Skip to product information
1 of 5

Rumorbooks

Thrasher 324 Sep 2007

Thrasher 324 Sep 2007

Regular price $10.00 AUD
Regular price Sale price $10.00 AUD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

The September 2007 issue of Thrasher (Issue #324) puts Sierra Fellers on the cover, shot by Broach, and delivers a mix of global skate missions, raw music features, and solid photo spreads. Fellers gets a full feature inside, showing his world beyond the board—biking, dancing, breakdancing—with style to match his skating.

The mag dives into the Damn Am contest series, titled "Flying Carcasses," with high-speed coverage of the chaos and carnage that define the amateur battleground. A piece called Walk West is more reflective, with skate trips under a “full moon shining,” giving a poetic contrast to the hard-hitting action elsewhere in the issue.

Two key travel features stand out: Chile vs Argentina, set in the rugged outposts of Fort Apache, and a look at Malmö, Sweden, where a squad of “beer-drinking scallywags” skate and party their way through the city's legendary concrete. There's also a segment titled “2 Thrasher” that threads these global narratives into one ongoing saga.

On the vert side, Bucky Lasek returns with a quote-worthy line: “Radiation Ray was the gnarliest,” referencing a fellow ramp warrior. A photo feature delivers “sequence abuse” galore, packed with big moments and even bigger slams.

Music coverage is noisy and raw. Born/Dead gets a spotlight in "Noise Forest"; Hope Conspiracy brings their “nasty art record” to light; and It’s Casual earns a unique footnote as “Sean Penn’s brother” fronts the band. Stressface rounds out the sound section, described as “stud belts equal Punky Brewster,” capturing the bizarre, thrift-store-meets-hardcore vibe of the time.

Regular departments hold it down—Mail at page 20, Notes at 191, and Apeshit starting at 150, where the staff proclaims, “It’s hectic. We’re all artists.” Lastly, a surreal piece titled Nurses offers “Mercury-ized pronouncements of Queen,” proving that Thrasher’s cultural edge was as sharp as ever.

This issue is a full-spectrum blast of skating, global DIY exploration, and underground sound—just how Thrasher does it.

Cover has quite a few creases. 

View full details