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Zine Fest 6 and Record Swap at Crosstown This Weekend

This year’s Zine Fest has a new component — the Memphis Listening Lab/WYXR inaugural Record Swap. According to Zine Fest curator Erica Qualy, this is such a perfect pairing because the birth of zines as we know them today was started as a response to the punk music culture in the 1970s, when copiers were made available commercially. People started creating fanzines and raising awareness in a way they hadn’t been able to before.

Qualy remembers hopping on the zine scene more than a few years later. “My friend and I first found out about zines in high school while browsing at the local library. We came across the book Zine Scene: The Do It Yourself Guide to Zines by Francesca Lia Block. We were entranced.”

She says they immediately went home and started brainstorming. They pulled an all-nighter until their first zine was born. Nearly 20 years later, Qualy is curating Zine Fest 6.

“Funny how seemingly small instances in your life can be the building blocks for a future,” says Qualy, inviting the public to join the revolution. “You don’t need to wait for anyone else to publish your stack of poems, your short stories about alien invasions, your comic about the dog and cat duo that saved the world. You can do it yourself. Make a zine today.”

Zine Fest 6 will be held in the upstairs Central Atrium of Crosstown Concourse, with DIY zine-making stations and vendor booth spaces.

The record swap will take place on the bottom floor of the Central Atrium. The Memphis Listening Lab, outside vendors, and the radio station inside Crosstown Concourse, WYXR 91.7 FM, will be selling music and merchandise.

Record Swap & Zine Fest 6, Crosstown Concourse, 1350 Concourse, Saturday, Sept. 4, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sunday, Sept. 5, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., free.

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Memphis Zine Fest Returns to Crosstown

Erica Qualy, an artist who dabbles in various forms of visual and performing arts, has been making zines since she was in high school.

“My friend and I were at the library, and we saw a book [Zine Scene: The Do It Yourself Guide to Zines by Francesca Lia Block and Hillary Carlip] about how to make zines,” she says. “A lot of the bands I admired growing up made zines. So, it just hit us. We thought, ‘Wow, this is so awesome.'”

The pair went home and created their first zine, complete with word finds, advice columns, and other quirky content fillers.

Crosstown Arts

Erica Qualy, organizer of Memphis Zine Fest V

Fast forward to 2019, and now Qualy is organizing Memphis Zine Fest V at Crosstown Concourse and working on the fourth issue of her zine — Facts, Advice, & Things to think about! — filled with poetry one-liners.

“When I first moved here from Minneapolis to go to Memphis College of Art, I realized there wasn’t really a zine scene here, or, if there was one, I didn’t know where it was,” she says. “So, I wanted to help provide a space where zinesters could come out and share their wares. Mary Jo Karimnia, a fellow Memphis artist, listened to my ideas for this event, and she helped me bring the event to life via Story Booth and Crosstown Arts.”

This year’s Zine Fest will feature the works of several zine makers, including various established zine makers and new makers who attended last week’s Youth Zine-Making Workshop.

Memphis Zine Fest V, Crosstown Concourse – Central Atrium, Friday, July 19th, 5-8 p.m., Free.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Fredd Velvet

Today’s MVM wants to stare deeply into your peepers.

Fredd Velvet’s “Green Eyes” is a shambling rocker about relationship dysfunction that’s pretty relatable. Erica Qualy teamed up with Ben Siler to translate the song’s frustration into images. Appropriately, there are a lot of ocular close ups. So if you spent your weekend drinking alone in your kitchen wondering what the hell your boyfriend/girlfriend was thinking, this one’s for you.

Music Video Monday: Fredd Velvet

If you would like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Snowglobe

Today’s Music Video Monday has a story to tell.

Snowglobe‘s orchestral pop rock has long been one of Memphis’ best exports. For the single from their self-titled 2016 album “We Were In Love”, they found the perfect video collaborator in experimental filmmaker Ben Siler. The Memphis auteur has crafted a complex, heartfelt story of lost love and mental illness using subtle gesture and rapid fire editing.

The video stars Natalie Higdon, Savannah Bearden, Danny Bader, Kittie Walsh, Snowglobe’s Jeff Hulett, Erica Qualy, and Inside Memphis Business Editor Jon Sparks, with editing by Laura Jean Hocking.

Music Video Monday: Snowglobe

If you would like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Zine Fest Fair at Story Booth

Last Saturday, Crosstown Arts hosted an all-ages zine-making workshop, and this week, they’re holding a class in zine-making for middle school kids. Both courses culminate with Friday’s Zine Fest Fair at Story Booth.

Zines? Have they come back? Did they ever go away? Zines encompass the true do-it-yourself spirit. Short for “fanzine,” these self-produced, underground publications are often Xeroxed and stapled affairs, though some are more sophisticated and full-color. Zines had their pop-culture heyday back in the late ’80s and early ’90s, when zines like Giant Robot and Maximum RocknRoll reached a nationwide audience. The internet and blogs then took over, but zines never really went away.

Erica Qualy, who’s helping with zine week at Crosstown, got into them about 10 years ago when she was still in high school. She and a friend saw a book about zines. “Wow!” she remembers thinking, “this is really cool.” They decided to make their own. Qualy has a couple zines, including Facts, Advice, & Things to think bbout, which she distributes to coffee shops and record stores. She says, “It’s my business card.”

At Zine Fest Fair, anyone with a zine can show and sell their wares. It will have some of the publications made during the workshop and class and other zines on display.

Qualy says the thing about zines is that anybody can do it, and she sees Friday’s event as sort of a meeting space. “There isn’t a huge zine culture here. This is to raise awareness.”

Zine Fest Fair at Story Booth, Friday, June 24th, 4-6 p.m. crosstownarts.org