(razorcake.org) While our magazine has been on a
lazy hiatus, Razorcake has been
cranking out the woodpulp, with thick issues arriving like menstrual pains (if
one ovulates every 60 days die to some biological bizarre-ity). Issue #79 opens
with an oddity: the editors gripe about not getting much love from Academia for
their oral histories and documentation of early L.A. punk. The underground has
always documented itself better than the mainstream or the academy, and
eventually if your zines or radio shows or liner notes or show videos are
archived somewhere then in the future an academic or VH1 documentary maker or
future Dave Grohl will find it and use it, but the expectation of instant
gratification via academic accolades seems to be a weird thing to get worked up
about. It reminds me of the Behind the
Music Green Day episode where they had to first contextualize selling out
to a mainstream audience and then frame accusations of selling out as the
tragic dramatic twist because there was no betrayal/accident/addiction/incident
available that their fall-from-grace/redemption story arc template needed. If
you ain’t got nothing to complain about, it’s OK not to complain. But then again,
if you need to because it fuels your punk-spirit fire, go for it. And the fact
that the gripe frames an Alice Bag-centric oral history of East L.A. early punk
is awesome. In fact, skip to a year and a half later and you get a great Slits piece, and in between there are features on the Urinals, Real Kids, Wayne Kramer,
M.O.T.O. and tons of new bands. There are also punk takes on everything from
poetry to pinball to the trans scene within the scene. And the consistency over
the years has been amazing, with regular comics from some of the bright lights
in the scene, regular columns by faves like Rev. Norb, and some solid editorial
direction. That said, it is impossible in the Internet age for a print zine, or
really anything, to have the kind of specific identity, national presence, and cultural
reverberations of MRR or Flipside in the days when punk was so
marginalized that every punk band in existence advertised or was reviewed in
their pages (or at least aspired to) and every small town punk anywhere relied
on these mags for info. Doing the same kind of work with less of the respect
certainly must be frustrating, but at least they get to experience some
marginalization in the post-Hot Topic era.
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