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	<title>MAXIMUM ROCKNROLL &#187; Zine reviews</title>
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		<title>Read a Book! The Encyclopedia of Doris</title>
		<link>http://maximumrocknroll.com/read-a-book-the-encyclopedia-of-doris/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=read-a-book-the-encyclopedia-of-doris</link>
		<comments>http://maximumrocknroll.com/read-a-book-the-encyclopedia-of-doris/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Dec 2011 01:40:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MRR Web Coordinator</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zine reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://maximumrocknroll.com/?p=10219</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Encyclopedia of Doris Cindy Crabb Doris Press The long awaited Encyclopedia of Doris is here, and it is the so-very-special collection of all of Cindy Crabb&#8217;s zines that have come out since the Doris Anthology. If you somehow missed the past decade of Doris, Cindy has been organizing her writing within the framework of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.dorisdorisdoris.com"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-10221" style="border: 1px solid black;" title="Encyclopedia-of-Doris" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Encyclopedia-of-Doris.jpg" alt="" width="244" height="348" /></a><em><strong>The Encyclopedia of Doris</strong></em><br />
<strong>Cindy Crabb</strong><br />
<a href="http://www.dorisdorisdoris.com" target="_blank"><strong>Doris Press</strong> </a></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The long awaited <em>Encyclopedia of Doris</em> is here, and it is the so-very-special collection of all of Cindy Crabb&#8217;s zines that have come out since the <em>Doris Anthology</em>. If you somehow missed the past decade of <em>Doris</em>, Cindy has been organizing her writing within the framework of letters of the alphabet.  She started doing this with the intention of making it all into one big book in nine years. Each issue covered three letters, and the multiple subjects she assigned to each letter were sometimes the first names of revolutionaries, or of friends of hers that are badass and inspirational; some of the letters go with recipes or herbal treatments, some with times in history or ideas. Sometimes she interprets the letter to fit whatever she wants to talk about, and it always ties in neatly. She conducts interviews, profiles radical discourse, draws cute comic versions of what she is talking about, and shares her take on making a life worth living. Included also are new writings interspersed with interviews other people did with Cindy about playing music, being an anarchist, being a feminist, being a punk over thirty, and more.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The fact that quite a few zine writers are turning into book writers these days presents us with a powerful sense of history. It isn’t just that the audience becomes too big to continue a photocopied print run, though surely once your publication numbers shift from two digit numbers to three, even to four, that means the work is important and affecting. This is history. This is a history book. Sure, it’s the history of one person’s perspective, but it covers such a vast spectrum of the worst things that have ever happened and also the best things, that everyone has something to learn or the chance to identify with the subjects herein. Blogs are all right, but it is important to have this writing all in one tangible place. Having an anthology provides a bigger context than a single issue — also some people never had access to the original zines. It will become a cultural artifact for the future punks or feminist scholars to puzzle over and study, while those who had exposure to the zine from the beginning can reflect on the magnitude of a whole decade going by.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">To give you an idea of the incredible breadth of Cindy’s writing, if you indexed <em>Doris</em> you would come up with such a huge interdisciplinary range it would be like trying to throw a net over radical history, survivor support, secrets, health care, feminism, privilege, anarchism, resources, networks, critical thinking about unlearning shitty social conditioning, being in jail, gender, self-help, how-tos, community projects, girl gangs, reaching sobriety, listening…and on and on. Probably my favorite letter in the <em>Encyclopedia</em> is &#8220;P.&#8221; It covers Prison Abolition, ♥ Punk ♥, the Pitchfork political strategy (five prongs), Power, Primitivism (a conversation with Chris Somerville), and Protection. Under “G,” Cindy covers the immense difficulty of grief, of the loss of a parent, of how hard it is to grieve when everyone is afraid to talk to you about it.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Sometimes I feel Cindy points out the obvious, and it serves as a reminder of how easy it is to lose track of what actually matters. Then I find out she didn’t know what &#8220;LOL&#8221; means until recently and I want to cry with joy on how refreshing her worldview is. In “Q is for Questions&#8221; she had other people ask her questions such as, “How do you discipline yourself to filter out the unimportant stuff and focus on the important?,” which discusses making a five-year plan in order to have goals to reach for that you can be okay with working on slowly. When you are trapped in the mire of day-to-day survival, the sudden revelation that some things just take a long time puts it all into perspective: “So even when I have no motivation and no hope, I just look at my five year plan and try to figure out what the fuck to do next.”</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">You can’t talk about <em>Doris</em> without acknowledging how significant it is in the world of sexual assault survivor resources. I am certainly not an expert on how much is out there on the subject, but that’s my point. Access! When I was a stumbling teen, confused and damaged and totally alone in my suffering of sexual assault, recovering (or trying to) from an incredibly emotionally abusive relationship, <em>Doris</em> saved my life. I felt isolated and trapped, I didn’t realize I should have been seeking support, and I happened to read about how Cindy was feeling the same thing I was and I realized it wasn’t my fault, I didn’t cause it, and I wasn’t alone. I can’t impart to you how important this writing has been to me, simply talking about the unspeakable, normalizing the experience, and removing the shame associated with having this shit happen to me. For the letter “H” she writes about “Hell.” Not the Hell that is the imaginary fiery place downstairs, but the concept of the worst possible circumstances to be faced with. Discussing sexual abuse and assault is the most difficult part to read, and the most personal. Legions of people have been affected by Cindy’s unique ability to confront the symptoms of abuse in such an inclusive manner, so honest, and unashamed, so as to reveal how awful even the simplest (and sadly, utterly commonplace) manipulation can be, how much it can fuck our lives up. I am just one of how many hundreds or thousands of people who have found strength in her testimony, and hope in her courageous pursuit of the truth.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">I feel proud that this anthology exists, that somehow the incredibly healing necessity of writing one’s story can ultimately become a radical resource for so many others, while remaining entirely DIY (that is, self-published and therefore impossible to co-opt or commodify.) While doing a little research for this review I found out that Cindy’s diaries and papers are housed at the Schlesinger Library of the History of Women in America at Radcliffe, Harvard. Doesn’t that mean we are winning?</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">—Julia Booz Ullrey</p>
