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  • ...ame McGovern-Goldwater Ticket, and publishes a civics and politics blog of the same name. *[[Noise Noise Noise]]
    765 bytes (108 words) - 21:18, 21 October 2011
  • Josh Medsker also has published the zine [[Noise Noise Noise]]. [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]]
    641 bytes (99 words) - 15:06, 7 March 2013
  • Noise Queen was a zine done between 1996 and 2001 out of Kingston, Ontario, Canad ...six half sheets of pink laser printer paper, done in one day, on 3/29/96. The zine contained editorials, fiction, articles, and reviews of zines, recordi
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  • ...English. Includes interviews with various artists from all over the world. The zine is also released together with a CD. * '''What's That Noise?! #1''' (2011): ''44 pages, A4 size, comes with 15 tracks CD. Includes inte
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  • ...Murphy published [[Noise Queen]] from 1996 till 2001, releasing 25 issues. The zine contained editorials, fiction, articles, and reviews of zines, recordi ...R TEXAS AND T FOR Timmybear'', and ''Holiday In The Sun'', about Texas and the Dominican Republic respectively) and three poetry collections in 'zine form
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  • ...zine]] published in the 1990s by [[Rumi Iwamoto]]. The zine specialised in noise music, noisecore and noisegrind. ...'' was also a sources of addresses and short demo reviews of various grind/noise bands.
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  • [[Image:jsnooki.png|frame|]] '''Josh Medsker''' is a [[zine]] editor from the U.S.A. ...ram, and others. Josh also transcribed most of the old NNN interviews onto the blog, so they would be more readily available.
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  • '''Crude Noise''' was a [[perzine]] that was written by [[Meredith Stern]], also known as ...emed around recovery and collective structures with articles talking about the Nowe Miasto warehouse in New Orleans, Sparklepussy in Pittsburgh, having pe
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  • ...oise pop/drone/field recordings/ [[hardcore]]/grind/ or any combination of the aforementioned music genres. ...broken instruments; use unconventional instrumentation and are outside of the conventional music scene.
    973 bytes (139 words) - 18:49, 30 December 2010
  • ...ted to the [[DIY]] (=disoriented ignorant youth) underground tape/[[zine]]/noise subculture and more."
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  • [[Image:Noise Noise Noise 9.jpeg|frame|'''Noise Noise Noise''' #9]] '''Noise Noise Noise''' was a [[punk]] [[zine]] from Bayonne, NJ. NNN was started in Anchorage,
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  • *No. 1: Featured Noise and Smegma. ...admen, Conflict, Sonic Youth, X, Instigators, Insane Hombres Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds. Cover star: Morrissey.
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  • ...eatures columns, show reviews, record reviews, and interviews with Bastard Noise, Looking For An Answer, ACxDC, and Hummingbird of Death.
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  • ...s the creator of [[Retain Parts, Destroy Parts]] and a contributor to [[NW Noise]]. He lives in the city of Auburn, WA in the shadow of Seattle, WA.
    370 bytes (54 words) - 19:16, 29 November 2010
  • ...y?-) is a Philippine-based zine dedicated to grindcore, power-violence and noise. [[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the Philippines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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  • ...en, this "print-zine incorporates filth, doodles, photography, philosophy, noise, word-vomit, pen-and-ink and young aspirations towards something "artistic, [[Category:Zine]][[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:Missouri Zines]]
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  • ...and 2) "[[Glamour Girl]]", and "[[Crude Noise]]". The third issue of Crude Noise appeared as a split zine with "[[Nosedive]]", by [[Icky Apparatus]]. ...adison, Wisconsin, in October of 2006 and then in Milwaukee in November of the same year.
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  • ...nd Jazz Fan'', then simply as ''Jazz Fan'' , and it was with issue 10 that the title became ''Rambler''. ...uary 1958, issues 11, 12 and 13 were released February 1958, and issue 14, the last, was published in March 1958.
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  • ...etween 2002 and 2004, named after the ''Mighty Mighty Bosstones'' album of the same name. ...]] and shared many contributors. Typically, a gig would be organised at ''The Horseshoe'' in Portsmouth each time a new issue was completed.
