For those seeking old books and LP records there are better places to browse than in San Diego.
One reason is the relatively young and transient population. Farther inland and on the other coast there are generations of collected belongings sitting in basements, attics and garages. Eventually one family member or other will dispose of the Grandparent's old furniture, books and music to the delight of treasure hunters of the region. In Southern California however, a lot of what is donated to thrift stores is late 1970s and 1980s music and tchotchkes. I've even discovered several decades worth of macaroni-adorned picture frames at one Salvation Army store.
The other reason San Diego is a poor resource for keen gear is the economy. Most of the used book stores have shuttered and the usual places one could find groovy LP's, the Goodwill and Salvation Army stores, have either combined all their resources into one store or done away with LP's altogether. While reducing the number of places the records are displayed makes sense for the business it hurts the shopper seeking cool stuff because multiple destinations meant that a browser could get lucky if his timing was right. All the LP's kept in one place means one faces constant competition has to be really lucky with the timing to score some choice items.
Recently I found a couple of Jonah Jones Quartet albums, Swingin on Broadway and Swingin' at the Cinema notable among the internet primarily for the pretty women on the cover. Of the JJQ discography these two albums are probably the easiest to find. I found multiple copies of each when browsing and purchased the two best of the lot. Oh, yeah...I agree that those stretch pants and curves, especially on the blond on the Cinema LP, are something else. The album art is pretty typical of the 1950s. Back then nearly anyone producing lounge-type music put an attractive woman on the cover because no one would buy an album featuring John Wilson and the Howard-Johnsons Off State Route 12 Experience on the sleeve. Sex always sold, don't get me wrong, but the producers of the lounge era LP escalated cheesecake and enticement into an art form rarely seen since. These particular albums are probably getting more attention now than before as the "Mad Men" style of fashion seems to be all the rage still. Too bad there are no model credits for the albums, at least none that I can find.
The music is good but not original other than the application of the JJQ style as they are covers of tunes already popular in the era. They are fun to hear as "lost" music and I'm really partial to their treatment of A Gal In Calico from the Cinema album. I think the Jonah Jones Quartet packed enough talent for a dozen musicians.
From the collection: Swingin' on Broadway (1957) and Swingin' at the Cinema (1958).
Dienstag, 31. Mai 2011
Swingin'
Labels:
Art,
fashion,
From the Collection,
Music,
Photography
Labels:
1960,
Casterman,
Hergé,
Philippe Debongnie,
Tintin,
Tintin Au Tibet
start the day off Right w/ Shinobi Stalin
Anybody hungry for that classic spirit of hip hop? Here's some underground rap from Florida-based emcee Shinobi Stalin...
If the name or the steez is familiar to you, you might'a downloaded Rezistance Musik the mixtape from the Mutant Emcee Collective. It's good to hear Shinobi spread out rhymes over diverse beats and subject matters by himself. Shinobi spits heady, no-nonsense rhymes that will appeal to rap junkies of all sorts. give him a listen.
comics. hiphop. news. art. culture
If the name or the steez is familiar to you, you might'a downloaded Rezistance Musik the mixtape from the Mutant Emcee Collective. It's good to hear Shinobi spread out rhymes over diverse beats and subject matters by himself. Shinobi spits heady, no-nonsense rhymes that will appeal to rap junkies of all sorts. give him a listen.
holla!
samax.
ghettoManga.comcomics. hiphop. news. art. culture
Montag, 30. Mai 2011
The Moon-Spinners comic book adaptation
In years past if there was a movie or television show it was probably made into a one-shot comic book by the Whitman, Gold Key or Dell Comics book companies. They were all of varying quality as quickie marketing tie-ins but some are stand-outs. Hayley Mills has received several comic book treatments of her films most notably Summer Magic which was drawn by comic book artist Russ Heath.