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		<title>Zine/Comp Review: Lost Tapes from the Federal Sessions</title>
		<link>http://maximumrocknroll.com/zinecomp-review-lost-tapes-from-the-federal-sessions/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=zinecomp-review-lost-tapes-from-the-federal-sessions</link>
		<comments>http://maximumrocknroll.com/zinecomp-review-lost-tapes-from-the-federal-sessions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Mar 2011 15:16:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bryony</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Zine reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[compilation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scene report]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UK]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[zine]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://maximumrocknroll.com/?p=7063</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Lost Tapes from the Federal Sessions, a new zine-slash-cassette-comp out of London, UK, has been put together as a tribute to the more organic and personalised ways of finding out about new music. Firstly, forget about whether the zine comes with a tape, or the tape comes with a zine, because that may well send [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_7064" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-7064" href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/2011/03/17/zinecomp-review-lost-tapes-from-the-federal-sessions/shot_1300308468613/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-7064" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/shot_1300308468613-300x301.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="301" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Lost Tapes from the Federal Sessions</p></div>
<p style="text-align: left;"><em><strong>Lost Tapes from the Federal Sessions</strong></em>, a new zine-slash-cassette-comp out of London, UK, has been put together as a tribute to the more organic and personalised ways of finding out about new music. Firstly, forget about whether the zine comes with a tape, or the tape comes with a zine, because that may well send you into a frenzy of confusion, and enjoy 21 tracks of exciting current bands that sonically cover pretty much the entire spectrum of DIY punk rock and hardcore.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Each band gets a comprehensive interview that covers their formation, band achievements, related projects of members and personal/political standpoints (with questions written especially for them, not some kind of standard questionnaire, which is cool) as well as a piece of artwork, seemingly inspired by their name. While James has concentrated on his home scene of the UK, there are some North American bands included (notably the excellent Street Eaters, who I hadn&#8217;t heard before opening up this lovely punk parcel).</p>
<div id="attachment_7065" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-7065" href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/2011/03/17/zinecomp-review-lost-tapes-from-the-federal-sessions/shot_1300308501918/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-7065 " src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/shot_1300308501918-300x301.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="301" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Art by Ellie May Roberts</p></div>
<p style="text-align: left;">This beautifully-packaged, large size, 54-page zine (sealed in a hand-stamped, stencilled envelope with a waxy kiss) is an awesome reminder of why, parallel to the endless treasure hunt for rare gems from days gone by, it&#8217;s as important as ever to document what&#8217;s happening in your back yard/basement — especially when what&#8217;s happening sounds this good!</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Bands include: Saturday&#8217;s Kids, Woolf, Jesus of Spazzareth, Damages, Bird Calls, The Sceptres, Small Bones, Battle of Wolf 359, Human Hands, Guilty Parents, Dead in the Woods, Facel Vega.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">£5 ppd in the UK . Email <span id="emob-plfynor@tznvy.pbz-73">cyslabe {at} gmail(.)com</span><script type="text/javascript">
    var mailNode = document.getElementById('emob-plfynor@tznvy.pbz-73');
    var linkNode = document.createElement('a');
    linkNode.setAttribute('href', "mailto:%63%79%73%6C%61%62%65%40%67%6D%61%69%6C%2E%63%6F%6D");
    tNode = document.createTextNode("cyslabe {at} gmail(.)com");
    linkNode.appendChild(tNode);
    linkNode.setAttribute('id', "emob-plfynor@tznvy.pbz-73");
    mailNode.parentNode.replaceChild(linkNode, mailNode);
</script> for US/distro.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><strong><a href="http://losttapesfromthefederalsessions.blogspot.com/">losttapesfromthefederalsessions.blogspot.com</a></strong></p>
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		<title>Killer Zine: Langdon Olgar</title>
		<link>http://maximumrocknroll.com/langdon-olgar/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=langdon-olgar</link>
		<comments>http://maximumrocknroll.com/langdon-olgar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Feb 2011 01:44:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Layla</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Zine reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://maximumrocknroll.com/?p=6668</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Wow, this is amazing. Langdon Olgar is put together by the women who organized the anti-street harassment group, Hollaback London, to raise funds for that and other feminist organizations. This fanzine is engaging and empowering at the same time. It looks incredible. I am not sure what printing method they used but it resembles a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wow, this is amazing. <em><strong>Langdon Olgar</strong></em> is put together by the women who organized the anti-street harassment group, <a href="http://ldn.ihollaback.org/" target="_blank"><strong>Hollaback London</strong></a>, to raise funds for that and other feminist organizations. This fanzine is engaging and empowering at the same time. It looks incredible. I am not sure what printing method they used but it resembles a literary journal mashed up with an old issue of <em>Vague</em> magazine. The content moves from the theoretical to the personal: women&#8217;s stories of survival, assault, of existing in this rape culture and what that actually means. This is about resisting psychic death, about reinforcing your existence in the face of doubt, fear and misogyny. &#8220;It was a compliment, love. Relax and enjoy it!&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Langdon_Olgar1.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-6669" title="Langdon_Olgar1" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Langdon_Olgar1-435x260.jpg" alt="" width="435" height="260" /></a></p>