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  • '''Noise Level''' was a fanzine by John Brunner. ...science fiction fanzine and folk music fanzine. It was distributed through the [[Offtrails Magazine Publishers Association]] (OMPA).
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  • ...printed in black and white on a light grey paper. The photographs have a ''noise'' effect on them. * [http://bookletlibrary.org/s/saguer-pere// Booklet Library] scans from the inside.
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  • '''Terror''' is a Noise and Industrial music [[fanzine]] from Lithuania. ...hren, Clew of Theseus, Clo Goelach, Coma Detox, Gas Chamber, Haare, Hum of the Druid, Knurl, McKaras, Molester, Mourmansk 150, and Wertham.
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  • ...ine. The name 'Lärmkessel (noise tank)' we have taken from a festival with the same name. This should already be visible from the outset that it is not about trying a new town newspaper, or a general infor
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  • ...r]] and amateur humorist" living in [[Memphis]], TN. He formerly published the [[zine]] [[Cimarron Weekend]]. He is currently a freelance writer; his work [http://andrewearles.com/ The Andrew Earles home page]
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  • The site features articles about music covering indie rock bands as well as ele ...rnoise.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Her-Noise-Archive-Series-One.pdf Her Noise Archive].
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  • ...hite power, Wilmer Watts, and an article by Lester Bangs titled "The White Noise Supremacists". 28 pages. [[category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from the U.S.A.]] [[Category:California Zines]] [[Category:1980's publications]]
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  • ...black' at the original surface level. The block is cut along the grain of the wood. Multiple colors can be printed by keying the paper to a frame around the woodblocks (where a different block is used for each color).
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  • ...a one anthology, released in August 2009 with a digital scan available on the Punks is Hippies Issuu archive web page. The zine originated from a blog.
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  • ...d personal writings with contributions from [[Kevin Kavanagh]] (who writes the [[Blast Off]] zine) and Kevo Murphy. ...ring the year since the first issue was released, not nearly as serious as the first issue.
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  • ...y are surprised to find out she does not, has never and will never live in the Motor City. * <b>[[Hello Cleveland: This Is Scum and Noise]]</b> 2005; two issues; made with [[Alex Spazz]] and [[Johnny Scumface]]
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  • '''The Orifice''' is a zine from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and San Francisco, Ca ...ding humor, Queer sexuality and gender bending, [[Punk]] music and related noise, and original [[Comic|comic]] art. Co-Editor [[Sy]] later went on to create
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  • ...ns Beast''. The pretty experimental zines vary in stile, size and content. The zine is produced and published in Mönchengladbach, Germany. ...ed with the music label [[Econore]] ([[Econore Magazine]]), specialised in noise and experimental music.
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  • ...founding member of the Profane Existence (P.E.) collective, and editor of the long-running [[Anarchism|anarcho]]-[[punk]] zine [[Profane Existence]]. In ...Alternative Scene]] (M.A.S.). From 1991-1993, he sang and played bass for the Minneapolis punk band Pissed. Siskind later became a vocalist for Disrespec
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  • ...ocused on extreme [[hardcore]] [[punk]] (powerviolence, fastcore etc), and noise music. It ran for two full issues and one collaborative issue during 2010 a ...unterstroke," collaborative zine with Richard Johnston-Jones ([[Madness of the Crowd]]), Matt Jordan ([[Expect Delays]]) and Chaz Hewitt (Eat a Book Recor
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  • ...cts two major metropolitan areas: Copenhagen, the Danish capital city, and the major Swedish city of Malmö. ...ght blue paper. The photographs have a ''noise'' effect on them that makes the zine look a bit trash and printed on a cheap printer.
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  • ...ne]] and music zine put out by [[Josh Medsker]] starting in 2001. He began the zine in Japan, then moved to Austin, TX., and then New York City. ...''Twenty-Four Hours'' also featured fiction and poetry from writers around the country. There have also been interviews with writers such as Neal Pollack
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  • [[Image:Angry-at-the-bus-stop-5.gif|200px|thumb|right|Angry at the Bus Stop issue 5]] '''Angry at the Bus Stop''' was a Nottingham, UK based [[fanzine]] which was dissolved in 2
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  • ''Singalong!'' was published in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The first issue appeared in February 1957, and Volume II, No.1 was released Jul ...r folk music zines, such as [[Folk Scene]] in the 1960s, and [[Folks]], in the 1970s and 1980s, would continue to be published.
