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New Musical Express         May 4, 1985

Cover: Can Music Survive The Video Virus?

Issue may be of interest to collectors of

- Reggae in 1985 (2 pages w/ pics)

- In Tua Nua (full page b&w ad w/ large group pic for single "Somebody To Love")

- Richard Strange & The Engine Room (full page b&w/color w/ pic)

- Big Heat (2/3 page w/ pic)

- Jesse Rae (full page b&w w/ pic for single "Over The Sea")

- Michael Stipe - R.E.M. interview (2/3 page w/ pic)

- Mick Jagger (full page b&w ad w/ pic for single "Lucky In Love")

- Simon F (Simon Fellowes) (full page b&w ad w/ pic for album "Gun")

- Stiv Bators - The Lords Of The New Church (2/3 page w/ Stiv pic)

- Ra-Ra Zoo (1/3 page w/ pic)

- The Video Virus by Dessa Fox (3 pages, centerfold color pages w/ pics)

- Eurythmics (full page b&w ad for album "Be Yourself Tonight" with small pics)

- Paddy McAloon - Prefab Sprout (2 pages w/ color pic of Paddy)

- Charts

- Album Reviews: Prince And The Revolution, The Georgia Satellites, The Veil, The Fuzztones, American Indi releases, Misty In Roots, 1000 Mexicans, George Jones, Desmond Dekker And The Aces, Gee Mr Tracy, Modern Romance, Richard Thompson, Helen And The Horns and more

- Single Reviews by Danny Kelly

- Live! Reviews: The Fat Boys, Flaco Jimenez and Peter Rowan, This Island Earth, Maze, Chakk, Augustus Pablo, A Popular History Of Signs / The Mekons, New Model Army, Bryan Adams, The Surf Drums, Rote Kapelle, Les Quatre Etoiles

- Film Reviews: Falling In Love, The Cotton Club

Issue is approximately 16" high × 12" wide ~ 52 pages ~ UK publication.


New Musical Express (NME) is now a British music, film and culture website and brand. Founded as a newspaper in 1952, the NME would become a magazine that ended up as a free publication, before becoming an online brand which includes its website and radio stations. It was the first British newspaper to include a singles chart, in the edition of 14 November 1952. In the 1970s, it became the best-selling British music newspaper. It started as a music newspaper, and gradually moved toward a magazine format during the 1980s and 1990s, changing from newsprint in 1998. The magazine's website NME.com was launched in 1996. In September 2015, the NME magazine was relaunched to be distributed nationally as a free publication. In March 2018, the publisher announced that the print edition of NME would cease publication after 66 years and become an online-only publication.