Today for Monday With Hayley Mills I present the comic book adaptation of the Disney film The Moon-Spinners from 1964. The art is credited to accomplished veteran Dan Spiegle. Now, Dan gets a lot of flack from fans that isn't entirely deserved. He is lumped together, sometimes with contempt, into those work-horse artists that were relied upon to do a quick job within deadline. His style sometimes sacrifices the fine line work that most fans expected after the 1970s but as a reader who appreciates storytelling ability his work rarely disappoints.
Spiegle worked on a fondly remembered DNAgents run but for a real insight into his work check out the Gold Key issues of Mickey Mouse #107-109. Mickey Mouse, Secret Agent is a classic and truly bizarre story where funny animals interacted with realistically rendered humans and scenery. For the most part prior to that story arc anthropomorphic critters remained in a cartoon world of cartoon physics that did not cross over into other more realistic though equally fictional realms. The film version of Who Framed Roger Rabbit has its spiritual if not direct roots in that story arc. It is a bit surreal to witness human beings not even blinking when a talking mouse in a trench coat shows up at their door. Character interactions of that type are not observed very often currently as the audience is considered to cool, aware or jaded to go with the story. There is usually some qualifier thrown in to make the reader forgive the ridiculousness of a funny animal, such as the oft-stated "Y-You're a duck!" in the Howard the Duck series.
The Moon-Spinners is Hayley Mills' fifth of the six films she did for Disney. While not a financial success at the time it has a life among fans that crowd the Hayleydome in the HMCC for the Hayley-Con film festivals. Hayley is great as always in a film remembered for its scenery and light romantic subplot against a story of murderous jewel thieves. While not quite as dark as The Truth About Spring the film has been described as a bit more suspenseful than the novel from which it was adapted.
Click the cover for a download link to a PDF of the complete 1964 Gold Key comic book The Moon-Spinners.
Today for Monday With Hayley Mills I present the comic book adaptation of the Disney film The Moon-Spinners from 1964. The art is credited to accomplished veteran Dan Spiegle. Now, Dan gets a lot of flack from fans that isn't entirely deserved. He is lumped together, sometimes with contempt, into those work-horse artists that were relied upon to do a quick job within deadline. His style sometimes sacrifices the fine line work that most fans expected after the 1970s but as a reader who appreciates storytelling ability his work rarely disappoints.
Spiegle worked on a fondly remembered DNAgents run but for a real insight into his work check out the Gold Key issues of Mickey Mouse #107-109. Mickey Mouse, Secret Agent is a classic and truly bizarre story where funny animals interacted with realistically rendered humans and scenery. For the most part prior to that story arc anthropomorphic critters remained in a cartoon world of cartoon physics that did not cross over into other more realistic though equally fictional realms. The film version of Who Framed Roger Rabbit has its spiritual if not direct roots in that story arc. It is a bit surreal to witness human beings not even blinking when a talking mouse in a trench coat shows up at their door. Character interactions of that type are not observed very often currently as the audience is considered to cool, aware or jaded to go with the story. There is usually some qualifier thrown in to make the reader forgive the ridiculousness of a funny animal, such as the oft-stated "Y-You're a duck!" in the Howard the Duck series.
The Moon-Spinners is Hayley Mills' fifth of the six films she did for Disney. While not a financial success at the time it has a life among fans that crowd the Hayleydome in the HMCC for the Hayley-Con film festivals. Hayley is great as always in a film remembered for its scenery and light romantic subplot against a story of murderous jewel thieves. While not quite as dark as The Truth About Spring the film has been described as a bit more suspenseful than the novel from which it was adapted.
Click the cover for a download link to a PDF of the complete 1964 Gold Key comic book The Moon-Spinners.
Josh Blair covers Egg Story
Labels:
2004,
Egg Story,
J. Marc Schmidt,
Josh Blair,
Slave Labor Graphics
Remember the... Nerds?
