5/1/14

Great Music Mags: ICE

ICE was a godsend to music fans buying CDs from 1987-2006.  Each issue listed not just upcoming release dates but classified ads from vendors and various articles on new and upcoming releases including interviews with people behind the scenes.  They also had a CD Watchdog column where defective or misleading discs were called out and an eye-opening columns focusing on imports and underground (bootleg) releases.  ICE remains one of the most read (studied, actually) magazines HERC has ever come across and he just spent several months converting his collection to PDF files for easier reference.  


It was HERC's good buddy John Book, who hipped him to the existence of ICE in 1991, four years after the newsletter had begun publication.  (John says he learned of ICE through Factsheet Five circa 1989 or 1990.)  ICE had yet to show up in any of HERC's local haunts so, based on John's detailed description and whole-hearted recommendation, HERC subscribed somewhat blindly.  


After his first issue (#58, top) arrived, he ordered all 57 back issues at a 50% quantity discount or $1 an issue (above). HERC continued to re-up his subscription, even after it began showing up on record store shelves and when publisher Pete Howard folded the publication in 2006, HERC's remaining subscription was surprisingly filled with weekly issues of Billboard until the owed issue obligation was fulfilled.


It's interesting to note the evolution of ICE's masthead and logo through the years.  What became apparent after his back-issues arrived, was that the first issue of his subscription marked the third look for the self-described monthly CD newsletter.  The logo at the top of this post is from #1 and by #8 (below), had already been freshened. 



HERC's favorite ICE logo is the one (below) that debuted in 1996. For the next four years, a different colored graphic graced the cover of the CD news authority.


That logo was replaced with a simplistic box with an outline (below) as ICE became a full color magazine with the slogan tomorrowsmusicnewstoday.



The last, subtle logo change (above) lasted nineteen more issues until #219, the final issue.  Each redesign invariably brought with it more features and more pages; #200 featured sixty-four pages.  By comparison, the very first issue was just eight pages.  If you never experienced ICE, you certainly missed out.  To their credit, some record stores kept laminated copies for in-store reference for their customers - HERC remembers seeing a small group of music fans huddled around the plastic pages.  Let HERC know in the Comments if you'd like to see more of ICE.

6 comments:

  1. More ICE please. And top off my drink while you're at it...

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    1. Right away, sir. Gratuities are appreciated.

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  2. Incredibly, I wasn't aware of 'Ice' until your post... Sounds like it would've been a good fit with my dearly departed 'CD Review' magazine: http://forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/digital-audio-review-mag.42542/

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    1. With all the dramatic pauses in my above comment, you'd think William Shatner was my ghostwriter, or somethin'.

      Must... emphasize... point!!

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    2. You mean ol' Billy Shat ain't your ghostwriter? Seems highly illogical.

      I picked up the occasional issue of CD Review back in the day, enjoying the usually witty and informative reviews but ICE was the shiz as far as advance notice of upcoming discs weeks or months out, including technical details from the involved producers or engineers and reporting any problems with CDs once they were released.

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  3. I'm LAAAAAAATE to this post, I know, but oh good gods please send those PDFs to the Internet Archive. I read ICE near-RELIGIOUSLY for years and years, getting issues from our local indie record stores - the "going underground" column was like this mysterious window into some arcane world for me. (Which then got replaced by Dime-A-Dozen's searchable boots torrent and then YouTube's inevitable "here's last nights show" uploads, I guess.) I also remember how you could see kinda behind the scenes of production as certain reissues and things got updated with new info or changed decisions got reported on in successive issues.

    But I was looking for stuff on ICE in a fit of nostalgia today, and this post just blew me away. Thanks.

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