Yaogun Xinyang/Rock Xinyang 2011–2015

Dates

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

5 issues

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2011 v1

2012 v2

2013 v3

2014 v4

2015 v5

2011 Volume 1

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26 pages

2012 Volume 2

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24 pages

2013 Volume 3

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58 pages

2014 Volume 4

View Issue

62 pages

2015 Volume 5

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108 pages

About this Publication

Issues:

5

Published:

2011–2015

Location:

China
Yaogun Xinyang is a pocket-sized 64-page zine dedicated to the rock scene of Xinyang, a city in central China’s Henan province. The editors, Xi Zhi Zi and Yang Mu, aim to document the development of rock music in this city from a personal perspective, saying, “as an independent cultural magazine from a small city, it is truly remarkable that it has persevered for five years despite the scarcity of information. From the unfamiliarity and alienation when we first arrived in this city, to the gradual integration into it today, whether acknowledged or not, we have, in fact, become a part of it”. Five issues were published between 2011 and 2015, with articles about bands, shows, and music venues in the city, as well as musicians who have moved out of Xinyang. There are also a series of articles about bands in local colleges and universities, whose information can be hardly found elsewhere.

About this Publication

Issues:

5

Published:

2011–2015

Location:

China
Yaogun Xinyang is a pocket-sized 64-page zine dedicated to the rock scene of Xinyang, a city in central China’s Henan province. The editors, Xi Zhi Zi and Yang Mu, aim to document the development of rock music in this city from a personal perspective, saying, “as an independent cultural magazine from a small city, it is truly remarkable that it has persevered for five years despite the scarcity of information. From the unfamiliarity and alienation when we first arrived in this city, to the gradual integration into it today, whether acknowledged or not, we have, in fact, become a part of it”. Five issues were published between 2011 and 2015, with articles about bands, shows, and music venues in the city, as well as musicians who have moved out of Xinyang. There are also a series of articles about bands in local colleges and universities, whose information can be hardly found elsewhere.