Razorcake

Razorcake

Razorcake #77
Executive Director / Editor-in-chief Todd Taylor
Managing Editor Daryl Gussin
Frequency Bi-monthly
Circulation 6,000
Founder Todd Taylor, Sean Carswell
Year founded 2001
Country USA
Based in Los Angeles
Website www.razorcake.org

Razorcake is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that publishes the Razorcake fanzine, a DIY punk rock fanzine published bi-monthly out of Los Angeles, California. It was co-founded by Todd Taylor (former Flipside managing editor) and Sean Carswell (author and Gorsky Press co-founder) in 2001.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

History

As Flipside was going under, Taylor decided that he did not want to cease to write about music. His initial idea was to create a webzine instead of a print zine because of financial restraints. Taylor told Carswell, during a trip to Florida, about his plan for a webzine. Carswell suggested that a print edition be produced. Taylor concurred, stipulating that Carswell needed to move to Los Angeles in order to assist with the production of the fanzine.[1][2][8]

The name for both editions was chosen while searching for a domain name. Many of the 300 possibilities, such as "Born to Rock" and "Barbed Wire Asshole," were either taken, too expensive, or thought to be a name that "would trap [them]." "Razorcake" was suggested by Katy (a.k.a. KT), a friend of Taylor and Carswell. The name was chosen since it meant nothing and was economical, and Skinny Dan (a.k.a. Danny) set up the website at www.razorcake.com.[1][2][9][10]

March 2001 saw the first issue of the print edition of Razorcake. The inaugural issue was the only one to bear a newsprint cover. Every issue since the first has had a glossy cover. As opposed to the cover, the focus of the content within Razorcake has never changed. Also, the fanzine’s circulation has more than doubled (to 6,000) since the first issue.[11][12]

Non-profit status

In late 2005, Razorcake was approved by the IRS as an official 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Razorcake is America's only fanzine dedicated to punk to obtain nonprofit status.[13] The new organization combined the Gorsky Press and the zine, and is now officially called Razorcake/Gorsky Press, Inc. This meant that not one person could individually benefit from Razorcake. All money earned goes back into day-to-day operations and keeping Razorcake afloat. Razorcake wanted to show that its business model was out in the open in order to demonstrate that a sustainable business could be ethical, fair, and true to its ideals long after its first issue.[14]

Mission Statement

Razorcake provides consistent coverage of do-it-yourself punk culture that you won’t find anywhere else. Razorcake believes in positive, progressive, community-friendly DIY punk. "We do our part."

DIY punk culture is often misrepresented, misunderstood, and the target of corporate exploitation. Razorcake supports a legit community of punk music and culture as the only bona fide 501(c)(3) non-profit music magazine in America.

Razorcake's bi-monthly fanzine is a one-of-a-kind resource for the DIY punk community. Over the years, Razorcake has developed this resource to help document every facet of this culture. The Razorcake Gorsky umbrella also includes book publishing, record pressing, live shows and readings, and a thriving web presence that maintains weekly podcasts, webcomics, and videos.

Razorcake's open participation policy means anyone can become a contributor. Currently, Razorcake offers a forum for over 180 long-term independent volunteer writers, photographers, illustrators, and musicians from around the world. Razorcake takes pride in the DIY punk scenes and represents them internationally. Razorcake also distributes the magazine to over twenty countries.

DIY punk is an exciting, evolving culture that can thrive outside of corporate interests. Razorcake's goal is to continue operating a modern framework where this community of independent, DIY punk can continue.[15]

Ethics

From the interviews it runs (contributors interview bands based solely on their appreciation), to the advertising allowed (no major labels and "below-market price" advertising to those in the DIY community), to the method of the zine’s distribution (not via chain stores, but directly to individual stores and people), Razorcake operates outside of the corporate structures that a traditional music magazine would embrace.[12][16] With only two people on staff, all of the material offered in both editions of Razorcake is donated.[2]

Content

Razorcake sees itself as a constant celebration and criticism of contemporary DIY punk rock. Every piece that Razorcake runs is exclusive. Razorcake provides long-format, detailed interviews with contemporary punk bands (including Dan Padilla, Toys That Kill, Fucked Up, Shang-A-Lang, The Ergs!, The Marked Men, Tenement (band)) and with punk pioneers (such as The Adolescents, Dead Moon, T.S.O.L., Jello Biafra, Ian Mackaye, Joe Lally), and a variety of musicians under the DIY punk umbrella (Hasil Adkins, Superchunk, Kenneth Higney, At The Drive-In, The Melvins, Pere Ubu).