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  • [[Image:Artemis (final).jpg|200px|thumb|right|Cover of the autumn 2009 issue - design by Jenny McLure]] ...ine is usually released three times a year, and is distributed for free at the university.
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  • '''The Dragomen''' was a [[One-shot|one off]] [[comic]] [[zine]]. It was written a ...they wished. The cover had a two colour screenprint of artwork inside and the zine was bound together by laces.
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  • ...sy fanzine founded by [[Charles R. Saunders]], and published on behalf of the Ottawa Science Fiction Society (OSFS). ...aunders. The fourth issue was edited by Jeff Cohen, with Kim Kofmel one of the subsequent editors.
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  • ...adbach and Berlin. The label is focussing on experimental and all kinds of noise music. ...ember 2010 presenting art and interviews with musician Carsten Vollmer and The Duke of Zuke. Issue #2 was published Februar 2013 with more pages.
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  • ...ronic, and things that appealed to the darker side". This was the birth of the legendary [[Punk Magazine]], which became an inspiration to countless other * ''Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk'' with Gillian McCain (Penguin Books, 1997)
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  • '''Issue Two:''' [[Billy Childish]] and the MBE's interview, Coco's Lovers interview, Reviews, Rants etc. ...sed until it ceased to be in early 2010. A CD was made called Clipper Guts Noise Report Volume One.
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  • ...ial, neo-folk, ambient, noise and experimental music have appeared so far. The zine is edited by Tony, with Squeeky Pete listed as deputy editor. It featu Issue #5: The Grey Wolves, Von Thronstahl, Reborn Beton, Katscan, P.A.L., article on Las
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  • ..., Donal Ogilvie, and Jeff Jenke-- all seniors, and all members of the punk-noise band Bryce Hammer. ...]s, and cut and paste [[Anarchism|anarchy]]. Also typically, it attracted the wrath of school administrators, who tried to prevent its distribution on sc
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  • ...was a [[fanzine]] published by Brian from Warwick, Rhode Island, U.S.A. in the 1990's. ...photos of bands such as Nightmare, Urban Terror, Deathside and Geshpenst; the column "Koretsu Korner" by Yasu of Devour Records, which features more news
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  • ..., since 2006, been undergoing categorisation to create an online database. The current project is being undertaken by a library technician in training as ...dent arts and new media organisation, existing in various incarnations for the past ten years.
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  • ...[[Maximum Rock N Roll]]. His essay "The Problem With Music" (an attack on the major labels) is widely reprinted. ...dited with recording 2,000 records and CDs. He is the owner and founder of the Electrical Audio recording studio in Chicago.
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  • ...products at gigs set up by the local collective he is part of, Independent Noise For Youths (I.N.F.Y). ...ro sells items at local gigs, at a set up 'distro table', and also through the postal system.
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  • ...er local bands in the Nashville area. The book is printed and produced by the author/artist, and is sold for non-profit, on a donation basis. ...bpoena the easy ones: traffic stops, jay walkers, and noise abusers, while the most heinous criminals are let off free to go, as long as they keep causing
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  • '''Comatulid''' is the pen name of Dominick Simone, a zine editor operating out of Northern Califo ...a fan of squatting, feminism, and Beat Authors such as Richard Brautigan. The print run of each issue is often under 100 copies and are distributed by sc
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  • '''Tune Up''' is a folk music [[fanzine]] published by the Philadelphia Folksong Society from Philadelphia, U.S.A. ...ssues were edited by Janet Hauguel. It was available mainly for members of the Society.
