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Themen | 007/2024 (05.07.2024)
  • Good morning, captain
    Fairport maestro sailing once more for sadder shores on nineteenth solo LP.
  • LEARNING TO FLY
    Sixty years ago, David Crosby, Gene Clark and Roger McGuinn bonded over a love of folk music and The Beatles. With Michael Clarke and Chris Hillman, they became THE BYRDS. What followed - jealousy, schism and divergent paths to equally wondrous music - has never erased the chiming folk-rock sound of the original band. "The five of us had a magic," discovers GRAYSON HAVER CURRIN.
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Themen | 008/2024 (02.08.2024)
  • The stone tapes
    Demos found by Cash’s son lead new arrangements of songs a struggling star sang before Rick Rubin arrived. By Grayson Haver Currin.
  • Journey of The SORCERESS
    Bereft of Christine, and broken with Lindsey (or so it seems) for good, STEVIE NICKS soldiers on, her Hyde Park show in July a testament to the power of her personality. Fifty years since she joined the band that made her name and wrote songs that gave them new life, it’s time to do something for herself. “I can do anything I want now,” she tells BOB MEHR, “and not have to worry about going back to Fleetwood Mac.”
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Themen | 009/2024 (30.08.2024)
  • Love on the rocks
    Inspired by Japanese manga and Italian cinema, the Irish quintet’s fourth searches for truth in a world gone wrong. Keith Cameron is smitten. Illustration by The Red Dress.
  • Kings of pain
    Vastly expanded reissue of the group’s highly fractious and hugely successful final album.
  • THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN
    ...turned the ’80s Upside Down with some of the most thrilling and provocative music of the era. But what really went on behind the overgrown coiffs and sullen stares of the brothers Reid was anyone’s guess – until now. In an extract from their eye-opening upcoming memoir, they relive the watershed year of 1985 – the year of their epochal PSYCHOCANDY LP, and a whirlwind of hope, hype, dysfunction and violence.
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Themen | 010/2024 (04.10.2024)
  • Right to roam
    Gilmour’s fifth and best solo album follows new paths through modernist soundscapes, guided by producer Charlie Andrew. By Tom Doyle. Illustration by Ernie Hunt.
  • ON A NIGHT LIKE THIS
    Planet Waves and BOB DYLAN’s 1974 arena tour with THE BAND have often been dismissed as excessive cash-ins: overblown bouts of premature, and instantly regretted, nostalgia. But time – and a vast new box set of music from the tour – reveals instead a crucial transition, as Dylan turned away from isolation and New York, and towards new and fertile phases of his career. “It was a celebration of the past and a going beyond,” discovers GRAYSON HAVER CURRIN.
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Themen | 011/2024 (01.11.2024)
  • Five alive!
    A spirited valedictory offering from the late Wayne Kramer. Just don’t expect the jams to be kicked out like it’s 1969, warns Andrew Perry.
  • HAPPY GILMOUR
    With a new album embracing “complete anarchic madness”, his first tour in eight years and (we kid you not) a single with Ice-T, Pink Floyd’s imposing guitarist returns with a mission: to shake up his music, shrug off the fug of nostalgia, disperse the pall of Covid. And there may, DAVID GILMOUR hints, soon be more to come. “I’ve got a trove of stuff already,” he assures MARK BLAKE.
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Porträt von Mojo

Mojo ist das perfekte Magazin für alle, die Rock lieben. Moderne und Old-School-Fans finden hier die perfekten Artikel über die Rockszene, mit Interviews und exklusiven Einblicken in Ihre Lieblingsbands.

Welche Inhalte bietet Mojo?

Mojo hat eine Fülle von verschiedenen Inhalten, auf die es sich konzentriert. Es gibt einen ausführlichen Blick auf die klassischen Rockbands, die das Genre zu dem gemacht haben, was es heute ist. Neben diesem allgemeinen Blick auf Bands und das Genre selbst enthält Mojo auch hervorragende Rezensionen neuer Alben, sodass Sie alle Informationen erhalten, die Sie brauchen, bevor Sie das Album selbst hören. Außerdem finden Sie in jeder Ausgabe erstklassige Gespräche mit prominenten Künstlern der Branche über eine Vielzahl von Themen, von ihrer Musik bis zu ihrem persönlichen Leben.

Wer sollte Mojo lesen?

Obwohl sich Mojo hauptsächlich auf Rockmusik konzentriert, sowohl Mainstream als auch Underground, ist es ein Muss für alle Musikfans. Durch die große inhaltliche Vielfalt erreicht das Magazin jeden Musikbegeisterten, der nach einer hochwertigen Lektüre sucht.

