Difference between revisions of "Outpunk"

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'''Outpunk''' was a fanzine by Matt Wobensmith run out of San Francisco.  
 
'''Outpunk''' was a fanzine by Matt Wobensmith run out of San Francisco.  
  
Outpunk ran for seven issues from 1992 till 1997 with contributions from queer punks such as [[Anonymous Boy]] and [[Donna Dresch]] of [[Chainsaw]], interviews with queercore bands such as Tribe 8, and a split issue with [[Fembot]], a zine by [[Gary Fembot]] of the band Sta-Prest. The last issue was a compendium consisting of a collection of reprints of articles from zines that Matt felt were notable, such as [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Bikini Kill]], [[Double Bill]], [[Fat Girl]], [[Fembot]], [[Girl Germs]], [[Jane Gets A Divorce]], [[PC Casualties]], [[Rude Girl]], [[Queer]], [[Shrimp]] and many others. '''Outpunk''' was also a record label, the first devoted to queercore bands, releasing the first recordings by bands such as Tribe 8, Mukilteo Fairies, Pansy Division, Sta-Prest, Behead The Prophet No Lord Shall Live and others.
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Outpunk ran for seven issues from 1992 till 1997 with contributions from queer punks such as [[Anonymous Boy]] and [[Donna Dresch]] of [[Chainsaw]], interviews with queercore bands such as Tribe 8, and a split issue with [[Fembot]], a zine by [[Gary Fembot]] of the band Sta-Prest. The last issue was a compendium consisting of a collection of reprints of articles from zines that Matt felt were notable, such as [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Bikini Kill]], [[Double Bill]], [[Fat Girl]], [[Fembot]], [[Girl Germs]], [[Jane Gets A Divorce]], [[PC Casualties]], [[Rude Girl]], [[Queer]], [[Shrimp]] and many others. '''Outpunk''' was also a record label, the first devoted to queercore bands, releasing the first recordings by bands such as Tribe 8, Pansy Division, Sta-Prest, Behead The Prophet No Lord Shall Live, Mulkilteo Fairies  (both Mulkilteo Fairies and Behead the Prophet No Lord Shall Live featured zine editor [[Joshua Plague]] on vocals) and others.
  
 
In ''[[D.I.Y.: The Rise Of Lo-Fi]]'', Amy Spencer writes "Matt Wobensmith...feels that a person's self-identification shouldn't form the basis of their whole personality. "Gay people often sacrifice the culture they come from just to belong to something," says Matt. Spencer continues, "This sacrifice of a radical culture whether as an artist, punk or anarchist, is what the queercore movement has always battled against."
 
In ''[[D.I.Y.: The Rise Of Lo-Fi]]'', Amy Spencer writes "Matt Wobensmith...feels that a person's self-identification shouldn't form the basis of their whole personality. "Gay people often sacrifice the culture they come from just to belong to something," says Matt. Spencer continues, "This sacrifice of a radical culture whether as an artist, punk or anarchist, is what the queercore movement has always battled against."
  
 
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:California Zines]][[Category:Queer]] [[Category:Split Zine]] [[Category:Punk]]
 
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:California Zines]][[Category:Queer]] [[Category:Split Zine]] [[Category:Punk]]

Revision as of 19:22, 16 January 2007

Outpunk was a fanzine by Matt Wobensmith run out of San Francisco.

Outpunk ran for seven issues from 1992 till 1997 with contributions from queer punks such as Anonymous Boy and Donna Dresch of Chainsaw, interviews with queercore bands such as Tribe 8, and a split issue with Fembot, a zine by Gary Fembot of the band Sta-Prest. The last issue was a compendium consisting of a collection of reprints of articles from zines that Matt felt were notable, such as Bamboo Girl, Bikini Kill, Double Bill, Fat Girl, Fembot, Girl Germs, Jane Gets A Divorce, PC Casualties, Rude Girl, Queer, Shrimp and many others. Outpunk was also a record label, the first devoted to queercore bands, releasing the first recordings by bands such as Tribe 8, Pansy Division, Sta-Prest, Behead The Prophet No Lord Shall Live, Mulkilteo Fairies (both Mulkilteo Fairies and Behead the Prophet No Lord Shall Live featured zine editor Joshua Plague on vocals) and others.

In D.I.Y.: The Rise Of Lo-Fi, Amy Spencer writes "Matt Wobensmith...feels that a person's self-identification shouldn't form the basis of their whole personality. "Gay people often sacrifice the culture they come from just to belong to something," says Matt. Spencer continues, "This sacrifice of a radical culture whether as an artist, punk or anarchist, is what the queercore movement has always battled against."