Razorcake not only interviews bands from all over the globe (Gorilla Angreb, Career Suicide, The Regulations), but punk-affiliated artists—photographers (Edward Colver, Bev Davies), comic artists (Nicholas Gurewitch of the Perry Bible Fellowship), movie directors (Alex Cox dir. of Repo Man (film), Curtis Harrington), actors (Kevin Murphy (actor) from Mystery Science Theater 3000), writers (Brad Warner, Chris Walter)—and political thinkers such as Howard Zinn, Christian Parenti, Noam Chomsky, and Candace Falk and Gary Pateman (curators of the Emma Goldman Paper Project).

Los Angeles area coverage

Razorcake is dedicated to an ongoing attention to its own roots and sections of Los Angeles County (especially East Los Angeles, the San Gabriel Valley, South Los Angeles) and Tijuana. The fanzine has interviewed a number of bands and individuals from these areas, as well as published articles related to this geographic area.

Articles

Interviews

Podcasts

One Punk's Guide to...

Starting with issue 46, Razorcake began a series of articles titled "One Punk's Guide to..." wherein writers give personal takes on various topics.

  1. One Punk’s Guide to… …Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying About Punk and Started Loving Music[58]
  2. One Punk’s Guide to Otis Redding[59]
  3. One Punk’s Guide to Professional Soccer, Book Publishing, and Corporate Ideology[60]
  4. One Punk’s Guide to Science Fiction[61]
  5. One Punk’s Travel Guide to Indonesia[62]
  6. One Punk’s Guide to Silent Films[63]
  7. One Punk’s Guide to Poetry[64]
  8. One Punk’s Guide to Bizarro Fiction[65]
  9. One Punk’s Guide to Bike Touring[66]
  10. One Punk’s Guide to Pinball[67]
  11. One Punk’s Guide to Outlaw Country[68]
  12. One Punk’s Guide to African Politics[69]
  13. One Punk's Guide to Christian Punk[70]
  14. One Punk’s Guide to Rap Music[71]

Additionally, some Guides have only been published on Razorcake's website.

  1. One Punk’s Guide to Surviving an All-Dayer[72]
  2. One Punk’s Guide to Getting on with It[73]
  3. One Canadian Punk’s Guide to the Tragically Hip[74]

Contributors

Besides Todd Taylor and Sean Carswell, former Flipside writers Donofthedead, Jimmy Alvarado, Designated Dale, Kat Jetson, The Rhythm Chicken, Jessica T., Nardwuar the Human Serviette, and Rich Mackin all wrote for the premier issue. Many of them remain with the publication, but Razorcake also has a raft of columnists who are well known in the DIY punk rock community as zinesters, musicians, and artists including:

In addition to these columnists, Razorcake has one staff member, Daryl, several dedicated reviewers, and guest contributors.

Gorsky Press

Gorsky Press, the book publishing arm of Razorcake, founded by Sean Carswell and Felizon Vidad, predated both the Razorcake website and zine.[9] Its mission is similar to Razorcake in that it focuses on high quality material from marginalized and disenfranchised writers. Gorsky Press has released books by underground writers such as Patricia Geary, Bucky Sinister, James Jay, and Jennifer Whiteford.

Bibliography

Website

In 2006, razorcake.com was revamped. To reflect its non-profit status, the website’s official url became www.razorcake.org. The website provides an almost wholly different set of content than the zine, while retaining the same focus on DIY punk rock by publishing live reviews, photos, columns, and interviews different from those appearing in the print edition.

By 2007, the razorcake.org website had been updated over 10,000 times, primarily by the posting of individual record reviews.[2] The website is updated with a new home page story every day. Also, Razorcake made early issues available on the site in .pdf format for free. March 2008 saw the launching of Razorcake’s first set of podcasts. For the first time since its inception, people could hear directly from Razorcake the music on which Razorcake focuses.

Razorcake also distributes various DIY items from their website, such as records, zines, and books.

Razorcake Records

In 2007, the Razorcake Records label was launched. Razorcake Records is also a non-profit venture. It conscientiously selects bands from the DIY punk rock community that share the same values as Razorcake. The first two releases were part of what Razorcake calls "The Sister Series."

