
2003
In the early 1970s, rubber was still king in Akron, Ohio. But just a few short years later, Akron's most important product was, ever so briefly, music. In the mid-1970s, a group of local bands took over an old rubber workers' hang-out in downtown Akron called The Crypt and created a mix of punk and art rock that came to be known as "the Akron Sound." And for a while, it was almost "the next big thing." Almost. It's Everything, and Then It's Gone, a Western Reserve PBS production written and directed by Phil Hoffman., takes viewers back to a time when the music really did mean everything. And for the men and women in these local bands, it was a way out of the factory.

Joe Walsh
Self

The New Music

Una identidad en absurdo Vol. 1

What Did You Expect: The Archers of Loaf Live at Cat's Cradle

The Year Of Punk

Pop & Passion

There Is No Authority But Yourself

What We Do Is Secret

Invisible Nation

Pinball Go to the Movies!

Punk the Capital: Building a Sound Movement

Dare to Dream: Anarchism in England in History and in Action

Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

Cascade

What Difference Does It Make?

Girl Groups: The Story of a Sound

The Cure - Disintegration In Sydney

Iggy and The Stooges: Live in Sydney

Dr. Feelgood - All Through the City (with Wilko 1974-1977)

Flipside Video Fanzine Number 1

Flipside Video Fanzine Number Two