<p>It&#8217;s hard for me to put into words how good this is. The writing about street harassment is just amazing, how it contextualizes it with the wider feminist struggle and with women&#8217;s various forms of self-expression in the face of repression and fear. There are so many different voices represented and expressed. Every piece is powerful and well thought-out. This is an incendiary document!</p>
<p>The artwork is what brought to mind <em>Vague</em> magazine — it has that cut-up, post-punk/Situationist feel. There was one line that really stuck with me, that seemed like it was alluding to the misogyny inherent in <em>Vice</em> magazine: &#8220;Just because it&#8217;s free, doesn&#8217;t mean you&#8217;re not consuming it.&#8221; Obviously, this contains mostly female voices, but there are interviews with allies, including an interesting talk with Ian MacKaye about the Fugazi song &#8220;Suggestion,&#8221; and one with a man about what it means for him to identify as a feminist.</p>
<p>You can order <em>Langdon Olgar</em> at <a href="http://ldn.ihollaback.org/langdon-olgar/" target="_blank"><strong>ldn.ihollaback.org/langdon-olgar</strong></a>, and they are taking <a href="http://ldn.ihollaback.org/2011/02/18/langdon-olgar-2-submissions-now-open/" target="_blank"><strong>submissions</strong></a> for the next issue before April 1st.</p>
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		<title>Scam zine&#8217;s Erick Lyle</title>
		<link>http://maximumrocknroll.com/scam-zines-erick-lyle/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=scam-zines-erick-lyle</link>
		<comments>http://maximumrocknroll.com/scam-zines-erick-lyle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Sep 2010 22:18:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MRR Web Coordinator</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[MRR magazine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zine reviews]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://maximumrocknroll.com/?p=4598</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Since the early &#8217;90s Erick Lyle (formerly know as Iggy Scam) has published Scam zine and played in tons of great bands, including Chickenhead, Allergic To Bullshit, The Horrible Odds, Onion Flavored Rings, and Black Rainbow. In recent years he has parlayed Scam and his many other DIY zine projects into a bona fide writing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Since the early &#8217;90s <a href="http://onthelowerfrequencies.com/bio/" target="_blank"><strong>Erick Lyle</strong></a> (formerly know as Iggy Scam) has published </em><strong>Scam</strong><em><strong> zine</strong> and played in tons of great bands, including Chickenhead, Allergic To Bullshit, The Horrible Odds,  Onion Flavored Rings, and Black Rainbow. In recent years he has parlayed </em>Scam<em> and his many other DIY zine projects into a bona fide writing career of sorts, with one book under his belt (</em><a href="http://onthelowerfrequencies.com/" target="_blank">On the Lower Frequencies</a><em> on Soft Skull Press), another in the works, a number of articles in the <a href="http://www.sfbg.com" target="_blank">San Francisco Bay Guardian,</a> and just this month a bound, full-sized reprint of <a href="http://microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/books/3124/" target="_blank"><strong>the first four issues </strong></a></em><a href="http://microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/books/3124/" target="_blank"><strong>Scam</strong></a><em>! </em></p>
<p><em>MRR&#8217;s Arwen Curry spoke to Erick Lyle for last year&#8217;s <a href="../2009/03/23/mrr311/" target="_self">print media-themed issue</a> of </em>Maximumrocknroll<em> magazine. Black Rainbow photo by Greg Harvester.<br />
</em></p>
<p><a href="http://microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/books/3124/"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-4614" title="Erick_Lyle-scamfirstfour" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-scamfirstfour-300x389.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="389" /></a><strong>Do you remember the first time you saw something that was like a zine or a pamphlet, a noncommercial, underground piece of writing? What did it look like to you at the time? </strong></p>
<p>I thought from a pretty young age that I would become a writer. I enjoyed writing in school even really early on. Like when I was seven or eight, I was always writing stories, but there was a period in my early teens when I was running away from home a lot, having a lot of trouble with parents, and randomly living on the streets here and there. I started to fail out of school, which hadn’t been a problem before, and I started to think that I’d fucked up my life in some way where I wasn’t going to be able to become a writer anymore—because I wasn’t going to finish school, and, that I would need to go to college to “become a writer.” But then somehow I happened upon a Hunter S. Thompson book that I cheerfully shoplifted from the mall, and I was reading this lunatic tale of crime and drugs and stuff, and realized, “Oh, OK, I actually already am a writer. This is awesome.”</p>
<p>That was before I was a punk rocker. It wasn’t until a couple of years later that I was into punk rock and seeing zines. There weren’t a lot of zines coming out of South Florida, but finding a <em>Maximum Rocknroll</em> actually was a pretty big deal, and we found it in a chain store, so that’s something to consider—that sometimes in a small town you gotta find the punk rock in a chain store. This was probably 1988, and me and my best friend Buddha thought that we were among the last remaining punks on earth because there were no other punks in South Florida, and all the bands that we liked, like Black Flag, the Descendents, Hüsker Dü, the Minutemen, they had just broken up right before we got into punk.</p>
<p>We had seen the Circle Jerks, and 7 Seconds, but somehow something was missing, so when we found this <em>Maximum Rocknroll</em><em>,</em> we were like, “Holy shit, this magazine is full of demo tapes; there’s a whole world out there,” so that was a pretty big deal. But the first zine I saw that really influenced me was a couple years later, probably in 1990, when I left my parents’ house for good and ended up at the Ft. Lauderdale Punk House. My roommate Chuck Loose was making a zine called <em>Get Loose</em>, and it was all about scamming, dumpster diving, bumming around town, graffiti, and stuff, and I was like, “Hmm, OK, this is cool. I can do this.”</p>
<p><strong>When you were a kid did you have books in the house? Did your parents encourage reading, or was it something that came to you more in school?</strong></p>
