Take It! #6

Finally, we wrap up the Fanzine Hemorrhage project, which has been running constantly & with a couple hundred reviews written since 2022, with what’s likely my favorite issue of any fanzine, ever. It’s Take It #6 from 1982. But first, a couple of things:

  • I put out my own fanzines in the 2010s and 2020s under the names Dynamite Hemorrhage and Radio Dies Screaming. The ten issues of the former are now sold out, but I have plenty of issue #1 of the latter, from late 2024. Take a look, and feel free to order Radio Dies Screaming #1 here
  • For years, I’ve taken photos of old American signs – mostly motels and faded glories of the 1950s and 1960s. I mean, it’s not at all professional or anything – they’re phone photos – but I’ve got an, um, ongoing “portfolio” here if you’re interested. I’m not on social media, so this is kind of the only way I’ll likely get anyone to ever take a peek.
  • I’ve got an eBay page set up to unload some extraneous fanzines, and other printed matter that I’m now done with. I’d love for you to take a look and bookmark the site if you ever like to buy old music fanzines and/or collected ephemera from the past. It will be updated frequently. Check it out. 

Now, let’s talk about Take It #6.

This is the lone issue of Take It! that I can say I was “contemporaneous” with; I distinctly remember it being available for purchase at the Record Factory on Blossom Hill Road in San Jose, CA, but I also remember not buying it, given my non-familiarity with the bands on the flexidisc – oh, just The Flesheaters, Meat Puppets and Tex and the Horseheads, each at the height of their respective powers. “The greatest flexidisc of all time”, some have called it (actually that was me that called it that). Anyway, I’d get my copy a few years later while I was in college, and I’ve savored it like a fine chianti with fava beans for years. As long as we’re making lists, it’s one of the single best issues of a fanzine that I’ve ever encountered as well. 

I’ve probably read it more times than anything save my Forced Exposures, but until today it had been a while. Opening it now to tell you about it, I’ve found that Michael Koenig writes in the intro that he patterned the cover of this magazine to be much like that of Slash, given that Chris D. of the Flesh Eaters (who wrote for Slash) is the cover star. Ironically, this issue of Take It! has shrunk to a normal 8.5”x11” size after having been the jumbo tabloid size of Slash for every issue before this final one. 

But wait – let’s talk about that flexidisc first. Tex and The Horseheads with Jeffrey Lee Piece do a blitzkrieg version of “Got Love If You Want It”. While this is not the first band I might go to for the full “roots/punk” experience, I kinda think they’re a bit underrated, and they capture a side of LA that I got to see myself in late bloom five years later: the jean-jacketed, longhaired, alcoholic, wasted sleazoid faux cowboy punk that haunted Hollywood Blvd. and clubs like Raji’s. The Meat Puppets, at the height of their powers, contribute “Teenager(s)”, which I’ve written about elsewhere as having the best opening two seconds of perhaps any song, ever, before turning into a shitstorm of nonsense, and then into a laid-back hippie/doper desert mind-expander. (Check Dynamite Hemorrhage #5 if you want to read more about it). And a live Flesh Eaters track (!), “River of Fever”, was recorded on the 1982 tour that Byron Coley writes about in this issue, about which more later.

The mag starts off with a great “three dot” gossipy column by one Julie Farman – who’d go on much later to detail a sexual harassment incident with the Red Hot Chili Peppers she was the victim of – called “Blabbermouth Lockjaw”. She gives some great copy about T.S.O.L. trying to beat up Minor Threat’s Brian Baker in a bathroom; a near-death accident in Boston when Snakefinger’s “Snakemobile” flipped over; a never-was 80-page Byron Coley fanzine called Flunk that’s “about to come out”; and – ooh, ouch, “Fear replaces Derf Scratch with something/one called THE FLEA”.