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  • ...America. The first three issues were photocopied, but by the fourth issue the zine was printed. ...[[Suburban Voice]], [[Wild Times]], and [[xXx]]. The stand-out feature of the zine that separated it from others is that it devoted one page to fishing,
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  • ...tion wished to celebrate these artists, their independent productions, and the do-it-yourself culture of zines. This exhibition was curated by Colin Matth ...ives Gallery in Milwaukee. The exhibition was free and open to the public. The exhibition included work by:
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  • ...d in the 1990's. At the time, Rev. Anthony was the youngest Priest IIIº in the Church of Satan. Several issues of this zine devoted to Satanism were released during the decade that it was published. Featured were interview with Michael Moynihan
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  • ...d author Dennis Cooper. Other articles include a history of Noise Rock and the label Sub Pop. ''you can't hide your love forever'' also featured extensive The staff for this zine are listed as Michael Segal, John Huston, and David Seg
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  • ...Loop to Oak Park. Copies of The Skeleton can be found at [[Myopic Books]], The Empty Bottle, and other places around Chicago. ...ling Tales of Bi-Polar Adventures, Sports, Paper on Paper, Comics & Games, The Future
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  • ...ief making, a humerous look at social issues and information on electronic/noise happenings, promoting local gigs and releases."[http://667u.com/no%20frills The final issue came with a CD from people who had supported the zine, including:
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  • ...dith Stern]], also known as Merrydeath, who had previously written [[Crude Noise]]. ...on but also about the women’s lives and the events leading up to and after the abortions.
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  • ...Since then, ten issues have been released. The editorship has changed over the years; previous editors included Valentina, Deborah Q and Eleonora Romano; Darklife covers everything from gothic to experimental, electronic, ritual, noise, avant garde and industrial music. While based in Switzerland, its contribu
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  • '''Zimri''' was a science fiction fanzine from the UK published by Lisa Conesa. .... [[Harry Turner]] ([[Now & Then]], [[Zenith]]) became Art Editor by 1974. The zine notably included poetry, which had been out of favour with zine editor
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  • '''Gardyloo''' was a folk music fanzine created by [[Lee Hoffman]] in the 1950s in New York City, NY, U.S.A. ...ted on various colours of paper. it was subtitled, "The Magazine of War to the Death, With a Cast of Thousands". Lee stopped publishing ''Gardyloo'' in 1
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  • ...Lesa, Lynn, Jim Igoe, The Nutty Redskin, M. W. Russell, Zero, and [[Donny The Punk]]. ...ffy-head, fever, so you can rest 'zine]], [[No KKK No Fascist USA]], [[The Noise]], [[Not Your Bastard]], [[Open Road]], [[Ooompa! Ooompa!]], [[Rude Review]
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  • [[Image:Songmakers_Almanac_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The Songmakers Alamanac'''<br/>Vol. IV, No. 7 July 1965]] '''The Songmakers Almanac''' was a fanzine devoted to folk music edited by Bill Wo
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  • Published in the UK, ''Folk Scene'' was released in the 1960s. At least 9 issues appeared. ...ured John Pearse; Nigel Denver; Pete Stanley, Dave Wiseman and Wizz Jones; The Leesiders; Colin Wilkie; and John Foreman.
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  • ...a'' was released Septembre, 1984, and is 14 pages total. The main theme of the zine was [[Mail Art]] and Copy Art, but in later issues began to feature [[ ...of albums, including Tribal Noise and The Wraith; A Personal Message from the Temple ov Psychick Youth.
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  • ...stil runs MRR as a website. It is dedicated to supporting and reporting on the underground [[punk]] rock scene. ...tz (owner of Mordam distribution) and Jello Biafra (of the Dead Kennedys). The radio show still runs to this day.
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  • ...], [[F Noise]], [[Goog Poogly]], [[The Livin' End]], [[The Living Eye]], [[The Offense Newsletter]], [[Pages of Rage]], [[Ripper]], [[Savage Pink]], [[Sch ...father of the owner of I.R.S. Records is the Assistant Deputy Director of the C.I.A. Contributors for this issue were John Crawford, Graham, Jim Shedden,
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  • '''Icky A.''' is a [[zinester]] from the U.S.A. Icky has lived in a number of States in the U.S.A. He is best known as the editor of [[Nosedive]] zine.