<p>My parents did encourage reading. They read to me out of the encyclopedia every night before I went to bed. They read to me about the presidents, I remember, pre-kindergarten. I don’t know what was up with that, but I do remember getting to school and in first grade and we all had to read in front of the class. I knew so much more about reading than everybody else in the class that I was completely embarrassed, and I pretended not to know how to read as well for a while because I could tell early on that if you knew things, you were gonna be ostracized, and I probably even knew what that word meant then, so it was a bad scene. At the end of the year I won some “Most Improved Reader” award because I’d been lying the whole time.</p>
<p>But when I saw <em>Get Loose</em>, I was like, “Oh, we can just publish right now! Ourselves!” That didn’t seem like something possible with <em>Maximum Rocknroll</em>—that was some magazine that took place in California that we got in a chain store. Up until that point I was still writing pretty avidly about my experiences, but didn’t know hot to get stuff out. I did have this weird gig at a college newspaper. When I first got kicked out of my folks’ house for good and I was living on the beach in my hometown, all the kids on the Florida Atlantic University newspaper had quit because of some disagreement with the administration and then, off-campus, they had started an independent version of the school paper that they were publishing. They were hiring people who weren’t students. I went in there and got a gig as the music columnist <em>and</em> political columnist, even though I hadn’t even graduated from high school and I was seventeen, homeless, and living on the sand. I got paid some crazy amount, like eight dollars a story, but it was money, and that was encouragement.</p>
<p>I wrote three columns about the Gulf, and when I went to write the fourth one, the editor was like, “Hey, man, you can’t really write about the war again this week, it’s a real bummer,” and I lost my column. I had thought that I was about to be part of the mass student uprising that would rival the Vietnam era, but I could see that it was sadly a different generation that I’d been born into.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-pic2.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-4619" title="Erick_Black-Rainbow" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-pic2.jpg" alt="" width="494" height="319" /></a></strong></p>
<p><strong>When you first decided to do an issue of your own zine, how did you go about it? How did you pay for it?</strong></p>
<p>Buddha and I decided that we would start a zine. We wanted to book shows, do a band, do a label, do a zine…is there some other DIY things you can possibly do? Write a scene report? Make flyers?</p>
<p>We started working on the zine really avidly to document the life of petty crime that we were living there in Ft. Lauderdale, like dumpstering and pasting up anti-Gulf War flyers around town, stealing stuff, just whatever, having fun. Then Buddha kind of dropped out of it. He had wanted to call it <em>Reagan</em> or <em>Scam</em>, and <em>Scam</em> seemed really appropriate, since that’s what we were doing, and it kind of defined the theme a little more too. I ended up just spending a lot of time sitting and working on it. It was real fun just cutting and pasting and stuff, and Chuck stole all his photocopies from Office Depot, which was then kind of a new thing, so that’s what we started doing. The dishonor system.<strong> </strong>My mom worked for Office Depot for seventeen years and they totally fucked her over. She was completely shit on every second of her life there, so it felt nice to steal from Office Depot. Still does.<span id="more-4598"></span></p>
<p><strong>With this first issue, did you think of it as a contributor zine or did you see your writing being prominent? What was the format going to be?</strong></p>
<p>We felt like we had a really cool scene in a small town that people wouldn’t come to—no one wants to go to the bottom of Florida because you have to go all the way back out. You can’t get bands to come, and I think we had a lot of pride, like “We’re having a great time down here…” and we wanted to get that out. So there was a little bit of a chip on our shoulder too, like, “Fuck everybody else, South Florida rules!” It was more just about the lifestyle and trying to get that out. We were reading Abbie Hoffman books at that time and reheating dumpstered food and serving it to homeless guys at the library. We were really strange people.</p>
<p><strong>Was Chickenhead going on at this time?</strong></p>
<p>Yes, but we were an imaginary band. We hadn’t actually played any music yet, but it was all planned out; it was going to happen. It was hard to get everybody in the same room, but when we finally did play the first time, we played this party in south Miami, and we only had three songs, Buddha and me had written the songs with a drum machine, and then we asked Chuck to sing. The drum machine was called “Dr. Rhythm.” We played this party, and Chuck broke all his bottles of peanut butter and started rolling around in it, and I was like, “Whoa, this is gonna be a cool band!” I had no idea. He hadn’t told anybody what his plan was, and I was like, “Right on!” We played our set twice.</p>
<p><strong>Did you feel connected to people doing this in other places?</strong></p>
<p>Yeah, because Chuck had booked some shows, he had gotten some bands down there. We did a big Plaid Retina show. We got people’s phone numbers somehow, and I spent a lot of hours drunkenly calling people across the country and trying to convince them that they had to come to play our town. So I was on the phone with Eggplant, or the guys in Christ On A Crutch, or I called Lance Hahn all the time and left messages—never even got to talk to him. I was like, “You gotta come out here! We’re gonna do a comp record! Can you be on it? We’re gonna do everything—a comp, a label, a zine!” That’s how we met a lot of people in the Bay Area, like Green Day and Monsula—just calling people up and being like, “You gotta come to Florida. Don’t you understand?” None of them came. Well, Christ on a Crutch came. They ruled.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-guitar.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-4613" title="Erick_Lyle-guitar" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-guitar-300x400.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="400" /></a>So you already had these roots set, this connection all the way across the country here in the Bay Area—what was the impetus for coming out for the first time?</strong></p>
<p>Joey who drummed in Blatz came out and visited for a while and he played drums in Chickenhead for a little bit. Then he was going to go back to California to come back on tour with his band Jack Acid, so I thought that I would come out here and hang out for a bit, and then get a ride back. That was my plan, but he never told them that was going to happen, so it was a pain in the ass, but that’s what I did. I was really into South Florida and I (incorrectly) thought that it was an easier place in the Bay Area, that people that moved away to the Bay Area were going the easy route. But then a couple of years later, summer 1993 after Chickenhead’s last tour, I was here in the Bay Area and was going to do some big California bike ride, but it fell through. I started hanging out and got really into San Francisco, and I decide to move eventually.</p>
