Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Books & Zines TwentyXNine Zine March 11, 2012 1 min read Check out this Brighton hardcore zine called “29“. These guys are booking shows and bringing you the best of local scene. See their merch here. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: 29 zinehardcorehardcore punktwentyxnine zine Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in November 3, 2025 Kurt Brecht (D.R.I.) brings his long-lost book series back into print after decades out of circulation July 29, 2025 The story of DIE KREUZEN finally gets told in full with “Don’t Say Please” May 6, 2025 A book born out of rejection and the need to survive: Daryl Gussin (Razorcake fanzine) releases A Year in Submission May 29, 2024 PUSCIFER covers themes of dopamine addiction through social media use in “The Algorithm” Previous Story Law & Order Zine #4 available now Next Story Content With Dying Zine Latest Metal/hardcore hybrid OMIT ALL traces AI outsourcing, parasocial dependence, and endless war across “Lights Up on The End Stage” Brighton emo band HAD SANDY talk spirituality, Citizen, Trophy Eyes, and “t’other side” “Those Dark Roads”: Cleveland punks SAINTS OF LORAIN premiere debut album THE DHARMA CHAIN unlock a hypnotic journey with “Some Kind of Pure State” New wave goth rockers VELVET MIST unveil a five-track concept EP about almost losing the light
November 3, 2025 Kurt Brecht (D.R.I.) brings his long-lost book series back into print after decades out of circulation
May 6, 2025 A book born out of rejection and the need to survive: Daryl Gussin (Razorcake fanzine) releases A Year in Submission
May 29, 2024 PUSCIFER covers themes of dopamine addiction through social media use in “The Algorithm”
Metal/hardcore hybrid OMIT ALL traces AI outsourcing, parasocial dependence, and endless war across “Lights Up on The End Stage”