Das Besondere an Mojo

Mojo ist ein wirklich umfangreiches Magazin. Mit seinen ausführlichen Rezensionen und hochwertigen Interviews werden die Leser selbst feststellen, dass kein anderes Magazin an die Qualität und Tiefe herankommt, die es erreicht.

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  • exzellentes Musikarchiv, das von der Vergangenheit bis zur Gegenwart reicht

Der Verlag hinter Mojo

Hinter dem Qualitätsmusikmagazin Mojo steht die Bauer Media Group. Die Bauer Media Group ist ein deutsches Multimediakonglomerat mit Hauptsitz in Hamburg. Seit ihrer Gründung im Jahr 1875 hat sie mehr als 600 Zeitschriften, über 400 digitale Produkte und 50 Radio- und Fernsehsender sowie Druckereien, Post-, Vertriebs- und Marketingdienstleistungen unter ihrem Dach vereint.

Alternativen zu Mojo

Auf unserer Plattform gehört Mojo zu den Rock-Musikzeitschriften. Ein weiteres empfehlenswertes Musikmagazin ist Classic Rock, die perfekte Zeitschrift für alle Rockfans. Es bietet eine Fülle von Inhalten über die größten Bands aller Zeiten, mit exklusiven Geschichten, über die noch nie zuvor berichtet wurde. Eine weitere Alternative wäre Rolling Stone. Das von Kritikern hochgelobte Magazin ist zweifellos eines der bekanntesten Musikmagazine überhaupt und macht diesem Namen mit seinen hochwertigen Artikeln und Interviews alle Ehre.

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In der aktuellen Ausgabe von Mojo