<p><strong>Let me ask you a different type of question still relating to youth: A lot of kids in the punk scene, for whatever reason, don’t get into reading. Maybe they read zines and stuff, but in terms of print, what would you recommend to someone who thinks that they don’t like reading?</strong></p>
<p>You probably gotta read all the Hunter S. Thompson books; <em>The Basketball Diaries</em>; what about Michelle Tea or something? This is a good question for you: has there been a great punk rock novel? I say no; I can’t think of one.</p>
<p><strong>I don’t know. I can’t think of one. </strong></p>
<p>Like Bukowski or something. <em>On the Road.</em> That whole punk rock life hasn’t been novelized in a satisfying way for me.</p>
<p><strong>Me neither. I was thinking also of the books <em>about</em> punk, which for some reason I stay away from for a few years, and then kind of creep up on later. </strong></p>
<p><em>Please Kill Me</em> is obviously brilliantly conceived, and has become the editorial template for every other kind of cultural history book, because it was so well done. So that one was great, but it’s not a novel. Books about punk, too, sometimes those are pretty sketchy, where you’re like, <em>nuh-uh.</em></p>
<p>I think that <em>Scam</em>, <em>Cometbus,</em> or <em>Doris</em>, zines that are aspiring to be better written, are good for younger punk rockers. If you’re talking about making a leap, like, “How is literature vital to me? How am I represented in it? Where are the freaks in literature?”—that’s kind of hard. There’s that Lester Bangs book I read when I was a kid.</p>
<p><strong>Yeah, I remember being impressed by his fantasy about James Taylor being pushed off a cliff, thinking, that is so awesome! Can you <em>say</em> that? </strong></p>
<p>Because it’s about rock and roll; it’s about living outside of the system. Being an outlaw, something like that. Everybody reads <em>One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest</em> when they’re a teenager; that was a big mall heist shoplifting book for me. I was like, “Yeah, this is awesome.”</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-graphic.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-4620" title="Erick_OTLF graphic" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-graphic.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="165" /></a></strong></p>
<p><strong>That’s true, and there’s Vonnegut. So your book, <em>On the Lower Frequencies,</em> is a collection of excerpts from <em>Scam</em> magazine, <em>Turd-Filled Donut</em>, and various other writings that you’ve done. It’s not exactly an anthology; it’s a collection.</strong></p>
<p>The book is kind of like one half of the <em>Scam</em> book, it represents what I’ve been doing for the past ten years here in San Francisco: anti-war stuff, anti-gentrification, working on a skid-row newspaper, squatting. All kinds of crime in there, but kind of a more community organizing level in this weird way, and the squatting is prevalent. There’s not the freight-hopping and stuff like that from Miami. That’s all going to come out in another Miami <em>Scam</em> anthology, probably later this year. It will literally be reprinted from the zines.</p>
<p>With <em>On the Lower Frequencies</em>, I made the decision to type things up and to mix up the narrative. I wanted to make this bottom-up sort of history of the past ten years out of this writing, using the primary documents. There are repeating characters throughout, and the reader is able to see what’s happening. It’s a little more show not tell; the reader can put it together in their own mind and see the trajectory of everybody and what we’re working on without me having to sum it all up.</p>
<p>I wanted to reach beyond just the people who read <em>Scam</em>. I think it is vital lost history. I think that thousands of protestors shutting down San Francisco when the war started is a lost piece of history that’s pretty inspirational. I think squatting is obviously an antidote to foreclosures of homes, the current economic crisis. So, I felt like I wanted to have the book in typeface, to be as legible as possible so that the ideas could come across. Most people get that and seem to be into it. I’ve never been satisfied with the way that <em>Scam</em> looked entirely. I don’t like it that you can’t read it and that it cuts off on the Xerox edges and that it’s illegible. And when the stories get longer, they take up too much space handwritten. They literally would be eight Xerox pages, and it becomes two typed pages, you know?</p>
<p><strong>How was it to work with Soft Skull, your publisher? And how do you feel about the book and how it came out?</strong></p>
<p>I love the way it turned out. I had full control over everything. Soft Skull served as a vital sounding board for ideas, but ultimately I was able to have a lot of freedom. For instance, I designed the cover of the book. I didn’t actually construct it, but I came up with the plan and laid it out. An author never chooses their cover when they’re working with a more mainstream press. An author seldom has a choice of their title, things like that. So I have a lot of respect for Richard Nash at Soft Skull. I think he’s a great editor and publisher. I have another book with them coming out later this year, hopefully.</p>
<p><strong>You’ve been touring with this book quite a bit. You took it around the East Coast and the West Coast and back…</strong></p>
<p>Midwest, South, Canada. In bigger towns where I think there’s a stronger independent bookstore scene, the crowds were really diverse age-wise, or not entirely punk rockers. I’m excited about that. Seattle was like that. I really love to go see people talk and read, but it’s a difficult thing for me to do, to stand up there and do that, so it was a challenge to try to get into a place where I could just go have a conversation with strangers about stuff I’m into. I think everybody would be well served by trying to figure out how to get themselves across in public to small groups of people. It’s different from the band tour because it’s so easy. It’s like, the shows are at seven instead of midnight, and no one is blacked-out drunk when you’re reading, ever. It’s all over in an hour, hour and a half, instead of like hours and hours of stuff, and you can just go hang out the rest of the night. It’s real chill, you know?</p>
<p><strong>In <em>On the Lower Frequencies</em>, the action is seen as it’s happening, as opposed to looking backward. And it’s not just your perspective—it’s a chronicle of a community engaged in acts of creative resistance against gentrification, the wars, globalization, etc. There are enough interview segments and pieces included from other people that it does read like a collection of voices with a strong editorial slant on your side. In terms of the struggles that are being talked about in the book, what is the role of the writer? </strong></p>
<p>In this case, with the book, I’m trying to collect a history of a community’s efforts over a period of time, in order to make sure that those efforts aren’t lost completely, and so that we can have room to reflect on what’s happened, to encourage debate amongst ourselves about what worked, what we were trying. Or even about whether that history is valid, but just to keep it alive. Because other people that were involved certainly might have their own perspectives, and that’s welcome as well. So I put it out there for our own benefit and also for the benefit of folks who aren’t involved, for future readers, or even for distantly future readers, because there are tactics and ideas in here.</p>
<p>You mentioned that the book is against a lot of things, but also the book is for a lot of things. That’s actually one of the main things that we as a community—the people who were working on these protests together—were talking about, was the idea that we should be fighting for what we’re for and not what we’re against. It’s something that I come to again and again in the book—these sort of lost utopian moments, where we’ll have some squat in downtown San Francisco for three months, where we’re serving free food and having these amazing shows, and actually living the life we want on Earth for these ephemeral brief moments, and I think that writing and literature, whether it’s fiction or nonfiction, creates a space where those ideas that are sometimes too fragile to survive in the light of day can live on dormant, like a virus, in print, waiting for their moment to come back.</p>
<p>So that’s important, and also, as a weird history freak, it’s a way to talk about the texture of what life was like in this city during these historical eras, so if people are trying to put it together later, or research way down the road, they can kind of have a more satisfying description, you know? Because I do research all the time, and I’ll try to research like, what was the protest like in 1991 when the war started and people shut down the Bay Bridge? What did that feel like? And there will be all these pamphlets about that time where it’s like, “Last night we went and took over the bridge, because this fuckin’ fascist war has gotta be stopped! These imperialists are trying to destroy our way of life! They’re trying to destroy Iraq! This is not gonna be allowed!” and you’re like, “Dude, what was it <em>like</em> when you took over the bridge? You’re not really going to tell me? I can’t believe it!” So, my message to the reader of this, my rant, a side rant, is: if you’re writing history, use descriptive words. Describe what happened. Say how many people were there. What was the weather like? What did it feel like? What did you do, in what order? These things are going to be really important later. We know that the war is stupid and imperialist. What was it <em>like</em>? So, that’s part of why I did this too.</p>
<p><strong>In <em>On the Lower Frequencies </em>and in <em>Scam</em>, the actual people that were involved have a voice and come to life, and it brings the experiences to life, it makes them human, it makes them possible, as opposed to reading rhetoric or rant. And this is something about literature in general, and about books—when ideas are brought to life through the experiences of real people, they mean something to readers.</strong></p>
<p>Well, you’re right, and this goes back to the initial experience of discovering <em>Get Loose</em> and being like, “This is something I can do.” I’ve definitely wanted to create that sense with <em>Scam</em> and <em>The Turd-Filled Donut</em> and now this book, that the kinds of things I highlight are ordinary folks just deciding to carry out an action. It’s not like they answered a flyer from International ANSWER and went out to the protest march; it’s like, “We saw an empty lot and wanted to turn it into a garden and we did.” That’s definitely part of the point, is that I want people to feel that they can do whatever they want.</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-TFD.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-4623" style="border: 1px solid black;" title="Erick_Layout.indd" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Erick_Lyle-TFD.jpg" alt="" width="267" height="368" /></a>A lot of your work with <em>The Turd-Filled Donut,</em> in particular, is very conscious of the press, of the role and the function of the newspaper. <em>The Turd-Filled Donut</em> is a pretty blatant satire in a lot of ways of the <em>San Francisco Chronicle</em>. Now the whole thing is changing. I think it was the <em>New Yorker</em> that reported that many cities are not going to have a daily newspaper relatively soon. I’m curious to hear what you think the function of the daily newspaper is, what it should be.</strong></p>
<p>It’s a good question. Well, just for the reader of this interview: <em>The Turd-Filled Donut </em>was a neighborhood newspaper that me and my friend Ivy started when we moved back to San Francisco in late ’97, and we were living in welfare hotels on Sixth Street, which is kind of the skid row of SF. We wanted to put out a paper that documented some of the real community that existed there, and also some of the protest activity that did take place. Tenants’ rights kind of things. We would steal newspaper boxes, repaint them, and put them out on the street with the paper in them. It was available for free in various social services agencies and hotel lobbies and stuff, so it was very much an attempt to reach as many people as possible. It might start a conversation or spread some news, to put out a different idea to the reader that they are part of a neighborhood. We were very conscious of the press, and I was pretty conscious about not printing articles that were unfair or fake or hearsay. I really wanted to be able to back if up if we had some kind of news story. I’d give the other side a chance to respond. It was almost by the book in a certain way, even though it had this crazy voice.</p>
<p><strong>And Ivy went and interviewed the mayor, Willie Brown.</strong></p>
<p>Right. We didn’t present him in the best possible light, but it was all his quotes. That paper wouldn’t have made sense if there weren’t a context of community, of being in a city where there are defined neighborhoods. It was about taking people that aren’t normally part of the debate and trying to give them a voice, because it’s understood that there is this public place where we should be able to talk with everybody else. So what you’re talking about when you’re losing newspapers is a decline of that public space. Even though the newspapers are a for-profit concern, there’s a democratic ideal behind it, that they’re part of the place where everybody’s going to be represented in some way. Even though we know that’s not really true, it’s a framework to even rebel against, you know? How are you going to rebel against that if it doesn’t exist? It’s a good question.</p>
<p>I don’t think it’s good for newspapers to disappear. Not just because I like them and the way they feel and crinkle. Not just because I enjoy the familiarity of the style of writing, even though it’s full of fucking total lies and garbage. Not just because of my daily ritual, not just all that. I think it’s because this country’s misinformed about everything factually, and I have a feeling that the vast majority of the public is actually really interested in being deceived. Maybe even more so in a place like San Francisco, where there are so many alternative news sources, I think that people are going to seek more of the news that they want to hear. So on the one hand there’s this paradigm of the newspaper that we’ve been rebelling against all this time because our voices are shut out of it and we think it’s bullshit, but if people are going to their favorite blog to find out what the news is, and it’s not even factual, whether it’s far right or far left, what are we left with there? There’s no ground zero to work from.</p>
