The Deli Magazine
Producer | Paolo De Gregorio |
---|---|
Categories | Music magazine |
Frequency | Quarterly |
Publisher | Independent/DIY |
Founder | Charles Newman |
First issue | 2004 |
Company | Independent/DIY |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Website | http://www.thedelimagazine.com |
The Deli is an independently owned music magazine and online website/blog started by Paolo De Gregorio in 2004. The project is based out of Brooklyn, New York and currently covers multiples cities and multiples musical genres.
History and function
The Deli began in 2004 as a continuation of a previous local fanzine. It covers in print independent bands and artists relevant to the different areas and scenes. Although bands that have been featured in the past when they were independent have since moved on to record labels, only independent bands, or bands without a record label, are covered in the print issues. The print edition of the magazine is quarterly. Both the magazine and online versions include editorial on the current music scene, band and industry interviews, classified ads and album and gear reviews each relevant to their specific city.
In addition to covering the local music scene, The Deli also hosts live music events through the cities it covers. The most relevant is The Deli's Best of NYC Fest, happening in the Spring in NYC and tied to the publication's Best of NYC Yearly Poll, whose jury comprises NYC booking agents, bloggers and scenemakers.
In 2011, The Deli began including reviews of audio gear and effects pedals through their technology blog,[1] Delicious Audio.[2] Prior to this, gear reviews were syndicated from the music production website SonicScoop as part of a limited partnership.[3][4]
Cities covered
The Deli website has expanded between 2007 and 2009, covering music scenes in multiple cities with daily updated blogs, polls, charts and live listings. The cities include: New York City, Los Angeles, California, Chicago, Illinois, San Francisco, California, Nashville, Tennessee, Portland, Oregon, Austin, Texas, Kansas City, Missouri, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and New England.
Deli iconography
The Deli uses their own icon coding on their website for the genres that they cover. Keeping in line with their food-oriented moniker, they use food to represent different genres of music; like a hamburger to represent rock or hash brownie to represent psychedelia. A fish is used to represent electronic music or a soup can for ambient, etc.
Issue history
- Featured artists
- Issue #1 Grizzly Bear
- Issue #2 Hopewell
- Issue #3 Nicole Atkins/Sylvie Lewis
- Issue #4 Diamond Nights
- Issue #5 The Occasion
- Issue #6 The Negatones
- Issue #7 The Jealous Girlfriends
- Issue #8 The Big Sleep
- Issue #9 Professor Murder
- Issue #10 Arizona
- Issue #11 Parts and Labor
- Issue #12 The XYZ Affair
- Issue #13 Claire and the Reasons
- Issue #14 Yeasayer
- Issue #15 Apes and Androids
- Issue #16 Semi Precious Weapons
- Issue #17 Crystal Stilts
- Issue #18 Chairlift
- Issue #19 Buke & Gase
- Issue #20 Za Za
- Issue #21 Glass Ghost
- Issue #22 Talk Normal
- Issue #23 Bear Hands
- Issue #24 Keepaway
- Issue #25 Lia Ices
- Issue #26 Twin Shadow
- Issue #27 Caveman
- Issue #28 The Stepkids
- Issue #29 Ava Luna
- Issue #30 Lucius
- Issue #31 Snowmine
- Issue #32 Foxygen
- Issue #33 People Get Ready
- Issue #34 Spirit Family Reunion
- Issue #35 Celestial Shore
- Issue #36 Wilsen
- Issue #37 Total Slacker
- Issue #38 Big Ups
- Issue #39 10 Year Anniversary Issue
- Issue #40 Sunflower Bean
- Issue #41 WOLVVES, Ejecta, DJ Empress, Kiah Victoria
- Issue #42 Porches
References
- ↑ http://guestofaguest.com/calendar/2011/10/the-deli-magazine-and-delicious-audio-present-the-stomp-box-exhibit-at-cmj-1/
- ↑ http://www.delicious-audio.com/
- ↑ http://thedelimagazine.com/!promo/media-kit-aes10.pdf
- ↑ http://www.sonicscoop.com/2010/10/12/cmj-announces-full-showcase-calendar-studio-time-update-panel-line-up/