Alley Oop #5

I’d wanted a copy of New Zealand’s Alley Oop for years, and so hats off and a big thank you to Brendan, who made it happen. Aside from Garage, which I’ll likely never see an original copy of, it was the NZ mag I’d most seen quotes pulled from and reviews swiped from, and upon the evidence presented here in 1988’s Alley Oop #5, there was ample reason for doing so. 

While no formal editor is presented on any masthead here, at least judging by the amount of content contributed, it looks like Paul McKessar helmed the fanzine or at least was very deeply involved. He apparently got #me-too’ed a few years ago. Right away there’s a very NZ-centric gossip page, with some excited early Xpressway news. Heads-up is provided about the Dead C’s forthcoming The Sun Stabbed EP, and there’s some celebration of the fact that “sales of the Xpressway Pile=Up compilation have already exceeded some expectations”. Remember, if it sells 100 copies in New Zealand, that’s like 4 million in the United States. They also talk about an upcoming Xpressway tape of 1983 recordings by Christchurch’s The World, which didn’t actually happen until Unwucht put the stuff out in 2013.

This gossip column also hipped me to a Bill Direen & The Bilders comp from 1988 called Divina Comedia that I’m only just learning was a thing now. Then comes a trio of interviews; first up is the Jean Paul Sarte Experience. This is undertaken by Ian Henderson, brother of George, and the guy behind Fishrider Records, a terrific small label who has put out several records by Emily Fairlight, one of my favorite artists the past ten years. You’ll definitely want to check her raspy-voiced gothic Americana out, and move on to this one once you’d bought that. Snapper are talked with by McKessar, and Stones by Chris Heazlewood, an artist of deserved renown in his own right. 

The reviews are fairly minimal in number, but of course the kiwis have outstanding taste. I was dazzled to see the rave for Tripod Jimmie by Bruce Russell (Xpressway/The Dead C); he loves the excellent and highly underrated A Warning To All Strangers, which he rightly says is going to be very hard to find. I barely saw it here, where I live in California, and they were from San Francisco. There’s some Pixies love from McKessar, and some slightly overwrought praise for Public Enemy too. Have I ever written about the time Public Enemy was playing UC-Santa Barbara when I was in college, around this very time, and “Flava Flav” was spotted in the middle of the afternoon, walking down Hollister Avenue in the neighboring town of Goleta wearing his big stupid clock around his neck? 

McKessar talks about local live shows you’d have killed to see from Sneaky Feelings, The Puddle, Verlaines, Steven and Plagal Grind (!!). There’s a deep dive into The Clean’s Oddities 2 tape, something I actually once owned (along with an original Xpressway Pile=Up) and sold, because I totally hate cassettes. And perhaps best of all is K B Tannock’s obituary for Nico, who’d just passed away at age 49. It’s exceptionally informative, focusing mostly on her final ten years, and a little harrowing, as it contains a description of his (her?) interview with Nico in 1985. Our heroine is ravaged by heroin, as well as suffering from an inability to communicate, to hear in one ear, and to go five minutes without complaining about how badly she needed smack. We’ve written some about Nico’s interview foibles before on this site (here and here), but she really was something special and strange. (I still have yet to read this book about her, but I own it and will get to it one day).

In all, Alley Oop #5’s about as front-and-center a seat as you’d imagine getting to take at the Flying Nun & Xpressway tables as these labels were at or close to their heights. May they all eventually be lovingly collected somewhere as Garage was.

One thought on “Alley Oop #5

  1. Hey Jay,

    hopefully I’ll be able to turn up a few more Alley oops. I did have almost a complete run back when I had my life somewhat together, but that was the mid-90’s, which is a shockingly long time ago now. I still have a few more boxes to pick up from family members, so fingers crossed there will be a whole bunch of fanzines packed away in one of those. Even worse than the loss of the Alley Oops though is the total lack of any of my zines, because I’m dubious that anyone other than me would have held on to any of them… a zine not even a mother could love!

    I suspect Alley Oop will get collected and reissued as the Garage ‘Pull Down The Shades’ zine collection HoZac did seems to have been fairly popular, and I can’t imagine somebody purchasing that book and not wanting to get themselves a full reprint run of  Alley Oop.

    Hell even a reprint of interviews from various movers and shakers in 90’s NZ Noise Scene, Noel Meek’s ‘Archive Fever’(Marhaug Forlag, 2023) culled from Opprobrium and BananaFish was successful… so Alley Oop has to happen.

    Let me know if you want me to grab you a copy of Not Given Lightly, the Chris Knox biography Craig Robertson just brought out ( https://www.flyingnun.co.nz/products/craig-robertson-chris-knox-not-given-lightly ). I read a bit of it when I was out at George Henderson’s house. George is really enjoying it and as he was there to see the Enemy (he seriously rates them as a live band too) and actually opened for Toy Love in Wellington (The And Band did one night and The Spies did the other) as well as seeing them a number of times,  his review carries serious weight… keep an eye on his Substack page (https://georgedhenderson.substack.com/)  as it can’t be far off

    I think we can send packages to the USA again (tariff treats put a pause on that for a while) so keep an eye on the post sir!

    Brendonx

    The Beat Mod’n’Rocker

    https://thebeatmodnrocker.substack.com/

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