At its inception Rancid News was a
punk zine, which began circulation in April 2003 with interviews from
AFI,
One Minute Silence, and
Johnny Truant, alongside articles, columns and reviews.
Rancid News was initially launched at a time when the
Fracture and
Reason To Believe zines were still in existence. After those publications ceased,
Rancid News assumed their mantel documenting the
UK punk scene. A key difference between
Rancid News and the aforementioned zines is that
Rancid News was sold outside
gigs, and in record and comic stores rather than being available free. It was compared to
San Francisco-based
Maximum RocknRoll, due largely to similar political beliefs and style of music covered.
Rancid News was often connected with the Household Name records scene, featuring most of the label's bands between 2003 and 2005.
Rancid News was also distributed by many of the Household Name Records bands, including
Five Knuckle,
Captain Everything!,
Adequate Seven,
Howards Alias, and
Antimaniax amongst others. At its height
Rancid News distributed around 4,000 copies around the UK and Europe. The zine was printed on
newsprint and most issues were 116 pages long, with a colour cover, and
saddle stitch binding. In early 2005 the name
Rancid News was considered a hindrance. People mistakenly assumed the fanzine had something to do with the punk rock band
Rancid and it was felt that it forced contributors to focus too heavily on music. The final issue of
Rancid News, published in February 2005, gave an indication of the changing direction, with a greater emphasis on radical culture in general and with particular focus on political articles,
vegan recipes and longer columns. The name
Last Hours was agreed on in a meeting in March 2005, with the first issue - issue 10 - of the fanzine being released in June 2005, with subsequent issues to be released every six months. It maintained a balance between interviews with punk bands and political articles. It was published under the strapline 'Radical culture and punk rock'. The print production remained the same as
Rancid News until issue 13, when the fanzine again changed direction with the first perfect bound edition, and an issue dedication to 'Punk rock and comics'. It marked the first time that interviews, articles or reviews relating to punk rock took up less than 50% of the fanzine. After issue 13 each issue of Last Hours was themed in one way or another, most often around the principle article of the zine. So, issue 14 focussed on acoustic punk rock, issue 15 on
anarcho-punk compilations, issue 16 on DIY punk rock houseshows, and issue 17 on radical illustration. In all of the issues of
Last Hours anarchist politics and radical culture took prominence over the music. ==Last Hours live==