SPIN Magazine 09/1994

$30.00

Cover: Charles Manson

Main cover line: “1969 Revisited: MANSON vs. WOODSTOCK” (by Mike Rubin) 

Other cover teases (top + left rail): Green Day / Helmet / Lollapalooza, Kate Moss: “The Real Skinny”, and a South Africa political feature (“The Right Wing’s Plan For a Race War”).

Plus (called out on the cover): Rodeo Groupies, Blur, John Mellencamp, “One-Night Stand”, Margaret Cho, Ricki Lake, Sandra Bernhard, Fall Fashion.

What this issue is “about” (the editorial spine)

 

This is a very “culture-collision” SPIN moment: the magazine uses the Woodstock ’94 media circus (and the broader mid-90s alt-rock boom) as the launchpad to look back at 1969—not as misty-eyed nostalgia, but as a contested mythology. The cover’s provocation (“Manson vs. Woodstock”) is basically asking: what did the dream turn into, and what got buried under the branding? 

Feature: “Manson vs. Woodstock” (1969 Revisited)

 

  • Why it matters: Putting Manson and Woodstock side-by-side is SPIN forcing the reader to hold the era’s “peace & love” iconography next to its darkest cultural underside—same year, radically different symbols. 

  • Writer credit: Mike Rubin is explicitly tied to this as SPIN’s September 1994 cover story in his own writing archive. 

  • Contextual read: In the early 90s, Woodstock had become a marketable brand again (Woodstock ’94), so SPIN framing the issue as “1969 revisited” feels like a deliberate pushback against easy commodified nostalgia. (That tension is also discussed in broader Woodstock scholarship that references this SPIN cover story.) 

 

Green Day / Helmet / Lollapalooza

 

These names are positioned like a “state of the scene” banner across the top—SPIN treating the 1994 alt circuit (and especially Lollapalooza) as the new mainstream engine.

Worth noting: Woodstock ’94 and Lollapalooza ’94 overlapped in the cultural conversation, and Green Day’s live notoriety around that era is heavily documented elsewhere (the broader point being: 1994 punk-on-a-big-stage chaos as spectacle). 

Kate Moss: “The Real Skinny”

 

SPIN is doing a very 90s thing here—music magazine as culture magazine—pulling fashion/body politics into the same issue as festival rock and counterculture history. The phrasing on the cover suggests a demystifying/critical angle rather than pure glam profile.

South Africa political feature

 

The cover line points to a hard political report (not music), and there’s corroboration that John Ryan had a report on the South African elections that appeared in SPIN’s September 1994 issue. 

So this issue isn’t just “rock + scandal”—it’s also SPIN leaning into global politics at a pretty serious temperature.

The “PLUS” culture stack (what it signals)

 

The additional names/topics on the cover suggest the issue’s back half is a grab-bag of sharp culture writing:

  • Rodeo Groupies (very SPIN: subculture anthropology)

  • Blur (Britpop’s US-facing moment beginning to peak)

  • John Mellencamp (heartland rock elder vs the alt era)

  • Margaret Cho / Ricki Lake / Sandra Bernhard (comedy + talk + edge-culture crossover)

  • Fall Fashion (again: SPIN as broader style/culture authority, not only records)

 

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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.

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