Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
British punk fanzines from the 1970s. A punk zine (or punkzine) is a zine related to the punk subculture and hardcore punk music genre. Often primitively or casually produced, they feature punk literature, such as social commentary, punk poetry, news, gossip, music reviews and articles about punk rock bands or regional punk scenes.
Punk rock songs against George Bush. Rodney on the ROQ: Various Posh Boy Records: Series of three. Punk and New Wave as popularized by the radio program. Something to Believe in 1984 BYO Records 17 Bands, mostlry early 80's hardcore Streets: 1977 LP Beggars Banquet Records: Early punk compilation (mostly from UK) The Thing That Ate Floyd: 1988 ...
Damage covered the punk scene in Northern and Southern California, as well as international developments. [2] OP magazine called it "one of the best new wave publications". [ 3 ] Reporting on the local scene in the San Francisco Examiner , Bill Mandel said that Damage was "the punk Bible" [for the Bay Area, presumably]. [ 4 ]
Flipside, known as Los Angeles Flipside Fanzine, was a punk zine published in Whittier and Pasadena, California, from 1977 to 2002.The magazine was associated with its own record label, Flipside Records, releasing vinyl records and compact discs beginning in 1978.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
A typical punk scene is made up of punk and hardcore bands, fans who attend concerts, protests, and other events, zine publishers, reviewers, and other writers, visual artists illustrating zines, and creating posters and album covers, show promoters, and people who work at music venues or independent record labels.
Slash was a punk rock-related fanzine published by Steve Samiof and Melanie Nissen in the United States from 1977 to 1980. The magazine was a large-format tabloid focused on the Los Angeles punk scene. [1] The fanzine also gave birth to Slash Records, an important punk record label.
A number of philosophical and artistic movements were influences on and precursors to the punk movement. The most overt is anarchism, especially its artistic inceptions.The cultural critique and strategies for revolutionary action offered by the Situationist International in the 1950s and 1960s were an influence on the vanguard of the British punk movement, particularly the Sex Pistols.