Showing posts with label best magazine subscriptions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best magazine subscriptions. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2014

Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute

Proceedings of the United States Naval InstituteAs an Air Force officer, I envy this magazine. It's got a definite nautical emphasis, but the other services aren't neglected. Without a doubt the best single thing going in print for understanding the current policies/thought/developments in doctrine and technology of the US military.

It should be stressed that the USNI magazine "Proceedings" is NOT officially connected with the US Government in any way. As it says on the cover, the USNI is "the Independent Forum on National Defense"

From Proceedings you can get detailed articles on current naval technology and trends, plus points of view on military issues that would NOT be welcome in the halls of the Pentagon, but are at the same time presented with professionalism and due respect for all concerned. The articles are written by formerly and currently serving officers and enlisted military people who are mostly sea service people (Navy, Coast Guard, and Marines), and by civilians with pertinent backgrounds and specific area expertise. It is filled with always up to date, and sometimes contentious, articles and opinion pieces making it one of the most valued magazines in my reading bins.

Buy Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute Now

Have not received first copy of my subscription to date. Will update when and if it comes. Must be the sequester.

Read Best Reviews of Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute Here

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Classic Toy Trains

Classic Toy TrainsIf you love toy trains, then this is for you. I enjoy this magaine very much. But I have two complaints. First is the price of the subscription. To me it is over priced. But the publisher is over priced on all their magazines. Problem is they are good magazines, so you end up paying it, sometimes. There are times I just can't afford it. I will say their are other sellers of this magazine that have a much better price. But it is still salty in todays market. he other complaint is it is only 9 issues. I don't normally do reviews, but I saw no one had done one for this magaine and felt I had to do it. Got to stick up for those who support our O gauge toy trains. I do have HO trains as well and do get Model Railroader as well, when I can afford it.This magazine is better than Model Railroader in my opinion. My wife yells at me all the time about all the magazines I have around. But I don't want to get rid of them.

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Monday, June 30, 2014

Kauai Real Estate Magazine

Kauai Real Estate MagazineI have found this magazine to be most benefical to us as we recently moved here and pickd up a copy and it helped us know what was available in the area we wanted and in our price range and the information was very complete from the realtors we contacted.

Great informational magazine. I would recommend it to anyone who is looking to buy on Kauai.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

BBC Music

BBC MusicI have subscribed to the BBC Music Magazine almost since its beginning a decade ago. It was introduced to me as a way of both building a good classical CD collection and learning more about music at the same time. For one low price (less than the cost of an average classical CD, in fact), one gets both a quality recording (some original pieces, some re-issues of quality library recordings from the BBC archives).

Each month, BBC Music Magazine highlights the latest issues and reissues in the classical CD world, as well as branching out in folk, world, and more popular pieces. Reviews include the top selling CDs, notable new releases, orchestral works, opera, choral, chamber, instrumental, jazz, and musicals. These fall under the heading of the essential recordings and the best critics. The BBC, because of its long history of association with quality broadcasting on a global scale, has within its writing and critical nets the greatest from all over the world. Included among the reviews are the latest and greatest books on musical subjects, as well as a sampling and offering of web sites of interest. The section of reviews is always indexed, which is a nice and handy feature.

The section entitled 'The Guide' offers picks of the month including concerts and opera, radio and television highlights, and always a particular feature. Unfortunately for American readers, this is the listing for the UK -something to use when planning a trip, but less than useful for regular planning.

Some of my favourite issues have included personality profiles on violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, mezzo Katarina Karnéus, and pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard. A great deal of history and influence on the contemporary music scene is contained in articles such as Daring Diaghilev, which explores the influence of his great inspiration, and speculates on those who will come after; and The Bard's Challenge, which discusses the problems and opportunities in music of working with Shakespearean works.