<p><strong>Self-selecting?</strong></p>
<p>Self-selecting. People on the left don’t think that’s a problem because they automatically assume that their facts are more correct, but we’re going to see in the Obama times that they’re not. Electric cars are not going to save us. We’re not going to make friends with the people in Afghanistan who want to blow us up by just seeming nicer than Bush. These are fuckin’ fictional narratives that we’re trying to embrace to feel better about our country and ourselves. But what about the right? There’s this vast population of people that think that the world is 10,000 years old, and that’s just what they believe. So we’ve been saying that they’re crazy and this is what we’re up against all this time. Well, on the left there are also things that are totally lunatic? These false narratives that people on the left are embracing are actually really harmful—especially when they’re used to, say, justify escalating a war in Afghanistan. And I just think that as there’s less and less center of news, down the road, people are going to be more and more misinformed, and it’s going to increase polarization.</p>
<p><strong>Part of it, too, is that the reporters of the newspapers are accountable to their editors, and the editors to some degree are accountable to the public. But when you’re talking about bloggers, what is their accountability? Nobody can fire them, nobody’s editing them.</strong></p>
<p>Or, are they even real? Is this just a persona? There was a guy who was doing a hoax McCain blog, all election-year, claiming to work for their campaign and just putting out all these total lies about McCain as if he was on their side, just like satires. It sounds like a real fun thing to do, but people are reprinting it and it becomes news, so I don’t know.</p>
<p><strong>So, unfortunately, it looks like you’ll be moving out of your cool old 1905 office building downtown. Do you want to talk about your noir office and your love of noir fiction?</strong></p>
<p>You’re referring to my office on Market St. in a pre-earthquake San Francisco building that has this rad black-and-white film kind of aesthetic to it. It’s like some kind of Sam Spade situation, and it is from Sam Spade’s era. Noir fiction is kind of like muckraking fiction; it’s based on the idea that there is a hidden truth behind the façade of daily life, so that the protagonist is either trying to find that truth or is suddenly brutally made aware of it. But there’s something deeper that’s going on. I think that relates to a search for history or my love of those kind of secret facts, and also it’s about finding yourself represented in print, like we’ve talked about already a little bit. Because in the noir fiction you’re more likely to see criminals represented, and the down and out side of life, and I feel like I recognize the places of the noir fiction a little bit more.</p>
<p>I’m from Miami, which is one of the city locations in the noir canon. Miami and LA are really huge in detective novels because they are places with these façades of sunshine and endless paradise. Palm trees and cruelty, that’s what we used to call it back home. Underneath, there’s this sordid world of poverty and crime. In a way, <em>On the Lower Frequencies</em> is a little bit of a noir history of the recent times of San Francisco, except that it’s overtly political and idealistic. It’s not that bleak, but it is a look at the underside, a look at history from the skid row.</p>
<p><strong>You do a bit of writing for a living as well; you write book reviews for the weekly paper here. What have you been reading that you can recommend?</strong></p>
<p>I was just writing about the new translation of Roberto Bolaño’s book <em>2666</em>, in combination with the Chinese exile writer Ma Jian and his book <em>Beijing Coma</em>. I was writing about them together and about this election cycle we just went through. It is a time where we’re looking for some real change, for sure, and as much as I admire the intelligence, temperament, and abilities of Obama as a person, I felt that a lot of the change he was offering up was not really substantial. It was more about tweaking the national storyline in a way so that we can continue to tell ourselves things that are going make us feel good about our country. Ronald Reagan, when he was elected at a time of really low morale, was able to sell the storyline about how America should feel good about itself. And I kind of think that Obama’s brought that back at a time when morale is really low, by selling a different fictional tweak of a way that we can see ourselves as the richest, most powerful country in the world.</p>
<p><strong>And honorable.</strong></p>
<p>And honorable now. Instead of being the richest, most powerful country in the world that can bomb anything we want, we’re going to be this strongest, richest, most powerful country in the world that’s a little bit more friendly, and we’re gonna use a different form of coercion to get what we want, supposedly. But we’re not the richest, most powerful country in the world. The whole world is humoring us because we’re so dangerous, you know? Everybody’s like, “There you go, US, <em>sure</em> you’re still the richest, most powerful in the world, sure; I mean, China owns you and you’re getting your ass kicked in these two guerrilla wars, but you’re still the best!”</p>
<p>I was writing about the idea that we need to actually be prosecuting Bush. We need truth and reconciliation to deal with this era of torture and the total disregard of the constitution. We have to look at the past factually to make a record of it, to tell ourselves the truth about it. That’s not going to make us feel good about it in the same way. But it’s a harder won kind of hope than just to embrace self-delusion. It would feel far more hopeful to really deal with these things truthfully and to say, “That’s not what we’re going to do anymore.” That’s what’s so necessary, and as long as we put that off, things aren’t really going to change. How that relates to Bolaño and Ma Jian is that I just felt they wrote these brilliant books that were about dealing with the truth of atrocity and really uncomfortable, difficult, grizzly truth—political truth. If political leaders and journalists are going to collude to create these storylines that are fictional, then the task of true memory is going to have to fall to literature. These foreign writers provide this really hopeful example to me. This is really incredible, this is against all odds, here is somebody really striving for the truth. So I recommend <em>Beijing Coma</em>, <em>2666</em>. On the noir front, I recommend Ed Bunker, who wrote the classic criminal memoir <em>Educations of a Felon</em>, and the prison novel <em>No Beast So Fierce</em>.</p>