Happy Memorial Day! Since I grew up in a military town where we loved the troops everyday, I wasn't really clear what regular people DO on Memorial Day, but according to my co-workers, women shop and men drink beer and eat barbecue. Proof positive that Americans can turn any holiday AWESOME! Um... so anyways, here's a strip from that dude Marcel of Marcel Comics...
Marcel has a strip in the Powerman/Luke Cage tribute issue of GhettoManga Quarterly, which you can buy on Indyplanet... Incidentally, you can also cop Marcel's latest paperback collection Read or Die on IP as well, just click here. Or while you're here, feel free to click here to read my review of Marcel's last book, Did You Mean MARVEL Comics?
So anyways... watch out for jake, and enjoy your sales, adult beverages and barbecue.
comics. hiphop. news. art. culture
Marcel has a strip in the Powerman/Luke Cage tribute issue of GhettoManga Quarterly, which you can buy on Indyplanet... Incidentally, you can also cop Marcel's latest paperback collection Read or Die on IP as well, just click here. Or while you're here, feel free to click here to read my review of Marcel's last book, Did You Mean MARVEL Comics?
So anyways... watch out for jake, and enjoy your sales, adult beverages and barbecue.
holla!
samax.
ghettoManga.comcomics. hiphop. news. art. culture
Sonntag, 29. Mai 2011
The occasional four-letter word in context
The much-covered Working Class Hero from John Lennon (1970). The song has a curse word in it so don't be stupid in a place you shouldn't be.
A hard-working Sunday post.
Conspiracy WorldWide Radio does it again: Guilty Simpson, Pete Rock, Smif n Wessun, Freddie Gibbs & more
Peep the latest episode of Conspiracy Worldwide Radio for interviews with Guilty Simpson of Random Axe/OJ Simpson fame, PLUS Pete Rock and Smif n Wessun talk about their new collabo record Monumental, Freddie Gibbs rolls though and more...
this is easily my favorite radio show. Hope you enjoy!
this is easily my favorite radio show. Hope you enjoy!
-samax.
Labels:
conspiracy worldwide radio,
guilty simpson,
hiphop,
Pete Rock
Samstag, 28. Mai 2011
PREVIEW- "Angeltown" by Gary Phillips & Shawn Martinbrough
I'm a big fan of noir connoisseur Shawn Martinbrough (Luke Cage: Noir, Bullseye: Perfect Game, Batman: Evolution), so I was happy to find these preview pages from the new trade paperback Angeltown: The Nate Hollis Investigations which reprints the Vertigo series he worked on with writer Gary Phillips (High Rollers) in 2005.
Gary Phillips has an impressive catalog of prose novels to his credit including Violent Spring (first in his Ivan Monk Mystery series) and The Jook (Switchblade). "Gary Phillips is my kind of crime writer." says fellow author Sara Paretsky (V. I. Warshawski novels)... Phillips is returning to comics for DC's Vertigo Crime imprint with the upcoming urban crime OGN Cowboys [READ THIS INTERVIEW on CBR] and as I said, Shawn Martinbrough is a beast. He's got this noir thing locked up. I'm definitely checking for this...
Anyways, for those who missed Angeltown in comics form, this collection drops in June, and Cowboys drops July 13th. More news about that when I get it!
Gary Phillips has an impressive catalog of prose novels to his credit including Violent Spring (first in his Ivan Monk Mystery series) and The Jook (Switchblade). "Gary Phillips is my kind of crime writer." says fellow author Sara Paretsky (V. I. Warshawski novels)... Phillips is returning to comics for DC's Vertigo Crime imprint with the upcoming urban crime OGN Cowboys [READ THIS INTERVIEW on CBR] and as I said, Shawn Martinbrough is a beast. He's got this noir thing locked up. I'm definitely checking for this...
Anyways, for those who missed Angeltown in comics form, this collection drops in June, and Cowboys drops July 13th. More news about that when I get it!
holla!
samax.