Prized CDs have included an exclusive BBC Symphony Orchestra performance of the Mahler's Symphony No. 1, conducted by Manfred Honeck, a passionate, idealistic performance that has an exceptional freshness and clarity, which tells a heartfelt story that includes memorial tunes and funereal overtones as well as a survivor's rejoicing at the conclusion. This symphony provides the backbone of the BBC Proms, and is the flagship orchestra of the BBC. The issue prior, which included a major article on Katarina Karnéus, the Welsh mezzo-soprano, included the CD of her performance of Berlioz Les nuits d'été with the BBC Philharmonic, conducted by Vassily Sinaisky. The month prior, the accompanying CD was a collection of piano pieces performed by Paul Lewis, pianist with an extensive career of performances since his performance in the World Piano Competition in London in 1994, performing pieces from Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Liszt, and Schubert.

In addition to the regular monthly issues, BBC Music Magazine includes regular special editions, which have included in the past 'The Golden Age of Musicals', a look at Broadway, West End, and other musicals from the time of Vaudeville to the present, with major articles of Hart, Rodgers, and Hammerstein, Lerner and Lowe, Bernstein, and more; 'The Glory of Venice', particularly concentrating on the works of Gabrieli, Monteverdi and Vivaldi; and Schubert: His Life, His Work, His World, which explores the background, biography, influences and compositions of this important composer. This range of special editions shows the breadth of BBC Music Magazine as well as the depth they are willing to go to in development of important themes or composers.

This is a very high quality publication with the addition of excellent recordings at a bargain price. This is perhaps one of the best ways in which to build a classical CD collection at home, and I am pleased to continue my subscription.

Here's the magazine that is what Gramophone pretends to be -a magazine for serious (and not so serious) collectors of classical music that want extraordinary value for their money and don't want their time wasted. While Gramophone has moved into new territory in recent years -such as spending pages delineating download technology and recordings and explaining why music in places like Fort Worth, Texas is worth 6 pages of text and color photography -BBC Music Magazine has stayed true to the core interests of most classical music buyers and collectors.

Both magazines carry features on important musical developments; both carried features this year on the 150th anniversary of Edward Elgar. It's not what they both do that differentiates them, it's what they both do that's different. If you review any two issues of these magazines side-by-side you will notice a bunch of differences, all of which -in my opinion -make BBC Music Magazine the better one to buy. Here they are:

1. First, each magazine comes with a CD every month. Gramophone thinks, for some bizarre reason, that people want to listen to a talky interview between its editor and a performer and then settle for listening to a dozen or so 20-second bleeding chunks of mostly obscure recordings selected by its editor as recordings of the month. Meanwhile, BBC Music Magazine rewards subscriber with a CD that is either a single piece recorded in concert, a group of complete works recorded in concert, or, as in the most recent month (June 2007) a historic recording -Malcolm Sargent's 1956 concert recording of Elgar's Symphony No. 1, its first release on CD. I'll leave it to you to decide which of these options makes the most sense for collectors -a CD you can add to your collection and sell, trade, give away or play...or an interview comparable to listening to an announcer interview a professional athlete and some bleeding chunks half the duration you get at the average Amazon site.

2. Both magazine covers state with pride they review "120 CDs, DVDs & books" (BBC Music Magazine) and "160 CDs, DVDs, books and downloads" (Gramophone). A closer inspection shows nearly all BBC Music Magazine reviews are of recordings by major composers of famous and not so famous repertoire. Gramophone review CDs by major composers; they also fill their pages with reviews of CDs by people you never heard of. The current issue includes reviews by composers named Billone, Arhtur Benjamin, Arnell, FX Richter, Moondog (is that a composer?), Grange, McCabe, Alnaes, Jeffreys, Marsh, Tucapsky, and SS Wesley. Some of the collections they review feature even more obscure composers.

3. Gramophone dedicates up to a dozen pages per issue to reviews of equipment and offers at least a half-dozen pages per issue to columnists that ruminate on issues of little interest to American readers. These columnists often end up saying something in support of Gramophone magazine. That's not too self-serving, eh? Meanwhile, BBC Music Magazine dedicates a couple pages to reviews of equipment and has virtually no pages dedicated to opinion outside of its editor's column.

