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I HAVE A HARD TIME IMAGING DANTHEMAN WROTED THINGS DIDT EVEN USE PUNCTUATION AT TIMES. Goddamn that was annoying, wasn't it?
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I just noticed that all of the issues of Starlog have been removed from the Internet Archive. Probably some sort of copyright reason. Just a few random issues remain (probably duplicate copies of the ones removed). The Fangoria issues are also gone. Just randomly scanned articles remain.
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I just noticed that all of the issues of Starlog have been removed from the Internet Archive. Probably some sort of copyright reason. Just a few random issues remain (probably duplicate copies of the ones removed). Over a period of years, I saved all the Starlog articles I could find on my subjects of interest: mainly my favorite shows and movies, and film music. And it came to over 4500 pages! So I have tidy archive, all organized and tagged. I was always afraid Starlog would be taken off the Internet, or at least go behind a paywall, and last November I noticed that the magazine was in fact gone. But now it seems to be available again: https://archive.org/details/lyman_007_hotmail_228
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I just noticed that all of the issues of Starlog have been removed from the Internet Archive. Probably some sort of copyright reason. Just a few random issues remain (probably duplicate copies of the ones removed). The Fangoria issues are also gone. Just randomly scanned articles remain. Damn, should have downloaded them while I had the chance. Zap's link above shows something available again, Solly.
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Before there was F.S.M. and other film music magazines or the internet, I remember reading articles and interviews about film composers in Cinemafastique and Starlog. Preston Neal Jones' article about Hans J. Salter in Cinemafastique was one of the best articles about him I ever read, and it was well presented with rare photos of the composer, and it was the article I first became aware of him. I didn't discover FSM until about 1999, when I got on the Internet. Before that, it was Starlog that validated and informed my early career as a film music nut.
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Films n filming, films illustrated and Film Review (and their annual book for the year) were the scraps we had before fangoria, starlog and others. Specialist filmmusic productions in 70s were more fanzine type of things, b/w and often produced on photocopiers, invaluable content but a million miles from the glossy colour stuff like starlog n fangoria
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I just noticed that all of the issues of Starlog have been removed from the Internet Archive. Probably some sort of copyright reason. Just a few random issues remain (probably duplicate copies of the ones removed). The Fangoria issues are also gone. Just randomly scanned articles remain. Some are still present, locatable in a roundabout way: https://archive.org/download/lyman_007_hotmail_228 Issues 1-131 seem to be there.
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Interesting final story in the first issue:
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