<p><strong>In particular the broadcast news is interested in selling stories that people want to hear. Reading a lot helps you understand how the world is being constructed around you, that people are writing the storylines. People are creating the narrative, and if you can’t recognize that you’re in trouble. We have a natural tendency, if we hear things over and over and over and over again, to believe that they’re true.</strong></p>
<p>And the storyline is also constructed by what sells. That’s part of the book biz. You take the lid off of that, and it’s too depressing to even think about. Actually, someone asked me to write a book that was like a <em>Scam</em> survival book for all the yuppies that are losing their jobs. Someone else is probably going to write that book this year; don’t be surprised. It’s what people want to hear, what’s going on combined with what can sell, and it’s such a cynical mixture, and that’s what we have to slog through to find culture. That’s a drag. At least blogs are free.</p>
<p><strong>Yeah, for now. </strong></p>
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		<title>Mentally Unstable zine</title>
		<link>http://maximumrocknroll.com/mentally-unstable-zine/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=mentally-unstable-zine</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:48:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Layla</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[MRR Archive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zine reviews]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[One of the greatest things about volunteering at MRR is the access to our incredible archive of records, fanzines, tapes and assorted other weirdo stuff! Mentally Unstable zine came out in 1984, has reviews of THE COMES &#8220;No Side&#8221; 12&#8243;, the GISM &#8220;Detestation&#8221; 12&#8243;, KUKL and ULTIMO RESORTE records. I have tried to scan in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mentally-unstable.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-806" style="border: 2px solid black;" title="mentally-unstable" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mentally-unstable-210x300.jpg" alt="mentally-unstable" width="162" height="232" /></a>One of the greatest things about volunteering at MRR is the access to our incredible archive of records, fanzines, tapes and assorted other weirdo stuff! <strong><em>Mentally Unstable</em></strong> zine came out in 1984, has reviews of THE COMES &#8220;No Side&#8221; 12&#8243;, the GISM &#8220;Detestation&#8221; 12&#8243;, KUKL and ULTIMO RESORTE records. I have tried to scan in the reviews page, but unfortunately my scanning job wasn&#8217;t quite able to capture the insanity of the 5pt font and the ADD layout! There are reviews of records separated by country, from Holland to South Africa, Norway to Australia&#8230; So many classic records:  SVART FRAMTID, MALINHEADS&#8230; I also scanned in the cover and another random page, so maybe you can make out some of the text. This zine was from the UK, and really captures the excitement of hardcore and punk. It&#8217;s really funny too&#8230;</p>
<p><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/inside-2.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-808 alignnone" style="border: 1px solid black;" title="inside-2" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/inside-2-300x217.jpg" alt="inside-2" width="245" height="180" /></a> <a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/inside-of-zine.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-807 alignnone" style="border: 1px solid black;" title="inside-of-zine" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/inside-of-zine-300x214.jpg" alt="inside-of-zine" width="254" height="180" /></a></p>
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		<title>Fodido e Xerocado photozine</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2009 04:19:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[We got a big treat in the mailbox recently. From Daigo Oliva and Mateus Mondini, two of the best current photographers in the punk scene, it&#8217;s issues 8, 9 and 10 of Fodido e Xerocado photozine outta Brazil. Lovingly packaged in hand stamped and screen-printed envelopes, this fanzine is the perfect confluence of honed artistry [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/fodido_e_xerocado.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-430 alignright" title="fodido_e_xerocado" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/fodido_e_xerocado-225x300.jpg" alt="fodido_e_xerocado" width="225" height="300" /></a>We got a big treat in the mailbox recently. From Daigo Oliva and Mateus Mondini, two of the best current photographers in the punk scene, it&#8217;s issues 8, 9 and 10 of <em>Fodido e Xerocado</em> photozine outta Brazil. Lovingly packaged in hand stamped and screen-printed envelopes, this fanzine is the perfect confluence of honed artistry and off-the-cuff punk rock aesthetic. The zines are chock full of photos and more photos of punk bands in action, with these issues focusing on Europe and Brazil in 2008. If you&#8217;re an aspiring show photographer, you&#8217;d do well to check out these guys&#8217; work. The subjects feel like they&#8217;re actually in motion, not just captured in motion, and the framing is so good, well, at times it&#8217;s almost too perfect. <em>Fodido e Xerocado</em> put out a book recently but it didn&#8217;t quite capture the vibrancy of their work. They deserve a fat coffee table volume with nice glossy printing, if you ask me&#8230;</p>
<p>The zine&#8217;s in all black-and-white, so it can&#8217;t showcase these dudes&#8217; talent with color, but here on the internets we don&#8217;t have that problem&#8230; Here&#8217;s a couple of random pix from their extensive flickr pages.</p>
<div id="attachment_431" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mateus_regulations.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-431" title="mateus_regulations" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mateus_regulations-450x220.jpg" alt="mateus_regulations" width="450" height="220" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Regulations (photo by Mateus Mondini)</p></div>
<div id="attachment_432" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/diago_sk8.jpg"><img class="size-large wp-image-432" title="diago_sk8" src="http://maximumrocknroll.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/diago_sk8-450x300.jpg" alt="Kalota em Manhein (photo by Daigo Oliva)" width="450" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Kalota em Manhein (photo by Daigo Oliva)</p></div>
<p>My only complaint is that, apart from some photos of MASSHYSTERI and the cover of #8, the zine is a total dude-fest. Let&#8217;s see some more ladies in there, guys — we know they&#8217;re out there&#8230;</p>
<p>As a bonus, they sent me a split CD by Brazil&#8217;s MORTO PELA ESCOLA and Daigo&#8217;s band NAIFA. The graphics are cool and both of the bands shred! Thanks a lot guys, keep &#8216;em comin&#8217;!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/mateuspatche/" target="_blank">http://www.flickr.com/photos/mateuspatche/</a><br />
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/daigooliva/" target="_blank">http://www.flickr.com/photos/daigooliva/</a><br />
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