this again followed my pattern of audience as it had to be quite stylish, clean cut and bold but without making the maturity feel lost in the process. They used to have a collage of most of the articles in the magazine and kept the lead article much bigger than the rest but recently they have switched this to a more abstract picture on the inside with either a very bold colour palette or a unusual shot of a band member with a bit of photography originality.