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  • ...oughout the world but paid particular attention to the scene developing in the Northwest U.S.A. ...p Shoppe, The Weeds, and Zippers, joined by Toody in the 70's for the band The Rats. Also included are Top Ten lists from musicians Monica Nelson, Ron La
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  • ...he 12th issue of Nosedive was a split zine with the third issue of [[Crude Noise]], published by [[Meredith Stern]]. Both zines contained many lino prints. ...re included in the 2002 tour of North America by [[Mobilivre-Bookmobile]], the traveling library of independent publications.
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  • ...es [[Chihuahua and Pitbull]], [[A Little Guide to Truing Bike Wheels]] and the books [[Stories Care Forgot: An Anthology of New Orleans Zines]] and ''Lear ...d in the compilation zine [[Y'erd Me?]], which documented the work read on the tour.
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  • ...ditor for later issues. Previously Tom Reamy had published [[Crifanac]] in the 1950s. ''Trumpet'' also featured an adaptation of Poul Anderson's novel ''The Broken Sword'', done in graphic novel format by editor Reamy and artist Geo
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  • ...c at this location. The committee head, serving as editor, was Sid Dolgay; the subtitle for this issue was "Folk Singing in Canada"; it was a mimeographed ...Edith Fowke, three songs written for ''Sing and String'' by Jack Landers, the folk scene, and a Weavers concert review.
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  • ...Review''. Issues three and four (released in 1978 and 1980) were titled ''The Anthology of Speculative Poetry''. ...H. Warner Munn, Edith Ogutsch, Marge Piercy, Kathryn Rantala, Mark Rich ([[The Silent Planet]], [[Treaders of Starlight]]), [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]] (
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  • ...own as "Straight to DVD." Chiaroscuro has been nominated for an "ARTY" by The Salt Lake City Weekly three times; in 2010, 2012, and 2013. They are yet to ...010 Alternative Press Festival with the help of The VCR5. As one member of The S.P.R.3 he has also performed at Salt Lake's all-ages venue Kilby Court. He
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  • [[Image:Voices1_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''Voices From The Edge'''<br/>Issue 12<br/>Cover art by Robert Baldwin and [[Cathy Buburuz]]] '''Voices From The Edge''' was a fanzine by Angie Underwood.
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  • ...and of the spaces where they live. Also, it details how story telling and the creation of mythologies can inspire change and can create possibility. ...reflecting the dark, "other worldly" sentiment of the written chapters in the zine.
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  • ..., BACKSLIDER, NOTHING IS OVER, WALL, BASTARD NOISE, ATTAKE, PARASYTIC, BUY THE STEAK, OLD PAINLESS, CHEST PAIN, THIEVES, PHOBIA, SONS OF TONATIUH, WORMROT ...RROSION OF CONFORMITY, BURMA, KAKKA HATA 77, ACID REFLUX OLD PAINLESS, BUY THE STEAK, THIEVES, CHEST PAIN, NATURAL LAW, DYSTROPHY, TRAPPER, DETHRONED EMPO
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  • The '''Kill Zinesters Tour''' was an idea hatched by [[Bunnyhop]] publisher [[N ...tour for legs of the trip. The plan was simple, rent a Winnebago and tour the States hyping zines, with assistance from local zinesters in each city, who
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  • ...d by [[Jimmy Johnson]] and [[Byron Coley]]. It ran for more than a decade. The last issue (Forced Exposure #18) appeared in 1993. ...bed '''Forced Exposure''' as "''Rolling Stone for people who'd rather read the Journal of Trauma Medicine than watch MTV''," and many rock critics were di
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  • ...eports from L.A., Berlin, Brazil, Israel, Italy and other locations around the world, with a focus on electronic music. '''Issue Nine''': "Anti-Imperialism: Bankruptcy of the Left?" by Christopn Frengeli; "Say Fear Is A Man's Best Friend" by Matthew
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  • ...nzine was published even while Riddle was on active duty in the U.S. Navy. The fanzine featured an editorial by Riddle, articles, fiction, poetry, and reg ...Lee Riddle, cartoons by Rd Hughes and Dennes Morton, and illustrators from the Fantasy Art Society of Britain.
