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The Rocket (music magazine)

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However, only a few weeks later “almost everyone's paychecks bounced”, and Roberts abruptly advised the entire staff that the magazine was shutting down immediately. No explanation was provided to any of the staff members as to the reason for the publication’s closure.
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introduced its Portland, Oregon edition, which generally simply mirrored the Seattle-version, with only the concert listing pages offering different contents. The following year, publication of the paper switched from monthly to bi-weekly frequency.
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edition was introduced in 1991. In general, the two editions contained the same content, with some slight variations (i.e., different concert calendars) although occasionally they ran different cover stories.
360:.) Publisher McChesney insisted that the newspaper also cover major label arena bands, and Ferrigno and his writing staff reluctantly agreed to do so, but only if they could “trash them” in the articles. 791: 786: 761: 766: 270:
region of the United States, published from 1979 to 2000. The magazine's chief purpose was to document local music. This focus distinguished it from other area weeklies such as the
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s readership was stronger than ever, with circulation having reached 55,000 copies in Seattle and 36,000 in Portland. After the magazine's demise Cross stated, "This was not about
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By January 1982, the magazine’s circulation had grown to 50,000 copies per month. The magazine managed to attract writers and cartoonists such as Jeff Christensen, Roberta Penn,
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celebrated its tenth anniversary by hosting a “Nine for the 90’s” concert with a mix of what the paper felt were Seattle’s most promising new bands, including
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feature had only performed live a dozen or so times. At the end of 1984, the newspaper printed a list of the “10 Hottest Northwest Bands”, which consisted of:
340:, with its first issue appearing in October 1979. By April of the following year, Ferrigno, Newman and McChesney raised enough money to produce the issues of 776: 781: 549:
of its money while the other papers never managed to find their footing. In August 2000, BAM shut down all of its floundering projects and sold
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U.S.A." devoted to the independent and underground music scene in Seattle and other parts of the U.S. Cover stars included
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bands that were even then beginning to attract national attention. Long before any other publication took notice of them,
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In April 1982, Ferrigno quit the newspaper and Newman took over as editor. By the end of 1983, McChesney had also left.
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on their own. Ferrigno would edit the publication from 1979–1982. Published on a monthly schedule, during that period
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developed a strong following in the Pacific Northwest, and the paper had cover stories on such bands as
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not being read or respected or advertised in. It's just been poorly run the last few years..."
571: 541:-based company that published several music-related publications. BAM utilized the profitable 458: 267: 74: 712: 482: 439: 372: 287: 756: 561:, and gave the appearance that he was seriously attempting to revitalize the publication. 558: 514: 403: 376: 325: 278: 320:. Frustrated by the paper’s refusal to cover Seattle’s then-burgeoning music-scene, the 534: 510: 490: 470: 272: 263: 750: 538: 435: 407: 353: 502: 443: 431: 411: 399: 390:
continued to attract new writing talent, including Daina Darzin, Craig Tomashoff,