Sister Series

The Sister Series is a cultural exchange that aims to connect bands from different areas. This is done by simultaneously releasing two separate 7" records by two similar independent bands, with each band providing some originals and cover of a song by the other band. Bands that have been featured in the Sister Series include Tiltwheel (San Diego) and Toys That Kill (San Pedro, CA), The Arrivals (Chicago, IL) and Grabass Charlestons (Gainesville, FL), and The Hex Dispensers (Austin, TX) and Young Offenders (San Francisco, CA).

Discography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Taylor, Todd. "Complete, Utter ReToddnation." Razorcake March 2001: 14-15.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "The music webzine and the at of survival" peacedogman.com 16 April 2008
  3. Razorcake Issue #4 (October/November 2001) ink19.com 2 Jan 2012
  4. Razorcake part 1 Cinemadaz youtube.com 2 Jan 2012
  5. TODD TAYLOR: TOTAL BURRITO DIPLOMACY larecord.com 2 Jan 2012
  6. RAZORCAKE: GET SOME EYE CANDY OUT HERE! larecord.com 2 Jan 2012
  7. "Bulletin From The Mosh Pit" latimes.com 3 June 2001
  8. "A Slice of Razorcake." LA Weekly 2007 16 April 2008.
  9. 1 2 "FAQ." Razorcake. Razorcake/Gorsky Press, Inc. 16 Apr 2008.
  10. Hansen, Steve. "Steve Hansen Interviews Sean Carswell." Small Spiral Notebook 16 April 2008.
  11. Taylor, Todd. "Introduction." Razorcake May 2001: 3.
  12. 1 2 Jörg, "Interview with Razorcake." Trust 16 April 2008.
  13. Razorcake announces 10th anniversary show with The Arrivals, Hex Dispensers and more riotfest.org 2 Jan 2012
  14. "Mission Statement." Razorcake. Razorcake/Gorsky Press, Inc. 16 Apr 2008.
  15. http://www.razorcake.org/mission-statement
  16. ""Is Business Killing Punk Rock?"." Maximum Rocknroll June 2006.
  17. Alvarado, Jimmy (August 2001). "A History of East LA Punk". Razorcake. Issue 3: 44–49.
  18. Alvarado, Jimmy (February 2003). "East LA Family Tree". Razorcake. Issue 12: 42–47.
  19. "We Were There: Voices from L.A. Punk's First Wave". Razorcake. Issue 79: 30–47. April 2014.
  20. "Alice Bag". Razorcake. Issue 24: 48–55. February 2005.
  21. "Alice Bag". Razorcake. Issue 75: 54–64. August 2013.
  22. "Aztlan Underground, Part 1". Razorcake. Issue 83: 34–49. December 2014.
  23. "Aztlan Underground, Part II". Razorcake. Issue 84: 32–45. February 2015.
  24. "Aztlan Underground". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  25. "The Brat". Razorcake. Issue 37: 56–69. April 2007.
  26. "Bümbkläät". Razorcake. Issue 78: 38–55. February 2014.
  27. "Circle One, Part I". Razorcake. Issue 38: 40–47. June 2007.
  28. "Circle One, Part II". Razorcake. Issue 39: 42–49. August 2007.
  29. "DFMK". Razorcake. Issue 82: 38–47. October 2014.
  30. "Diane Gamboa". Razorcake. Issue 36: 48–55. February 2007.
  31. "Felix Reyes". Razorcake. Issue 90: 64–75. February 2016.
  32. "Generacion Suicida". Razorcake. Issue 77: 44–55. December 2013.
  33. "Generacion Suicida". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  34. "Guilty Hearts". Razorcake. Issue 31. April 2006.
  35. "Gun Club". Razorcake. Issue 29: 62–75. December 2005.
  36. "It's Casual". Razorcake. Issue 48: 62–67. February 2009.
  37. "Jake Smith, Part I". Razorcake. Issue 88: 42–55. October 2015.
  38. "Jake Smith, Part II". Razorcake. Issue 89: 66–75. December 2015.
  39. "Interview with The Gun Club's Jeffrey Lee Pierce's Sister, Jacqui". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. November 9, 2008. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  40. "John E. Miner". Razorcake. Issue 15: 44–47. 2003.
  41. "Kid Congo Powers". Razorcake. Issue 71: 44–53. December 2012.
  42. "Los Illegals, Part I". Razorcake. Issue 43: 34–43. April 2008.