4. While Gramophone has been through two extensivee format changes in the past five years and is still something of a mishmash, BBC Music Magazine's presentation is clean, simple, presentable, easy to read, and contains about two-thirds the advertising pages as Gramophone. I know BBC Music thinks the latter area is a problem. To me, as a reader, it is a joy.

With BBC Music Magazine available and delivering an original CD every month not available anywhere else in the world, I wonder why anyone continues to subscribe to Gramophone. Both magazines are relatively expensive (sinlge issue cost is $8.75 for BBC Music Magazine and $8.95 for Gramophone) but you can get a trial subscription for a good price if you buy here, shop around, or watch your junk mail. I got a one-year subscription for $55 that way.

No American should cash in their value-added subscription to either Fanfare or American Record Guide to pick up either British publication. However, if you are in the market to expand your base of knowledge, it is clear to me the best alternative is to subscribe to BBC Music Magazine. Not every one of their monthly CDs is a keeper but they are all of some value. I throw away that CD I get from Gramophone every month, my testimony to its value. I'm going to do the same with it altogether when my current subscription ends.

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I would agree with the other reviews that place this magazine in high regard. However, there are some concerns I thought I should mention, especially when comparing this magazine to Gramophone.

First, I will agree that the cds provided by BBC are better. Gramophone doesn't provide full works on their CD. However, from my standpoint, there is value to the interviews that Gramophone includes. It's just annoying to hear a bunch of clips of works.

However, when it comes to content, I often find myself prefering Gramophone to BBC Magazine. I take personal exception to the implication in one of the other reviews dismissing Fort Worth in the music world, as I live only miles from there. Our conductor, Miguel Harth-Bedoya, maintains an active tour schedule that includes, among others, the Chicago and Cleveland Orchestras, both among the top in the country. They also regularly premiere new works by significant living composers, including Kevin Puts, who was their composer-in-residence two years ago and is now a professor of composition at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, MD. Maybe his name isn't the most familiar today, but living composers are what keep music fresh.

The fact is, music is alive today because we don't stay with what is familiar, and I enjoy learning about performers and composers that are new to me. I think BBC sticks too close to the traditional, and also has too much of a British preference for the reporting of music. The aforementioned review cites their extensive coverage of Elgar. It should be no surprise that a British magazine puts far more coverage on the most notable British composer of the last 200 years than Gramophone. Reading this magazine threatens to put blinders on the reader, focusing too much on the old and British. There are only so many articles to be written about composers and performers that are already dead. Gramophone favors the living, breathing art of music in its coverage.

That being said, I do wish Gramophone didn't put quite so much stock into their massive review sections. If BBC talked about more living composers and performers, at least those that aren't British, I would give it my vote.

Read Best Reviews of BBC Music Here

BBC Music main competitio in Gramophone Mag. BBC Music gives you a decent new CD each month, which makes this a bargain.

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My father very much enjoys and is quite knowledgeable about classical music, so I was hoping to get it right, and this magazine seems to be an excellent one. I gave him the subscription along with two unopened back issues I found on ebay. It was a hit!

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Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Mahogany Blues

Mahogany BluesThis is one of the most informative publications that I've read in a long time. As a history teacher, I've decided to buy enough copies to share with the classes that I teach. The information about the military and prison industrial complex is crucial info for young people today!

I'm so glad to find a magazine that's interesting and doesn't insult my intelligence. Even though I don't necessarily agree with all of the political views in the magazine, I definitely learned a lot!

Buy Mahogany Blues Now

Are you complaining like I was about how magazines are all full of fluff, beauty products, Paris Hilton and light news? Check out this mag run by young people in New York confronting global issues. It was informative, artistic creative and open. I fully recommend it, and have only seen it improve during my subscription!

