Celebrate With Us the 45th Anniversary of Crawdaddy! Magazine

Do you know the story of Crawdaddy!? Forty-five years ago, the first US
magazine of rock criticism was born. Conceived by a visionary young
journalist named Paul Williams from his freshmen dorm room at Swarthmore
College, Crawdaddy! Magazine (so named for the club where the Rolling
Stones played their first show) set in motion a movement of music
writing that has continued to resonate and gain momentum over the past
four and a half decades since Williams first put his pen to the page and
cranked out a magazine. In those early issues, Williams made a name for
himself for frank, intelligent, and earnest commentary on the subject of
music—reviewing Simon and Garfunkels’ Sounds of Silence (for which he
received a phone call from Paul Simon at his dorm room congratulating
him for his insights), waxing on the musical identity of San Francisco,
taking on folk-rock as it emerged in a dichotomous climate, and going on
to become one of the preeminent Dylan experts of the age. Read what
Williams himself had to say about that first issue…

At a time when the field of music criticism was still unheralded and far
from taking the shape as it exists today in our saturated new media
environment, Williams helped build the foundation of the medium, driving
an ideology that self-discovery can and does exist through the practice
of reflecting on art. Paul Williams is considered the godfather of rock
journalism for setting a standard that we in that wake strive to uphold,
for being among the first to acknowledge the worth of his subject in a
cultural context and setting it free for the masses to embrace.

He didn’t do it alone. Crawdaddy! was home to rock writing luminaries
such as Richard Meltzer, Sandy Pearlman, and Jon Landau, who helped
music journalism become a global enterprise, as Rolling Stone, Creem,
Mojo, Pitchfork, and the like eventually came to existence in the shadow
that our forebears cast. Williams stepped away from Crawdaddy! in 1968
and the magazine stopped publishing for a few years until it was
relaunched (without an exclamation mark) in 1970 under the direction of
other highly respected editors and contributors, among them Peter
Knobler, Greg Mitchell, Jon Pareles, Ed Ward, William Burroughs, and
Abbie Hoffman. Williams eventually took the magazine back in 1993 and
published 28 more issues until the financial burden became too
debilitating. In 2007, Crawdaddy! was relaunched to live once more
online, where we aim daily to honor those ideals as defined by Williams
45 years ago.

In celebration of the institution that Paul Williams set in motion from
his dorm room typewriter, we invite you to remember your own experiences
within the pages of Crawdaddy! from its origins through today, to peruse
those first 19 issues that we have available for you in their entirety
here on the site, to read through some of the collected remembrances of
past and present Crawdaddy! contributors, and honor the life and work of
Paul Williams. Without him and what he started, we would certainly be
missing something wonderful.

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http://www.crawdaddy.com/index.php/2011/02/07/celebrate-with-us-the-45th-anniversary-of-crawdaddy-magazine/
Via InstaFetch

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