Yeti (magazine)  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

YETI magazine is a journal focused on art, music and literature, based in Portland, Oregon, United States. It is published by YETI publishing (who have also published books by Luc Sante, Tara Jane O'Neil and Jana Martin). YETI was founded in Seattle by Mike McGonigal, author of the 33⅓ book on the album Loveless, former editor of '80s 'zine Chemical Imbalance, and a freelance writer (including contributions to Pitchfork Media). The magazine features various articles, interviews, artwork, poetry, novel excerpts, and more, from contributors including:

Each magazine is packaged with a compilation music CD, featuring rare and/or previously unreleased tracks. Musical contributors to the magazine have included:

Yeti 5

Pierre Albert-Birot, Brice Marden, Robert Belfour, Fred McDowell, Jordan Belson, Jonas Mekas, Han Bennink, Movietone, David Berman, Cookie Mueller, Joe Brainard, Chuck Nanney, Thomas Brinkmann, Opal Louis Nations, Richard Buckner, Fred Neil, Octavia Butler, Pauline Oliveros, Piero Camporesi, Oulipo, Marc Caro, Ron Padgett, The Clinic, Gary Panter, Jess Collins, Panhandle Records, Bruce Conner, Fernando Pessoa, Gal Costa, Recorded Sermons, Cowboy Poetry, Ron Regé Jr., Carl Craig, Sally Ross, Meg Cranston, Wolfgang Schivelbusch, Rene Daumal, Schoolly D, Julie Doucet, Carolee Schneemann, Kenward Elmslie, Bola Sete, Rev. Lonnie Farris, Roger Shattuck, Funkstorung, Kevin Shields, Amy Gerstler, Nancy Spero, Carlo Ginzburg, Swan Silvertones, Guerilla Girls, 39 Clocks, The Hairy Who, Paul Thek, Hatch Show Print, This Heat, Tim Hawkinson, Lynne Tillman, Richard Hell, Amon Tobin, Eva Hesse, Tom Verlaine, Gert Hofmann, Paul Virilio, Highway Q. C.s, Chris Ware, Darius James , H. C. Westermann, Alfred Jarry , Colson Whitehead, Ray Johnson, The Who Sell Out, George Kuchar, Charles Willeford, Tuli Kupferberg, Kathryn Williams, The Lilys, Robert Wyatt, Rune Lindblad, Madame Yevonde, Sam Lipsyte, Unica Zürn.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Yeti (magazine)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools