OBIT: A Magazine of a Dying Culture
Scarce punk zine with a feature essay on "Death of a Punk" by Jane Huntington, edited by the Ramones cover album-illustrator and founder of PUNK Magazine.
Scarce punk zine with a feature essay on "Death of a Punk" by Jane Huntington, edited by the Ramones cover album-illustrator and founder of PUNK Magazine.
Early issue (May 15, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Nearly contiguous run of the first 96 issues of Sis Cunningham's essential document of the 1960s folk movement, including Bob Dylan's first appearance in print, as well as the first appearance of his "Blowin' in the Wind."
Early issue (December 7th, 1979) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine.
Early issue (January 18th, 1980) under the tenure of Naylor and Carroll of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine.
Limited first edition collection reproducing all eight issues of Blake Donner's zine devoted to the spirituality of freight train graffiti, with essays by Davis, Greg Bennick, Travis Low, and Laura Hamblin.
Scarce signed handmade artist's book on the subject of itself, produced in a limited edition of just 20 copies.
Early issue (May 29, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Early issue (April 17, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Early issue (June 25, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Early issue (January 23, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Early issue (March 6, 1981) of this hugely influential Manchester-centric post-punk zine, under the editorial tenure of Carroll and Naylor.
Clubzine of the Birmingham Science Fiction Club, inscribed by editor Jim Gilpatrick to science fiction writer Grant Carrington.
First three issues of the E.G. Records Newsletter, founded to promote the label's artists following the January '79 opening of its U.S. office.
"All British Number," featuring work by Bill Butler, Tom McGrath, Dave Cunliffe, Lionel Kearns, Dick Wilcox, Pete Berry, Gary Lundberg, and Bob Knapp. "Edited, drawn, layed out, cut-up & interred" by Nuttall.
Includes articles on Ultravox, Captain Beefheart, Gary Numan (cover story), XTC, and The (English) Beat.
Rare proto-zine of pseudoscience, all five issues of this perpetual motion journal which issued its first four numbers (as well as the PERPETUAL MOTION HANDBOOK) under the editorship of Barrows.