Monday 7 June 2021

Media project: Music magazine

For our last half-term of Media, we will have the opportunity to do some of the more creative, practical work that we missed out on due to the covid lockdowns.

Our work will be based on the 2021 Year 13 A Level Media coursework brief which was to create a music magazine and music video cross media production.

Print brief: music magazine

You should create the front page for a music magazine – specifically:

  • a front cover featuring your new artist/band promoting a tour and music video
  • a selection of cover lines appropriate for the magazine and audience

The magazine targets a mainstream music audience.

You can either create a new, original music magazine or create your own front cover for an existing music magazine.


Research and planning blog tasks

Create a blogpost called 'Music magazine research and planning' and complete the following tasks to plan and prepare your print work:

1) Research music magazine cover key conventions. Look over the magazine cover key conventions notes sheet and write which of these you will use for your magazine cover. (This is a film magazine example but the conventions still apply).

2) Find at least five music magazine front covers (either current or former magazines as many have stopped their print editions) aimed at a similar target audience to your project (mainstream music audience). For each one, pick out one design idea or convention that you could use in your own print work. A few examples to start you off:





Planning, sketching and writing

Complete the tasks below in the same blogpost you have already created for research and planning:

1) Plan a title and slogan (sell line) for your new, original music magazine. Sketch out possible designs for the masthead - font, style, colour etc. If you are creating a front cover for an existing music magazine, make sure you recreate the magazine's style and branding accurately - what font do they use? What colours? What is their slogan?

2) Plan the content for your magazine front cover. What will be your main image? What cover lines will you include on the cover?

3) Produce an A4 sketch of your front cover including the key conventions and design tricks you have studied in existing magazines and then planned in the planning tasks above.


Photoshoot planning

1) Who will you photograph as your artist/band to appear on the front cover of your magazine? This is vital for planning your photoshoot (note: if it is you or someone in the class it will make things a lot easier in terms of running the photoshoot but you can do this at home if you prefer).

2) Write a shot list for your photoshoot. Make sure you plan the right camera shots for a magazine front cover - medium shots, medium close-ups etc.

3) What costumeprops or make-up will you require for your photoshoot?

Photoshoot: Tuesday 15 June


Photoshop design

If you have completed all of the research and planning tasks above then open up Adobe Photoshop CS6 and create a new A4 document (portrait). You can start to create your title, cover lines and any other branding or colour on your cover and then add your photo when you have completed your photoshoot. The following videos will help with this:

Photoshop CS6 magazine tutorial:


Get started with Photoshop CS6 tutorial:


Research and planning deadline: Tuesday 15 June

Year 11: Preparing for A Level Media

We're now asking Year 11 students to move away from GCSE work and start preparing for A Level.

Year 10 students will still be in class working on a range of creative, practical projects designed to fill in some of the production work we missed out on due to the covid lockdowns. 

For Year 11, we've put together a range of activities for students thinking of studying A Level Media:

Preparation for A Level Media

If you're thinking of studying A Level Media Studies, there are a variety of activities you can do over the next few months to help prepare for post-16 study.

Just like GCSE Media, our A Level Media course is blog-based. You will complete the majority of the work on your A Level Media blogs and all our tasks and notes are available on our main blog hub Media Macguffin. The first thing you can do is take a look at the A Level Media blogs to get an idea of the work we do:

Year 12 A Level Media blog
Year 13 A Level Media blog

The best A Level Media students have a good understanding of the world around us and the wider media landscape. The way to develop this understanding is simply engaging with the media on a daily basis. The following activities will really help with this:

Read the news every day - the BBC website is always a good, free starting point. You should also visit the Guardian website regularly and also consider news websites with different or neutral political perspectives such as MailOnline or the i Newspaper website.  

Watch critically acclaimed films and TV series - both are media topics that are covered in A Level Media. 

Read through copies of Media Magazine - a dedicated magazine for A Level Media students that we have a subscription to at Greenford. You can find our Media Magazine archive here

Preparation activities

We are very lucky that the brilliant people at Media Magazine have created a whole booklet of articles and tasks designed to prepare students for A Level Media. You can find the Media Magazine A Level preparation activity booklet here.

Work through these tasks by reading the article and then answering the questions. It's up to you how you do this - you may want to simply make brief notes or bullet points or type up well-deveoped answers and email them to us to start a discussion. It's completely up to you!

We particularly recommend the following activities as a useful starting point:
  • Task 5 - Long Form TV Drama: Genre, Character and Narrative
  • Task 8 - Magazines: Recreating Men’s Health for a Non-binary Audience

If you haven't studied GCSE Media

Don't worry if you haven't studied GCSE Media - we will teach you everything you need to know over the two-year A Level Media course. The activities above will still help you by introducing the blogs, Media Magazine and the types of media product we study.

Contact us

If you have any questions regarding A Level Media or these preparation tasks you can email the Head of Media Mr Halsey using your school email. 

A Level Media is also taught by Mr Pall and Mr Bush and you are welcome to email them with any questions too.

We look forward to working with you in Media next year!