Read Best Reviews of Mahogany Blues Here

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Quality Popular Crossword Puzzles Jumbo

Quality Popular Crossword Puzzles JumboThis is my favorite crossword-puzzle magazine because each issue offers 90 Easy, Medium, Hard, and Challenger puzzles. Lots of folks want only Easy puzzles, but what's the point of that? I want puzzles of differing levels of difficulty. I particularly like theme puzzles. For example, puzzles with clues answered by various book titles. This magazine does not offer lots of puzzles with that theme, but the few it does offer are excellent. As to overall level of difficulty, I would say that most of the puzzles fall into the Easy to Medium hard category. I also like the size of the magazine--5 and 3/4 inches wide by 9 inches tall. This is perfect for working puzzles in bed before going to sleep--the primary way I use the magazine. The front and back magazine covers are soft and flexible, which also facilitates solving puzzles while sitting up in bed. Working puzzles before sleeping helps to take my mind off the day's many problems. And, finally, I hope that solving puzzles will keep my mind healthy, active, and strong during my long creep into senility.

I gave this as a gift for my grandma and she loves it! Will definitely do this again this Christmas.

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These crossword puzzles are just the right level for me. I have been a subscriber for over 20 years. I find they are not too easy nor are they too hard.

Read Best Reviews of Quality Popular Crossword Puzzles Jumbo Here

Friday, November 15, 2013

Disney Princess

Disney PrincessMy 5 year old daughter loves to receive her magazine. However, it is loaded with ads for dolls and other Disney items. The stories are great and she loves to look at the pictures sent in by other readers. But, because there is so much advertisingI really don't feel that it is worth the price. I will be looking for a different magazine once my subscription has run out.

We just started receiving this magazine and my 4 year old loves it. If your daughter is obsessed with Disney princesses like mine, then this is the magazine for her. It has several princess stories, coloring pages, and a few activities. This month has one cooking and one sewing activity just to give you an idea.

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Our daughter, soon to be 5, recieves this magazine as a gift from her Grandma, and she loves it! She loves disney princess, and this magazine is great for her. There are usually several stories in comic book style that we read together, in addition to coloring pages, a full page poster, and some have come with a page of princess stickers. She always looks foward to it coming in the mail. We will definately renew it for her next year.

Read Best Reviews of Disney Princess Here

And I am not talking about the subscription! My problem with this magzine is that there is SO much advertising in it all from Disney. I know it's their magazine, so they're entitled to do it, but my daughter did (some of) the activities, and then treated it like a catalog "Mommy, can we get this?, Mommy look at the movie coming out!". We switched to Sparkle magazine which has NO advertising in it just D.W., Angelina Ballerina, and other favorite girl characters. Yes, it's got all the Disney Princesses, but you may feel like the evil stepmother after having to say no to all the "I want"s.

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My 4 yr old loves this magazine it has activities and stories with all her favorite Princesses. I bought this orginally through a fund raiser (my older child's school) it has been such a hit I renewed it!

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Saturday, November 2, 2013

Jewish Press - Ny

Jewish Press - NyI read this news paper whenever I can get my hands on it and I am a Reform Jew. It is a great paper and it opens my eyes up to all the issues regarding the Jewish Community as well as what is going on in Israel. I do thoroughly enjoy reading about all points of view, as this is a very conservative paper. I am very liberal minded. It has great articles inclusive of kashrut, torah and the like. Don't be scared away by the other reviewer if you are not Orthodox. You will enjoy this as it is well written. Maybe if we acted like one community instead of dividing ourselves will labels like, Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, Modern Orthodox, Chasid, or Reconstructionist, we would better understand and respect each other than continue to be divided by what is different in our philosopies. Anyhow, fantastic newspaper for all to enjoy!

This is a newspaper for 'Orthodox Jews'. It contains columns on various questions of Torah, and also on questions of public interest to the community. It is very proIsrael in its political orientation, and would be considered in U.S. terms very 'conservative ' on social issues.