  43. "Los Illegals, Part II". Razorcake. Issue 44: 36–49. June 2008.
  44. "Louis Jacinto". Razorcake. Issue 49: 44–49. April 2009.
  45. "The Mormons". Razorcake. Issue 33: 40–43. August 2006.
  46. "Nervous Gender". Razorcake. Issue 58: 66–75. October 2010.
  47. "Interview with Ollin". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. May 25, 2007. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  48. "Pedal Strike". Razorcake. Issue 96: 56–65. February 2017.
  49. "The Pinkz". Razorcake. Issue 5: 38–41. December 2001.
  50. "Social Conflict". Razorcake. Issue 73: 66–75. April 2013.
  51. "The Stains, Part I". Razorcake. Issue 67: 34–59. April 2012.
  52. "The Stains, Part II". Razorcake. Issue 68: 30–49. June 2012.
  53. "Trap Girl". Razorcake. Issue 94: 34–45. October 2016.
  54. "The Warriors". Razorcake. Issue 94: 56–75. October 2016.
  55. "Thee Undertakers". Razorcake. Issue 56: 56–75. June 2010.
  56. Alvarado, Jimmy (June 26, 2009). "East LA Podcast, Part One". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  57. Alvarado, Jimmy (July 24, 2009). "East Los Angeles Punk, Part 2". Razorcake.org. Razorcake. Retrieved January 28, 2017.
  58. Taylor, Todd (October 2008). "One Punk’s Guide to… …Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying About Punk and Started Loving Music". Razorcake. Issue 46: 34–43.
  59. Taylor, Todd (February 2009). "One Punk's Guide to Otis Redding". Razorcake. Issue 48.: 42–55.
  60. Carswell, Sean (December 2011). "One Punk’s Guide to Professional Soccer, Book Publishing, and Corporate Ideology". Razorcake. Issue 65: 70–75.
  61. Dunne, Katie (June 2013). "One Punk's Guide to Science Fiction". Razorcake. Issue 74: 40–45.
  62. Dunn, Kevin (October 2013). "One Punk's Travel Guide to Indonesia". Razorcake. Issue 76: 34–45.
  63. Ramone, Donna (February 2014). "One Punk's Guide to Silent Films". Razorcake. Issue 78: 32–37.
  64. Klein, Cheryl (June 2014). "One Punk's Guide to Poetry". Razorcake. Issue 80: 32–37.
  65. Johnson, MP (October 2014). "One Punk's Guide to Bizarro Fiction". Razorcake. Issue 82: 32–37.
  66. Miskelly, John (February 2015). "One Punk's Guide to Bike Touring". Razorcake. Issue 84: 66–69.
  67. Greet, Kayla (April 2015). "One Punk's Guide to Pinball". Razorcake. Issue 85: 32–39.
  68. Johnson, MP (February 2016). "One Punk's Guide to Outlaw Country". Razorcake. Issue 90: 32–39.
  69. Dunn, Kevin (June 2016). "One Punk's Guide to African Politics". Razorcake. Issue 92: 32–39.
  70. Morris, Kurt (December 2016). "One Punk's Guide to Christian Punk". Razorcake. Issue 95: 40–47.
  71. Terry, Chris L. (February 2017). "One Punk's Guide to Rap Music". Razorcake. Issue 96: 34–45.
  72. Miskelly, John (February 5, 2015). "One Punk's Guide to Surviving an All-Dayer". Razorcake. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
  73. Carswell, Sean (November 22, 2016). "One Punk's Guide to Getting on with It". Razorcake. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
  74. Whiteford, Jennifer (September 12, 2016). "One Canadian Punk's Guide to the Tragically Hip". Razorcake. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  75. Video game designed by Rev. Nørb (Boris the Sprinkler, Razorcake) released punknews.org 2 Jan 2012
  76. "Punks Helping Punks: Razorcake Works to Prevent Crappy Zines" utne.com 15 October 2007
  77. "Vermin on the Mount, the Underground Literary Series, Celebrates 10 Years" blogs.laweekly.com 12 November 2013
  78. "Vermin on the Mount is back in Echo Park!" 826la.org 8 October 2012
  79. Mitch Clem (Nothing Nice To Say) on Springman Records punknews.org 2 Jan 2012

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