Michael Koenig gives his own Boston live action scene report and makes me wish I’d seen Talia Zedek in Dangerous Birds; David & Jad Fair in Sit: Boy Girl, Boy Girl, and Chris D. in the Flesh Eaters (well, I did see that, but not until 1990). Chris D., in fact, gets his own column in here – was this his first published writing since Slash went under? Someone’ll have to tell me. One of the true standout columns this time is a new one from Don Howland, whom you perhaps know from his later work with the Gibson Bros and the Bassholes. Here he dissects the musical sins of Australia, and counts down a “Low 11” of insipid pop acts that I still quote from to this day. 

The piece that always really did it for me in this one is Byron Coley’s tour diary of his time roadie-ing for The Flesh Eaters on their first national tour – “Flesh Eaters ‘82: Masterpieces Hexed from the Dunes of Jive Broken Roads” (sounds like Chris D. might have titled that one). For years, and perhaps even now, I’ve claimed the 1978-83 Flesh Eaters as “my favorite band” – and also for years, this was the most up-close-and-personal I’d ever gotten with them, all filtered through Coley’s mania for the American underground and his warped sense of humor. The part about them playing live in Madison with Die Kreuzen always made me pretty jealous; in fact this whole tour they’re mostly playing with hardcore bands, forcing the band to play faster just to keep the pits flying. You can actually hear it on “River of Fever” on the flexi, which turns into a breakneck pace midway through, quite unlike the version on A Minute to Pray, A Second to Die.

Other highlights – Gregg Turner turns in an excellent LA scene report, complete with absurd reprinted lyrics from a local metal band called Slave-State whom I’m very sad to report did not appear to ever get any vinyl released.  Eric Lindgren writes a piece about “The 10 Most Twisted Tracks From The Sixties”, including The Lollipop Shoppe, Legendary Stardust Cowboy, MC5 and Swamp Rats. Byron Coley writes an insane amount of record reviews, plus a column on beatniks. Richard Meltzer and Mick Farren have their turns as well. And….that’s it. That was the end of Take It!. No pleas for financial help, no indication that another issue wasn’t around the corner, nothing. The magazine gathered steam and rapidly got stronger and when it died with the publication of this issue, it was easily the best fanzine in the USA. 

Even today – in 2026 – every single issue is available directly from Michael Koenig himself right here. Fair warning: it’ll cost you, especially #6, which, at $250, is 10x the price of each of the others. I’d wait for your Hanukkah or Christmas money to accumulate, and maybe write Koenig a nice email and see if he’ll sell them all to you for <$300. Tell him Jay at Fanzine Hemorrhage sent you. And thanks for reading!

Thrillseeker #1

At one point in September 1982’s Thrillseeker #1, Barry Henssler of The Necros bemoans the lack of fanzines tied to the DC punk scene. I’m guessing the folks who were living their “salad days” at this time in our (my) nation’s capital don’t quite remember it that way, and indeed, there’s an entire book set to come out about DC’s punk fanzines. Thrillseeker will get some play, I am sure. It’s an excellent and incredibly comprehensive piece of on-the-ground work, edited by a guy named Tony Lombardi and with a plethora of contributors. I scanned the many names and recognized Tom Lyle from Government Issue, and Jeff Krulik – Mr. Heavy Metal Parking Lot to you. 

Thrillseeker #1 absolutely looks the part and walks the walk of a hardcore punk zine, but due to Lombardi’s wide-ranging, omnivorously music-hungry tastes, there’s quite a bit more than meets the proverbial eye. The long review section at the back, for instance, tackles everything from Mofungo to The Raincoats to Mission of Burma to the Flesheaters to the Dazz Band and Rick Springfield. The short review of the (excellent) debut single from The Bangs (you perhaps know them as The Bangles) says, “What a disappointment. I thought these gals were supposed to play 60s influenced trash rock, but this is just cutesy wimpy pop. Even Tru Fax & the Insaniacs rock out more than this trio”. You don’t even have to know that reference to know it’s a total harsh burn. But Lombardi, who writes at least two-thirds of the reviews here, also cops to loving Fleetwood Mac and the new Springfield record. And Void and Flipper

