BravEar 1982–1987

Date

1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987

16 edizioni

Salta 5 edizioni

Vai all'anno

1982 #1

1982 #2

1982 #3

1982 #4

1983 #5

1983 #6

1983 #7

1983 #8

1984 v2 #1

1984 #9

1985 v3 #1

1985 v3 #2

1986 v3 #3

1986 v3 #4

1986 v3 #5

1987 v3 #6

1982 Edizione 1

1982 Edizione 2

1982 Edizione 3

1982 Edizione 4

1983 Edizione 5

1983 Edizione 6

1983 Edizione 7

1983 Edizione 8

1984 Volume 2 Edizione 1

1984 Edizione 9

1985 Volume 3 Edizione 1

1985 Volume 3 Edizione 2

1986 Volume 3 Edizione 3

1986 Volume 3 Edizione 4

1986 Volume 3 Edizione 5

1987 Volume 3 Edizione 6

Informazioni su questa pubblicazione

Edizioni:

16

Pubblicato:

1982–1987

Editore:

Michael Miro

Posizione:

Hayward, CA United States (1982–1983)
Berkeley, CA United States (1983–1987)
A 16-issue zine published between 1981 and 1988 in Hayward, California, BravEar was edited first by Lorry Flemming and later by Rory Cox, and published with attractive design by Mike Miro. In addition to coverage of the local alternative music scene, which included punk bands like Dead Kennedys and Camper Van Beethoven, it featured interviews with prominent musicians from further afield, such as U.S. bands Soul Asylum and Violet Femmes, the English singer Billy Bragg, and Scotland’s Cocteau Twins. Other articles considered Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen and decried U.S. militarization and the threat of nuclear war.

Informazioni su questa pubblicazione

Edizioni:

16

Pubblicato:

1982–1987

Editore:

Michael Miro

Posizione:

Hayward, CA United States (1982–1983)
Berkeley, CA United States (1983–1987)
A 16-issue zine published between 1981 and 1988 in Hayward, California, BravEar was edited first by Lorry Flemming and later by Rory Cox, and published with attractive design by Mike Miro. In addition to coverage of the local alternative music scene, which included punk bands like Dead Kennedys and Camper Van Beethoven, it featured interviews with prominent musicians from further afield, such as U.S. bands Soul Asylum and Violet Femmes, the English singer Billy Bragg, and Scotland’s Cocteau Twins. Other articles considered Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen and decried U.S. militarization and the threat of nuclear war.