Among its most longterm and famous columnists are Morris Mandel, and Arnold Fine.

It also has many other features including bookreviews, a childrens' column.

It has a heimish quality and it is filled with advertisements and information largely for the New York City Jewish community.

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Monday, August 26, 2013

Women's Health (1-year auto-renewal)

Women's HealthI've been a reader of Women's Health (1-year) off and on for many years and have given some thought as to the best way to characterize the magazine for potential buyers. Here's essentially what you get in every issue of the mag:

-updated and interesting FITNESS information

-WEIGHT LOSS information/tips

-HEALTH information pertaining to women

-NUTRITION information for better health

-information on having a better SEX life

Note that some of the words are captialized. Well, they represent the main topics that you'll be reading about in this magazine. So, if you're looking for the latest info on any of these kinds of topics, it's worth your time to check it out. Also recommend The 5-Minute Plantar Fasciitis Solution for women suffering from plantar fasciitis.

My boyfriend ordered subscriptions to Men's and Women's health (for himself and for me, respectively) about six months ago. It didn't take me too long to figure out that women's health could be more aptly titled "men's health lite" i.e., a similar magazine with significant alterations (read: reductions) in reading level, scientific basis, and practicality.

The editors of these magazines seem to think that men seek scientifically-sound, medically proven facts for nutrition and exercise physiology, while women are looking for cheesy motivation and advice about lipstick colors.

If you want fluff, you might as well save the money and buy one of the less expensive women's 'health' mags (Self, Fitness, etc.); if you want more substantial content, try Men's Health. (Which niche Women's Health fulfills, then, seems unclear.)

save your money!

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Unlike many female oriented magazines this one has some fine advice on health, fitness & exercise. You won't find destructive over the top dieting tips that could make you very ill & it is not overloaded with ads like "Oxygen, Shape, & Self." For those of us who want overall fitness, cross training, interesting recipes, & new outdoor activities to try this magazine is the best one out there. Even for all of us middle aged gals trying to get back some of our youthful health & appearance. Also, if you are into weight training, I would try a muscle magazine for that. WH is not that big on that subject. The main negative is some of the departments keep changing their formats & some articles can be as little as one paragraph. But, on the whole it still is better than its competitors.

Read Best Reviews of Women's Health (1-year auto-renewal) Here

I only recently picked up on this magazine and so I feel behind the times. What is possibly ironic is that for the last couple of years I would pick up the occasional copy of Men's Health because I felt that I was finally getting up to date articles on FDA approved diets, foods, vitamins and other health related OTC drugs, as well as updated fitness routines. Thankfully the same information can be found and how it relates to a woman's system here.

I've also read the one and two star reviews of the magazine and the reviews that condemn this magazine and touted 'Shape' instead left me scratching my head. I had a subscription for several years to 'Shape' in college and ultimately turned my back on it as I found it to be superficial featuring a famous thin model/celebrity who was never particularly known for their athletic ability as the big selling point. It also bothered me that every other ad was for a magic diet pill/supplement that was eventually done away with after an expose on some news program listing a litany of problems.

A health magazine should be about health: getting it and keeping it and warn the public against a quick fix. I also like to see exercise and fitness emphasized more heavily than fashion. Which is exactly what I got here. Ultimately I want to be healthy and feel good for a long, long time. I also want to keep up to date on current methods for maintaining this goal. I really believe I get current and effective information and advice here. Other women's health/fitness magazines felt to me more like they were compeating with Cosmo and Glamour type magazines.

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If you're looking at ordering this magazine because you've been reading your boyfriend's Men's Health, really enjoyed the work-out and health tips, and you said to yourself "Huh they make a version for women, I should order it." DON'T! Reading Women's Health is like reading Cosmo, filled with celebrities, causal language and make-up tips (not to mention advice for men probably gleaned from Men's Health so that you can surprise your boyfriend?). Don't waste your time on this vapid stuff.

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