About ZUM
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zum started out as a small, photo-copied zine meant to serve as a
forum for us (sibling team George and Yvonne) and our friends in 1990. We
grew into an internationally recognized, well-respected indie music-based zine,
and then label. We've organized numerous shows in the SF Bay Area (including UC
Berkeley noon shows and evenings at the Berkeley YWCA) and shared our love of
music on college radio.
With zum #12 being our last print issue in 2000, we are now an
online entity. ZUMonline.com will serve as the new home of all the zum content people have come to expect and hopefully continue as an ever-growing resource and community. Here's an interview with us.
CONTRIBUTORS
Yvonne Chen
spends a good deal of her time working on her boutique and publishing company in San
Francisco, Little Otsu.
George Chen
plays music in Chen Santa Maria, Vholtz, KIT, and 7 Year Rabbit Cycle. He's also starting a freelance publicity company called Higher and has worked with The Punks and Gowns. His day job is doing publicity for Alternative Tentacles
Jeremy
Crown is
the other partner behind Otsu. He and his friend Greg also run the Scenester record
label.
Abe
Farnsworth wrote these reviews as nicely as he could. He's been in too many bands has
over 200 copies of the Mur.der/Nervous System Split 7" if you want them,
because he doesn't.
Alex
Provan is our second official intern and the first from the mystical land of Providence. He lives in New York and jams as Decades.
Alan
Salmassian has been a man about town for as long as we can
remember. He works at Streetlight Records San Jose and is a braintrust on
all things pop.
Charles
Pettry hates it when you call him Chuck...or does he?
Dave Cranford
has been a die-hard music fan for over 30 years and lives in Chicago. He works
for Dusty
Groove and still buys anything Paul Westerberg puts
out.
Ethan
Swan is partially responsible for the band Emergency and the
label Archigramophone. He currently writes for the ANP blog and lives in Manhattan.
Jamie
Stewart is the guy behind Xiu Xiu.
Jason
Hull works at Lockheed and loves the Simpsons. He's
also a movie buff and does a radio show on KSCU, Santa Clara.
Jason McGill is a Providence player, renowned equally for his
propensities toward intrigue and sloth. He can generally be found
silkscreening research papers in English and Library Science at the
University of Rhode Island Graduate School. That is, when not blowing
car horns with the high-imploding Barnacled Tres Bien Ensemble. Jason
spends at least 45 minutes each day in meditation, and usually 15
minutes stretching, which all adds up to one Power Hour. Otherwise,
spiritual, mental, intellectual, creative, and physical activities are
kept to a sporadic minimum.
Jeff Walsh
sells movie production software and is the man behind Turn
Records.
John
Bacon likes bike riding and making up jokes.
Lance
Hahn toured the world in his band J Church, ran the label
Honey Bear, and researched Anarchist bands. He passed away October 21, 2007.
Matt Thompson is
a self-appointed critic, audibly autonomous selector and talking-toy
developer. He is responsible for the shenanigans at 333.
Mr. Begha grew up in
the south, moved to the bay area in his late teens, plays in a bunch of
bands, and talks about food like most dudes talk about girls.
Nicholas Gitomer used to be in My Little Red Toe, and now DJs sometimes
under the name DJ Freewheel, in addition to eating vegan bbq food, reading,
and walking through the Magnolia Park district of Burbank (818!).
Robert MacManus is an artist from Melbourne, Australia who does occasional freelance writing for various publications and on line web zines including VICE, Inpress.
Scott
Banachowski is now a UCSC grad student and still has pretty
good taste in music.
Themba
Lewis played bass in the Intima and Liar Bird, ran Mt.
Pleasant Press, and is living in Oxford.
Trevor
Johnson was zum's first official intern. He is now engaged
and kickin' it large in Illinois.
Will Redman
recently earned a masters in Music Composition at the University of Southampton.
As a drummer and percussionist, he has played with International Soundscape
Internationale, Krill, the John Dierker Trio, and other jazz,
free-improv, and new music ensembles.
William Lynch is writing a novel about the second-largest building in the world, and sometimes he still misses the Cattle Club.
DEMO POLICY: We accept demos. Please don’t include any press packets, it wastes paper - one sheet of bio info is cool. Please don’t email to follow up, if we like your music we will contact you. Just to get an idea, see what we are into and decide if it's a good fit.
Last updated April 10, 2008. [ edit this page ]


