Before the Internet and being able to know almost everything instantly, being a fan was very different. We got most of our information about U2 from music magazines, including U2's Propaganda, TV programmes and other fans. We never got to hear songs from new albums before their release, so it was really exciting on release day to rush out and buy the album and then hear it all for the first time. I quite miss that excitement - nowadays we seem to find out about things pertaining to U2 so easily.
Another way of sharing and gaining information about the band was via a fanzine. These were very popular in the late 80's and 90's. They were homemade magazines made by fans and they were very popular and were quite an important part of U2 fandom in those days.
In the summer of 1990 I decided to start a fanzine of my own, I called it Eirinn, an old name for Ireland which I pinched from the title of a Runrig song. The 'zine was dedicated to U2 and Ireland. Initially it was really a labour of love as I was literally cutting and pasting it which took a long time. After a year or so I got a word processor so it was a little easier then and around 1995 I got my first computer and it was so much simpler to create and publish.
I really enjoyed doing the fanzine, it was nice to share my love for U2 and Ireland with other fans and it was also an outlet for my creative side. But towards the end of the 90's fanzines were becoming obsolete. Glitzy online fansites were taking over and the lovingly made paper fanzines couldn't compete. I stopped producing Eirinn on it's tenth anniversary in 2000.
There was something to be said for fanzines though, it was always special to receive a 'zine in the post, to open the envelope and to turn the pages, it was something tangible, that you could touch and feel, a bit more personal than cyberspace.
2 comments:
Hi Sue,
My name is Natalie Baker and I'm contacting you from Melbourne, Australia.
I'm currently working on a documentary about U2 fans from around the world called 'Meet Me in the Sound', and I was wondering if you would be willing to contribute an interview about the fanzine that you produced in the 1990's.
If you could please contact me at gypsyheart@y7mail.com, I can provide you with further information.
Thank you,
Kind regards,
Natalie
Hi Sue,
My name is Natalie Baker and I'm contacting you from Melbourne, Australia.
I'm currently working on a documentary about U2 fans from around the world called 'Meet Me in the Sound', and I was wondering if you would be willing to contribute an interview about the fanzine that you produced in the 1990's.
If you could please contact me at gypsyheart@y7mail.com, I can provide you with further information.
Thank you,
Kind regards,
Natalie
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