  • ALL BACK TO MY PLACE
    THE STARS REVEAL THE SONIC DELIGHTS GUARANTEED TO GET THEM GOING…
  • WHAT GOES ON!
    THE HOT NEWS AND BIZARRE STORIES FROM PLANET MOJO
  • Save Magic!
    Five key tracks from the latest Joni motherlode.
  • Julian Casablancas
    The Strokes/Voidz mainman talks entitlement, respect and Arctic Monkeys.
  • RHODA RUNNERS
    All-star Dakar, times three.
  • SUBSCRIBE TO MOJO!
    GET 12 ISSUES OF MOJO AND SAVE £16 A YEAR ON SHOP PRICES
  • THE MOJO INTERVIEW
    Negotiating fame, the f(olk)-word, then the “dark nightmare” of LA, emerging into motherhood and renewed self-possession, she’s the songwriting seeker plumbing the depths of the psyche, and refusing to curry favour. “I wouldn’t wish meeting me on anybody,” says Laura Marling.
  • LAURA IN ORDER
    The pick of Marling’s mature works, by Victoria Segal.
  • NEW YORK STATE OF MINDS
    Fifty years since their instigation, and 10 since the passing of their last original member, the RAMONES’ rock’n’roll revolution maintains a living legacy. But was there ever a more unlikely success story? KRIS NEEDS returns to the birth of the band, unravelling a tale of blood, toil, tears, sweat, more blood, heroin, OCD, dumb genius and perfect timing: “They ignited the powder keg that was waiting to be ignited.”
  • RAMONES: THE MOVIE!?
    With an errant star and warring estates, will this Brudders biopic ever get made? KRIS NEEDS investigates.
  • The UNQUIET AMERICAN
    In 1974 RANDY NEWMAN - the agent provocateur of singer-songwriters - unleashed his greatest provocation: a barb that speared racist bigotry and liberal hypocrisy alike. In a chapter from his in-depth new Newman biography, Robert Hilburn unpacks the complex genesis of Good Old Boys and its speaking-the-unspeakable anthem, Rednecks: "He knew the song was going to upset people-to put it mildly-but it’s how he saw the world."
  • THE NEWMAN LEAGUE
    Racists, rotters and rogues: agallery of, er, unusual Randy narrators. Lined up by Andrew Male.
  • MOJO PRESENTS
    An American indie rock supergroup that’s into “failure”, “risks” and “things sounding fuckedup”? Featuring members of Pavement, Dirty Three and, er, Zwan? That’ll be THE HARD QUARTET, masters of creativity on the fly and makers of the ‘Old Man Record Of 2024’. “We’re pushing all our chips in!” they tell ANDREW PERRY.
  • A HARD ROAD
    Four previous intersections of The Hard Quartet, by Andrew Perry.
  • Flip Your Wig!
    SPACESHIPS! CRUSTACEA! BEEHIVES! New wave culture vultures The B-52’s spun it all into floor-shaking hits, then survived tragedy to become even bigger. As singer KATE PIERSON releases a new solo album, she tells BILL DeMAIN of the band’s fierce commitment: “Even when we were singing about lobsters and volcanos, we sang like our lives depended on it!”
  • “THE B-52’s PAVED THE ROAD FOR US”
    Kate & Co hymned by the Athens acts they inspired. As told to BILL DeMAIN.
  • Tucker: The Man & His Dream
    Revered by Bowie, wooed by Crosby and Stills, hosted by President Mobutu, TUCKER ZIMMERMAN is the classical dropout who became one of the Great Lost Singer-Songwriters. Except now he’s been found, by folk-rockers du jour Big Thief. Exposing his genius may even be the best thing they’ve done. “When we’re together it’s like fireflies exploding,” he tells WILL HODGKINSON.
  • “MY SONGWRITING HERO”
    Big Thief’s ADRIANNE LENKER on taking Tucker Zimmerman to Dairy Queen…
  • SADE’S DIAMOND LIFE BEGINS
    SADE ADU was a stylist when she met London Latin ensemble Pride. Soon after, she was fronting a new, streamlined group playing soul, jazz and sophisticated pop. After Sade’s classic Diamond Life hit in the second half of ’84, West End clubland and squats with frozen pipes made way for international success. Forty years on from their moment-defining debut’s release, players and friends recall the moment of fusion. “It was all positivity and action stations,” they say. “Sade took the full brunt of the fame.”
  • HAPPY GILMOUR
    With a new album embracing “complete anarchic madness”, his first tour in eight years and (we kid you not) a single with Ice-T, Pink Floyd’s imposing guitarist returns with a mission: to shake up his music, shrug off the fug of nostalgia, disperse the pall of Covid. And there may, DAVID GILMOUR hints, soon be more to come. “I’ve got a trove of stuff already,” he assures MARK BLAKE.
  • THE SILVER SOUND
    David Gilmour’s greatest bits, in Pink Floyd and beyond, selected by TOM DOYLE.
  • “IT WAS EMOTIONAL TO HEAR RICK’S PLAYING”
    GUY PRATT on David Gilmour, Rick Wright and his “filthy” bass sounds on Luck And Strange.
  • “I FEEL A RESPONSIBILITY”
    SYD BARRETT and DAVID GILMOUR: two very different men bonded by art, friendship and history.
  • Five alive!
    A spirited valedictory offering from the late Wayne Kramer. Just don’t expect the jams to be kicked out like it’s 1969, warns Andrew Perry.
  • “Right now, we are all MC5!”
    Heavy Lifting producer Bob Ezrin talks to Andrew Perry.
  • Hello birds, hello trees
    Acclaimed folk duo finally follow 2020 covers album with her first new songs since 2011.
  • Future days
    Seven songs and, suddenly, a potentially riveting way forward for the celebrated guitarist.
  • The proclaimer
    Hull’s head honcho offers another spin in the caravan of love.
  • Incredible journey
    London tenor saxophonist embraces orchestration on widescreen second LP inspired by life’s “twists and turns”.
  • Cue Anon!
    Solo album number six – his best yet? By John Mulvey.
  • Factory records
    The first official telling of Lou Reed’s origin story as a paycheque composer: 25 tracks of faux-Brill Building candy, corn and echo-laden chaos that led to the debut Velvet Underground album.
  • High water mark
    This mountain of music is so mighty it reorients a Dylan era.
  • Timeless flight
    Jeff Beck and friends (but no Eric) captured at the Beeb in encyclopaedic four-disc collection.
  • Iron curtain up!
    Presenting highlights from a quarter century of Ukraine’s mostly obscured musical output.
  • Sol Power
    From the cut-out abyss: gospel-powered baroque pop for the counterculture, with Jimmy Webb.
  • Tindersticks
    Nottingham outliers soundtracking the human condition.
  • Here we go again?
    ABBA interviewer seeks another side of Swedish superstars.
  • Streets of fire
    New York City’s boho enclave has a musical legacy too big for this book, says Grayson Haver Currin.
  • Basement jacked
    This documentary-plusmusic package tells the story of the first artist-owned commercial recording studio.
  • Cold comfort
    The Chills’ Martin Phillipps, New Zealand indie-pop flagbearer, left us on July 28.
  • A case of musical mistaken identity?
    Let us answer your rock-related questions and settle all musical arguments.
  • Sid Griffin and The Long Ryders
    It began with country rock synthesis in Hollywood. And ended when cruel fate piled on the blows.