- Punk Planet
"Punk Planet" was a 16,000 print run
punk zine , based inChicago, Illinois , that focused most of its energy on looking atpunk subculture rather than punk as simply another genre ofmusic to whichteenagers listen. In addition to covering music, "Punk Planet" also covered visual arts and a wide variety of progressive issues — including media criticism,feminism , and labor issues. The most notable features in "Punk Planet" were the interviews and album reviews. The interviews generally ran two or three pages, and tended to focus on the motivations of the artist (or organizer, activist, or whoever) being interviewed. "Punk Planet" tried to review nearly all the records it received, so long as the record label wasn't owned or partially owned by a major label. This led to a review section typically longer than thirty pages, covering a variety of musical styles. Although much of the music thus reviewed was, expectedly, aggressive rock, the reviews also covered country, folk, hip-hop, indie rock, and other genres. The Punk Planet reviews section also encompassed independently released comics,zines , and DVDs.A number of poor distribution deals and the collapse of IndyMedia resulted in mounting debts for the editors. As a result, issue 80 was shipped with a cover reading: "This is the final issue of Punk Planet, after this the fight is yours." Subsidiary business Punk Planet books remains in business.Notable Issue Topics/Subjects
*Issue 22 — first issue with full color, cardstock cover
*Issues 24, 46, and 67: "Art & Design 1", "2", and "3" — theme issue
*Issue 34 — first issue with perfect binding
*Issue 50: "The Chicago Issue" — theme issue
*Issue 55 and 75: "The Revenge of Print 1" and "2" — theme issue
*Issue 80: final issueHistory and Other Projects
The first issue of the
zine was published in May1994 , in part as a response to the perception that "Maximum Rock and Roll " was becoming too elitist. In September2006 , "Punk Planet" had printed 75 issues of their bi-monthly publication, and in the fall of 2004 launched a book publishing arm, Punk Planet Books, in conjunction with the New York-based small press Akashic Books. Punk Planet Books has published four titles as of May2006 : "Hairstyles of the Damned " byJoe Meno (August2004 , ISBN 1-888451-70-X), “All the Power: Revolution Without Illusion” by Mark Andersen (September2004 , ISBN 1-888451-72-6), “Lessons in Taxidermy” by Bee Lavender (March2005 )(ISBN 1-888451-79-3), and "100 Posters, 134 Squirrels" by Jay Ryan (November2005 , ISBN 1-888451-93-9).In September 2006, Punk Planet partnered with the website,
ZineWiki , to publish, online, exclusive articles from past print issues.On June 18, 2007, a post at www.punkplanet.com informed the public that after 13 years and 80 issues, Punk Planet's final issue was being sent out. The reasoning pointed to "bad distribution deals, disappearing advertisers, and a decreasing audience of subscribers." [http://www.punkplanet.com/]
Criticism
Like the other big national US
fanzine — "Maximum Rock and Roll " — "Punk Planet" was not without its detractors. Many complained about its high price,perfect binding , and a perceived over-attention to layout and style, which had to a certain extent moved it away from the traditional punkaesthetic .External links
* [http://www.punkplanet.com Punk Planet] — official website.
* [http://www.punkplanetbooks.com Punk Planet Books] — official website for their book imprint
* [http://zinewiki.com ZineWiki] — publishing exclusive Punk Planet articles online.
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