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  • ...ges was standard and the third issue weighed in at 170, making it probably the biggest single fanzine ever published in Britain." Issue #1 featured written contributions from Bryan Berry, John Brunner ([[Noise Level]]), [[Daphne Buckmaster]] ([[Esprit]]), Nigel Lindsay, and Stuart Mac
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  • ...n in 1953, and he began doing book reviews for the zine. By the late 1950s the name had been changed to ''Yandro'', derived from an old folk song in a Man ...ll Mimsy]], [[Inside Star Trek]], [[SH - sf Fanthology]]), John Brunner ([[Noise Level]]), L. Sprague de Camp, E.J. 'Ted' Carnell ([[Novae Terrae]]), Raymon
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  • '''Amra''' was a science fiction and fantasy fanzine devoted to the "Swords and Sorcery" genre published by George H. Scithers (1929-2010). ...nd was numbered 2.1, as Scithers had used the title on a previous venture. The final issue, number 71, was dated July 1982.
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  • Eleven issues of the zine have been published, which are available through [[Marching stars]] Di '''Here. In My Head. #11: A 24-Hour Zine''' was created for the [[24 Hour Zine Thing]], and features pieces on being creative, self-esteem
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  • [[Image:LSR-27_copy.jpg‎|Right|frame|'''The Little Sandy Review''' Cover photograph of Koerner, Ray and Glover by Paul '''The Little Sandy Review''' was a [[fanzine]] devoted to folk music published by
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  • ...long running fanzine published throughout the 1970s, 1980s and the 1990s. The last issue, issue 70, appeared in 1998. Bill Bowers was preparing issue 71 ...st Cafe]]), William Breiding ([[Star Fire]]), Rich Brown, John Brunner ([[Noise Level]]), Terry Carr ([[Lighthouse]]), A. Vincent Clarke ([[Pulp]]), Buck C
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  • '''Hoot''' was a folk music [[fanzine]] published in the 1960s by the Guild of Canadian Folk Artists, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. ...Guild of Canadian Folk Artists also put on shows at ad hoc venues such as The Unitarian Church in Toronto.
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  • ...nchorage, featuring interviews and show reviews from local legends such as The Clyng-Onz, Psychedelic Skeletons, and Skate Death. Frank has since moved to '''#16 (Fall 1985)''' “The Yeah We’re Still Here Issue”. Cover by J. Alexander
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  • ...dered more of a mindset than an organization by the active participants in the ongoing <b>CrimethInc.</b> experiment. They are profoundly anti-capitalist ...as expanded into nearly all areas of the current anti-capitalist movement. The name itself, however, is a reference to "Crimethink" in George Orwell's 198
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  • ...and of the spaces where they live. Also, it details how story telling and the creation of mythologies can inspire change and can create possibility. ...reflecting the dark, "other worldly" sentiment of the written chapters in the zine.
    4 KB (625 words) - 04:28, 23 November 2010
  • ...Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, a ...Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez p
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  • * [[The Karley Knews]] * [[The Ken Chronicles]]
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  • ...at was edited by [[Ethan Clark]], with an introduction by [[John Gerken]]. The book description says: ...vation of writing and artwork, but also as an attempt to aid in rebuilding the city that inspired and shaped this body of work. Proceeds from Stories Care
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  • ...e fiction fanzine published by Ron Smith in New York, N. Y., U.S.A. It won the [[Hugo Award for Best Fanzine]] in 1956. ...side'' with White as editor and new editor Leland Sapiro, who would rename the zine [[Riverside Quarterly]].
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  • ...a chance to mingle with like-minded souls who were equally frustrated with the monochrome oppressiveness of Eisenhower America." ...ohn Brunner ([[Noise Level]]) contributed a column of folk music news from the UK. Other writers included Harlan Ellison ([[Science Fantasy Bulletin]]), B
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  • [[Image:TNFF834997_copy.jpg‎|right|frame|'''The National Fantasy Fan'''<br/>February 1983]] '''The National Fantasy Fan''' was a science fiction fanzine published by the National Fantasy Fan Federation.
    4 KB (577 words) - 03:07, 24 February 2024

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