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In 1986, Cross became the paper’s editor and remained in that capacity until
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https://www.seattlestar.net/2012/10/october-31-1979-launching-the-rocket/
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Fell To Earth" Experience Music Project Pop Conference Video Presentation
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Goedde, Brian. “End of Flight, Please Disembark: R.I.P. The Rocket”,
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Gilbert, Jeff. “Mick’s Rockutz, The Central Tavern, Lots of Beer”,
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Cover of the April 7–21, 1999 issue (#299), parodying the cover of
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Sitt, Pam. “Rocket's Nose Dive Stuns Music Magazine's Staffers”,
741: 18: 625: 545:“to float its other papers” for years, which slowly drained 636:
Newman, Robert. “Mighty Cranium-Impaling Metalmesiters”,
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McChesney, Robert W. “Balancing Things Left of Center”,
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and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as
569:’s final issue was dated October 18, 2000. According to 599:
Ferrigno, Robert. “Love, Rage, and Negative Macramé”,
666:, Issue #195, December 7–21, 1994, pgs. 44 & 46 640:, Issue #195, December 7–21, 1994, pgs. 22 & 24 616:, Issue #195, December 7–21, 1994, pgs. 12 & 14 244: 234: 226: 208: 190: 182: 172: 162: 152: 144: 133: 792:Biweekly magazines published in the United States 787:Monthly magazines published in the United States 762:Defunct magazines published in the United States 477:’s editorial focus shifted to covering the pre- 767:Music magazines published in the United States 8: 410:provided some cover art during this period. 109: 38:, which are uninformative and vulnerable to 16:Music magazine serving the Pacific Northwest 53:and maintains a consistent citation style. 117: 108: 727:https://historyoftherocket.wordpress.com/ 653:, Issue #195, December 7–21, 1994, pg. 38 95:Learn how and when to remove this message 603:, Issue #195, December 7–21, 1994, pg. 8 328:, and art director, Bob Newman, started 592: 497:cover stars in 1988. In December 1989, 722:https://seattlemag.com/reading-rocket/ 438:, Hosannah Choir, Girltalk, Ellipsis, 356:, The Enemy, and The Jitters, (led by 737:https://www.historylink.org/File/3588 7: 777:Publications disestablished in 2000 649:Anderson, Dawn. “Timeline: 1988”, 45:Please consider converting them to 553:to Dave Roberts, the publisher of 14: 533:In 1995, Cross sold the paper to 348:had articles about such bands as 782:2000 disestablishments in Oregon 23: 513:, The Young Fresh Fellows, and 446:, The Young Fresh Fellows, and 414:began a monthly column called " 708:Full searchable archive online 49:to ensure the article remains 1: 772:Magazines established in 1979 742:https://therocketseattle.com/ 681:, November 2 – 8, 2000 issue 457:’s demise. In the mid-1980s, 398:, Brent Lorang, Grant Alden, 148:Charles R. Cross (1986-2000) 422:, who at the time of their 818: 694:, October 20, 2000 issue 626:http://rockmagarchive.com 575:, during its final years 509:, High Performance Crew, 116: 420:The Young Fresh Fellows 316:that competed with the 214:; 23 years ago 196:; 44 years ago 797:Newspaper supplements 314:alternative newspaper 212:October 18, 2000 555:Illinois Entertainer 194:October 1, 1979 168:Biweekly (1992-2000) 299:Publication history 286:-based magazine, a 239:Seattle, Washington 177:Robert W. McChesney 166:Monthly (1979-1992) 138:Robert W. McChesney 113: 692:The Seattle Times 572:The Seattle Times 459:heavy metal music 268:Pacific Northwest 252: 251: 105: 104: 97: 55:Several templates 809: 695: 688: 682: 673: 667: 660: 654: 647: 641: 634: 628: 623: 617: 610: 604: 597: 483:alternative rock 440:Robert Cray Band 373:Charles R. Cross 371:, Wes Anderson, 222: 220: 215: 204: 202: 197: 121: 114: 100: 93: 89: 86: 80: 78: 67: 27: 26: 19: 817: 816: 812: 811: 810: 808: 807: 806: 747: 746: 704: 699: 698: 689: 685: 674: 670: 661: 657: 648: 644: 635: 631: 624: 620: 611: 607: 598: 594: 589: 531: 515:Alice in