SPIN Magazine 08/1989

$20.00

Issue Snapshot

  • Publication: SPIN

  • Date / Issue ID: August 1989 — Vol. 5, No. 5

  • Length: 96 pages 

  • Cover Star: Tom Petty (cover line: “Won’t Back Down”)

Cover And Major Themes

This issue is built around three big cover pushes:

  • Tom Petty — “Won’t Back Down” (the main feature hook)

  • China / Tiananmen Aftermath — “Inside the Square with the Student Leaders” (a reported piece tied to the 1989 protests)

  • Hip-Hop Moment — “Rap Summit: State of the Hip Hop Nation” (a scene-status feature)

Supporting cover callouts also spotlight Indigo Girls, Love And Rockets, Simple Minds, and Dinosaur Jr.

What This Issue Feels Like In Context

August ’89 SPIN is doing what it did best: putting rock stardom, politics, and subculture reporting in the same room. The cover alone reads like a map of late-’80s tension and transition—Tiananmen, the shape of hip-hop, and Tom Pettyas a mainstream figure with a defiant single at the exact right time.

1 in stock

Purchase & earn 20 points!
 

Description

SPIN in the 90s felt like a magazine with its ear pressed to the floorboards. While a lot of mainstream music press was still clinging to the old rock hierarchy, SPIN leaned hard into what was actually changing the culture in real time. As the decade kicked off, it treated grunge and the wider “alternative” explosion as more than a sound. It was a generational handover. Bands that used to live in the margins suddenly became the center, and SPIN was one of the places documenting that shift with real urgency.

What made SPIN especially important in that era was how wide its idea of “alternative” could be. It didn’t just stop at guitars. The magazine gave hip-hop serious space and treated it as culture, not a novelty, at a time when plenty of legacy outlets still weren’t sure what to do with it. That mix of scenes and voices is a big part of why 90s SPIN reads like a time capsule of where the future was heading.

By the mid-90s, SPIN had enough authority to publish the Spin Alternative Record Guide (1995), a critic-driven map of the alt universe that became a reference point for fans and aspiring writers alike. It’s one of those artifacts that captures the era’s confidence: the sense that a new canon was being built, and SPIN was helping write it.

You may also like…