Articles/Writing
(issue 13)
Zines have existed in Ireland for twenty-eight years. Unprofessional,
home-made small circulation magazines with features on local music scenes,
documentaries from daily life, art and political commentary that are out
of bounds for mainstream media outlets such as national media institutions
and the transnational cultural industries. Investigation into early Irish
fanzines offers a rich and inspirational tradition of attempts to record
and document lived realities, histories and viewpoints that otherwise most
likely would have been ignored.
The first Irish punk fanzine was in March 1977 by Stephen
Rapid, a member of local band the Radiators (From Space). Raw Power #1 was
eleven A4 single-sided photocopied stapled pages, handwritten and typed
featuring a Radiators interview, record reviews, a feature on a new band
Revolver, local band rumours and news, aswell as tips for bands starting
off with original material.
From the outset the tone was encouraging of others getting involved:
“And most of all don’t sit around doing nothing. If you want
to see these bands let them know, if you’re in school organize a dance,
get them to play. Form your own bands if you don’t like any around
at the moment. Write your own fanzine so that other people will know that
there are others around like them. Don’t follow fashions start your
own. But do something positive NOW.” (Intro, Raw Power#1).


Raw Power lasted two issues, the second issue containing
the first ever interview with Derry band the Undertones.
The idea had been sparked though; Heat was the next Irish fanzine in July
’77.
“I met Jude Carr, he was going to a lot of these gigs as well and
it literally came to a situation where we decided that … you know
the idea that you could just get up on stage and do it – We couldn’t
play, we couldn’t sing, we couldn’t write, but the one thing
we could do is bring out a fanzine about the bands that we were into…”
(Peter Nasty interviewed by Boz).
Heat’s creators Pete Nasty (Pete Price) and Ray Gunne (Jude Carr),
had a more graphics/print background, and were more influenced by the New
York fanzine Punk [first punk fanzine] than the very basic photocopy-staple
job of English Sniffin’ Glue [first British punk fanzine]. The text
was handwritten while pages were well designed, laid-out and printed with
a colour cover. The subject matter covered new wave/punk band interviews,
articles, reviews and later comic strips and films. Having secured advertising
funding and distribution from Better Badges in England (button badge producers),
the magazines circulation was increasing by 200 each issue; jumping to 2000
copies when they tried to secure proper nationwide distribution through
Easons newsagents. By Heat Vol.2 issue 2 [no.11], the magazine was gathering
momentum, but a published article “McGuiness is good for U2”
lead to the end of the road. The article alleged that U2 manager Paul McGuiness
had succeeded in getting a band pulled from a support slot at a gig, for
U2 instead. McGuiness threatened to sue Heat unless the article was pulled
but a batch had already gone to Easons. McGuiness subsequently found out
and sued the magazine ensuring its closure and place in Irish music folklore’s
history, although a benefit gig for Heat managed to cover the costs. Heat’s
two writers later started another fanzine called Black & White, this
time laying out contributions from bands rather than featuring their own
articles, it didn’t receive quite as a good a reaction though and
only lasted for 3 issues.
Imprint another fanzine started in 1979 edited by Barbara
Fitz, in its eleventh issue features Zerox Irish Fanzine Directory charting
names and dates of the releases of Irish fanzines up to that time. Other
features include an interview and tour around town with Tom Robinson of
Sector 27, aswell as interviews and features on Dexys Midnight Runners,
Broken Doll, Modern Disgrace and other local goings on!

Vox which started in March ’80 became a significant
cultural publication of the era combining punk, electronic and progressive
music, underground poets, performance artists and fringe entities. Flicking
through its pages is like looking through a directory of all things new
wave and underground covering that period of time, with so many topics and
features that it is hard to attempt a summary.
Dave Clifford, its editor, was himself a printer and this is reflected in
its sophisticated, clean layouts, printed pages and two-colour cover as
well as high quality writing and journalism. Although with such high aesthetics
it may have bordered towards being a magazine, PA of A New Clear Threat
zine and Paranoid Visions (band) explains:
“In reality it was a fanzine, in real terms Dave Clifford was a fan
of punk bands, he did a magazine for punk bands as a man into punk doing
it himself, nobody censoring it, editing it, he interviewed totally outrageous
bands .I remember reading an interview with a band called Of Xerox. This
was when I was 13 “Christ these are popstars”, reading about
them, looking at photographs, they’re the real thing. I kept seeing
the bass player on the train on my way to school, I though she was the coolest
in the world. They’d played about 3 gigs, they weren’t a real
band but he was writing about them and that made it really special. Another
punk band called The Pretty – one of the first Irish punk bands –
first real serious nasty shower. He had an article on them which was very
insightful. That would have been influential on me. Once I realised that
The Pretty were no better than me or anything that I could have done, Of
Xerox were just 4/5 years older than me, she was on her way to school aswell.
Once you realise that it takes the mystery out of it, not everybody is the
Sex Pistols or the Damned, anybody can be doing this…”.
Vox lasted for at least 14 issues until 1983.
To be continued ….. perhaps. [This is an excerpt from a thesis I’ve
done called: ‘A History of Irish Zines: Alternate Voices To The Cultural
Industries’]. Special thanks to Boz for the lend of actual fanzines,
research and information, thanks also to PA for interview.
Early Irish Fanzines Part 2: P.A./ A New Clear Threat
More info on Irish punk and new wave music etc. see extensive online archive see Irish Punk and New Wave Discog