Chains 404:Dennis Eichhorn 396:Gillian G. Gaar 394:, Jim Emerson, 377:Scott McCaughey 326:Robert Ferrigno 301: 279:Willamette Week 218: 216: 213: 200: 198: 195: 167: 129: 101: 90: 84: 81: 69: 58: 44: 28: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 815: 813: 805: 804: 802:Free magazines 799: 794: 789: 784: 779: 774: 769: 764: 759: 749: 748: 745: 744: 739: 734: 729: 724: 719: 710: 703: 702:External links 700: 697: 696: 683: 668: 655: 642: 629: 618: 605: 591: 590: 588: 585: 530: 527: 511:The Walkabouts 318:Seattle Weekly 300: 297: 273:Seattle Weekly 264:music magazine 250: 249: 246: 242: 241: 236: 232: 231: 228: 224: 223: 210: 206: 205: 192: 188: 187: 184: 180: 179: 174: 170: 169: 164: 160: 159: 154: 150: 149: 146: 142: 141: 135: 131: 130: 122: 103: 102: 47:full citations 31: 29: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 814: 803: 800: 798: 795: 793: 790: 788: 785: 783: 780: 778: 775: 773: 770: 768: 765: 763: 760: 758: 755: 754: 752: 743: 740: 738: 735: 733: 730: 728: 725: 723: 720: 718: 716: 711: 709: 706: 705: 701: 693: 687: 684: 680: 679: 672: 669: 665: 659: 656: 652: 646: 643: 639: 633: 630: 627: 622: 619: 615: 609: 606: 602: 596: 593: 586: 584: 582: 578: 574: 573: 568: 562: 560: 556: 552: 548: 544: 540: 539:San Francisco 536: 528: 526: 523: 518: 516: 512: 508: 504: 500: 496: 492: 488: 484: 480: 476: 472: 468: 464: 460: 456: 451: 449: 445: 441: 437: 433: 429: 425: 421: 417: 413: 409: 408:Matt Groening 405: 401: 397: 393: 389: 384: 382: 378: 374: 370: 366: 361: 359: 355: 354:The Blackouts 351: 347: 343: 339: 335: 331: 327: 324:arts editor, 323: 319: 315: 311: 310: 305: 304:Bob McChesney 298: 296: 293: 289: 285: 281: 280: 275: 274: 269: 265: 262: 258: 257: 247: 243: 240: 237: 233: 230:United States 229: 225: 211: 207: 193: 189: 185: 181: 178: 175: 171: 165: 161: 158: 155: 151: 147: 143: 139: 136: 132: 128: 127: 120: 115: 112: 107: 99: 96: 88: 76: 75:documentation 72: 65: 64:documentation 61: 56: 52: 48: 43: 41: 37: 32:This article 30: 21: 20: 714: 691: 686: 678:The Stranger 676: 671: 663: 658: 650: 645: 637: 632: 621: 613: 608: 600: 595: 580: 576: 570: 566: 563: 554: 550: 546: 542: 532: 521: 519: 503:Love Battery 498: 494: 474: 454: 452: 444:Metal Church 423: 412:Bruce Pavitt 400:Peter Blecha 387: 385: 369:John Keister 362: 345: 341: 337: 329: 321: 317: 307: 302: 277: 271: 266:serving the 255: 254: 253: 124: 110: 106: 91: 82: 71:Citation bot 33: 577:The Rocket' 529:Final years 487:Soundgarden 471:QueensrĂżche 365:Lynda Barry 350:Patti Smith 312:, a weekly 309:Seattle Sun 259:was a free 209:Final issue 191:First issue 140:(1979-1983) 126:Sub Pop 200 85:August 2022 751:Categories 715:The Rocket 664:The Rocket 651:The Rocket 638:The Rocket 614:The Rocket 601:The Rocket 587:References 581:The Rocket 567:The Rocket 559:promotions 551:The Rocket 547:The Rocket 522:The Rocket 507:The Posies 499:The Rocket 475:The Rocket 455:The Rocket 392:Ann Powers 388:The Rocket 346:The Rocket 342:The Rocket 334:supplement 332:as a free 330:The Rocket 256:The Rocket 219:2000-10-18 201:1979-10-01 157:Rock music 153:Categories 111:The Rocket 51:verifiable 535:BAM Media 520:In 1991, 467:Wild Dogs 448:The U-Men 428:Fastbacks 381:The Fartz 163:Frequency 36:bare URLs 358:PK Dwyer 288:Portland 276:and the 261:biweekly 245:Language 235:Based in 40:link rot 493:became 491:Nirvana 416:Sub Pop 336:to the 284:Seattle 248:English 227:Country 217: ( 199: ( 183:Founded 173:Founder 757:Grunge 543:Rocket 495:Rocket 481:local 479:grunge 463:Slayer 436:D.O.A. 424:Rocket 402:, and 292:Oregon 145:Editor 134:Editor 60:reFill 713:"How 432:54-40 322:Sun’s 34:uses 537:, a 489:and 375:and 186:1979 68:and 338:Sun 753:: 517:. 505:, 469:, 465:, 450:. 442:, 434:, 430:, 406:. 367:, 352:, 290:, 221:) 203:) 98:) 92:( 87:) 83:( 79:. 77:) 73:( 66:) 62:( 42:.

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Sub Pop 200
Robert W. McChesney
Rock music
Robert W. McChesney
Seattle, Washington
biweekly
music magazine
Pacific Northwest
Seattle Weekly
Willamette Week
Seattle
Portland
Oregon
Bob McChesney
Seattle Sun
alternative newspaper
Robert Ferrigno
supplement
Patti Smith

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