
Since its debut as a photocopied fanzine handed out at a punk show in 1985, AP has been the publication where the honest word, the correct word, the authoritative word has been spoken on new music and youth culture.

Features, articles, and more from this issue:
In REVIEWS:
- Get it?
- From Murder City to Technopolis.
- One-woman electro-wrecking crew is gloriously annoying.
- Slipknot’s #0 sets the wheels of steel aflame.
- Spazmo art-punk with a psychobilly edge.
- The original nasty rapper makes punk his bitch. Who can resist?
- The last word in power metal-until their next album.
- Bludgeoning is the new prog rock.
- Get pissed, destroy.
- As good as metalcore gets. Period.
- Ambition and aggression converge for maximum resonance.
- Temporary genre residence, permanent critical praise.
- Whitmore singing in the dead of night.
- Sad dudes are ready to shine.
- Because “Summer of Love” was used 30 years ago.
- Ready for the Second Coming.
- Roadside authenticity for sale.
- Will Oldham and Bruce Springsteen walk into a bar...
- Former Tristeza member goes postal.
- Born to run.
- Amster-damn!
- Quantity and quality trump notoriety.
- We’d like to solve the puzzle...
- Spreading the sickness by any means necessary.
- Post-punk-tuation.
- From Britain, hotter and fussier.
- 2000 light years from emo.
- Brave new soul jams
- Bad scene, everyone else’s fault.
- Beastly noisemongers tone it down, slightly.
- Monks and rockers and seals, oh my!
- New-school boys put on their caps and gowns.
- Truth is what he aims for.
- Members of F-Minus and Alkaline Trio get their post-punk on.
- Change is good, but is it really necessary?
































