Tracks (magazine)

Tracks is a monthly Australian surf magazine, promoting itself as "the surfers' bible". It is published by Next Media.

It was established in October 1970 by Alby Falzon, John Witzig and David Elfick, starting as a kind of counter-culture tabloid, printed on newsprint and produced on Sydney's northern beaches. Since then it has grown to be a major surfing publication. Over the years its editors have included:

  • Alby Falzon 1970-1975
  • John Witzig 1970-1972
  • David Elfick 1970
  • Phil Jarratt 1975-1977
  • Paul Holmes 1978-1981
  • Kirk Wilcox 1981-1984
  • Nick Carroll 1984-1986
  • Jon Ellis 1986-1988
  • Tim Baker 1989-1991
  • Gary Dunne 1991-1994
  • Neil Ridgeway 1994-1997
  • Wayne Dart 1997-2000
  • Sean Doherty 2000-2008
  • Luke Kennedy 2008-

Tracks published a cartoon series,"Captain Goodvibes", by Australian cartoonist Tony Edwards. The Goodvibes cartoons were first published in May 1973 and appeared regularly until July 1981. Goodvibes became an icon of Australian surfing culture.

"Lash Clone" by Australian Author D.C Greening appeared in the pages of Tracks during 1980s and his later works "Cosmic Surf Wars" appearing more recently.

In July 1988 the masthead was updated from "tracks" to "tRACKS".

In March 2000 the magazine changed format from the original newsprint size down to a tabloid size.

Famous quotes containing the word tracks:

    Truth is one, but error proliferates. Man tracks it down and cuts it up into little pieces hoping to turn it into grains of truth. But the ultimate atom will always essentially be an error, a miscalculation.
    René Daumal (1908–1944)