We’ve established previously on this blog that the opening “news/gossip” section was a de rigeur part of many 70s/80s US punk fanzines. What I always love are the “items” that end up never coming true, such as “Black Flag will be in a movie called Cool Patrol”. What the hell? Who can tell us what that was all about? There’s more gossip and news about go-go bands (DC’s indigenous funk gift to the world); the fact that ½ Japanese’s “epic” ½ Gentlemen Not Beasts is about to be issued on cassette; and “The Gun Club have undergone personnel changes. The band now includes two women. Jeffrey Lee Pierce still drinks too much!”

The live show reviews include a dispatch from a Fear / Necros / Scream / Double O and Void show at the Lincoln Memorial July 3rd, 1982. God bless America!! Void, in another review, are described in awe and quite aptly: “Their music is pure noise, as tortuous as the best Black Flag and Flipper. It was like they were tuning up the whole time they were on stage”. Oh to have seen that. Void bassist Chris Stover now lives in and is a realtor in San Francisco, my home. We had some good hangs a couple decades ago; went to each other’s kids’ birthday parties and what have you. Either Lombardi or Tom Lyle (both are “TL” here) reviews a go-go show with Trouble Funk, Air Raid Band and a no-showing Soul Sonic Force. I recall how excited I was when I learned that all-white hardcore bands and all-black go-go bands in DC played shows together. Never happened in enlightened San Francisco, but perhaps that was because we didn’t have go-go bands. 

In the Black Flag interview, Henry Rollins has just joined the band, and he actually talks about wanting to cut a comedy record with his old pal Ian Mackaye. Is that where this thing started? I’ve seen that ferociously bad idea referenced in other fanzines for years. Greg Hetson from the Circle Jerks says their next record will be a “six song 12”EP” – another one of those bit of information that bore no eventual fruit. There are also interviews with Fear, The Necros, X, DOA, Sonic Youth (!!) and The Flesheaters. This is that same tour that Byron Coley documented in tour diary form in Take It #6, one of my favorite single issues of any fanzine ever. Here he’s a clowning interview-interrupter, and on the evidence herein, clearly the band and Coley get along well. Chris D’s favorite new stuff includes the Meat Puppets’ debut album on SST, along with “Dream Syndicate, Salvation Army, Red Cross and the Gun Club”. 1982, a great year to be alive in Los Angeles, California.

Government Issue recount their trip to California, starting with their interview with Tim Yohanan on the MRR radio show, “All Tim Y wanted to talk about was ‘straight edge’, and we were burnt out from the sleepless ride out to the west coast, so it was kind of lame, but fun!”. They then go on to talk about their first gig at the On Broadway in San Francisco, which was just upstairs from the Mabuhay Gardens, and, (for a time) was also booked by Dirk Dirkson. “The crowd in SF is weird, really image-conscious Oi-clones. Lots of dressing up for the big night out but not much action….Dirk made our show all worthwhile by giving us $40 at the end of the night! Shredding!” No lie: that’s the equivalent of $132.56 today.

There’s a long interview with Jello Biafra that’s actually really good. He’s humble enough, for a change, that it almost makes me respect the guy. I did enjoy his personal taste in offbeat music, but his stage performance and unbridled ego in virtually every setting was so off-putting to me in the 80s that it’ll take another forty years of personal growth and maturity for me to move him to the positive side of whatever imaginary ledger I’m keeping. Void also show up again in an extensive, exceptionally dumb interview from a radio show they stumbled onto, with wacky call-in guests; it was maybe one of those things “not fit for transcription”, particularly in the pre- voice-to-text world.

I know Thrillseeker made it to both a second and a third issue, but I’ve never seen them in the wild. The notion of DC being fanzine-bereft, however, is severely undercut by its existence, to say nothing of other gems we’ve talked about previously here like Truly Needy and Vintage Violence.