Labels:
begborrowsteal,
Gary Phillips,
ghettoManga,
Shawn Martinbrough
Bigger Noses, Booty Spanking and Comics Commentary from Brandon Graham
Brandon explains why he doesn't like your favorite artist anymore and adds a little gristle to this chick's nose to amuse himself. And did I mention booty spanking? Yeah, this pro'lly isn't safe for work, but it's it's a holiday weekend, so if you're working, eff your job anyways, right?
"In my head I've been on my high horse." Brandon says on his blog. "I've been thinking about how important it is that when you figure out how to draw you still push it-- fuck around and take chances.
The reason I regard a lot of mainstream dudes as bullshit is not because they can't draw but because the extent of that is power girl complaining about having back problems. (also, have you seen my new spanking comic?)
It's scary and hard to go beyond what works and a lot of the guys who I think have done some of the best work I also think later found a comfortable place and didn't push it as much. so yeah great power/great responsibility."
Word. Get more at Brandon's blog.
holla!
New Nose by Brandon Graham |
The reason I regard a lot of mainstream dudes as bullshit is not because they can't draw but because the extent of that is power girl complaining about having back problems. (also, have you seen my new spanking comic?)
It's scary and hard to go beyond what works and a lot of the guys who I think have done some of the best work I also think later found a comfortable place and didn't push it as much. so yeah great power/great responsibility."
Word. Get more at Brandon's blog.
holla!
-samax.
Freitag, 27. Mai 2011
Something more than sexual
An album cover that makes me wish I was old enough to know you then.
The Immortal Ladies by The George Melachrino Orchestra (1956).
The Immortal Ladies by The George Melachrino Orchestra (1956).
Exiled
Back in 2007 I attended the 30th Portland International Film Festival (I blogged about it once or twice). One of the films supposedly playing was Exiled (2006). However, every time I went to a scheduled screening, someone would walk out, sheepishly apologize, and tell the audience that the film was still on the way -- sorry, here watch this instead. After a couple of attempts, I gave up on seeing it. Finally screening the film yesterday, I realize it wasn't a great loss.
Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad film. However, it's a Johnnie To film starring Anthony Wong, Simon Yam, Lam Suet, Nick Cheung and Francis Ng -- it should have blown my mind, but instead it merely held my attention. It's a low-key affair, very dark (literally as well as figuratively -- most of it is people silhouetted in inky blackness) with long periods of brooding. There are, of course, the usual explosions of violence, usually protracted gun battles, but there's an emptiness at the center; I just didn't feel a connection to the characters, and the tempo was a bit too adagio.
It's about five guys from Macau, childhood friends, who became gangsters, and one of them apparently shot the boss. Now his four friends are split; two are loyal to the boss and have been dispatched to rub him out. The other two are loyal to him and determined to stop the other guys. At least that's how it starts. But you know how gangsters are, always flipping sides. This goes for the bosses as well, and before long everyone is blasting away.
Simon Lam turns in a frightening performance as Boss Fay, but Anthony Wong merely phones it in (or perhaps he was directed that way -- I don't know, I'm forever ruined after seeing his performances in The Untold Story and Ebola Syndrome). Lam Suet, the John Goodman of contemporary Hong Kong cinema, is great as usual, and Nick Cheung shows his range (compare his taciturn family man here with his vicious assassin in Beast Stalker).
I need to see more Johhnie To films (and there are certainly plenty to see), but this one just didn't do it for me. I much prefer something like PTU.
Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad film. However, it's a Johnnie To film starring Anthony Wong, Simon Yam, Lam Suet, Nick Cheung and Francis Ng -- it should have blown my mind, but instead it merely held my attention. It's a low-key affair, very dark (literally as well as figuratively -- most of it is people silhouetted in inky blackness) with long periods of brooding. There are, of course, the usual explosions of violence, usually protracted gun battles, but there's an emptiness at the center; I just didn't feel a connection to the characters, and the tempo was a bit too adagio.
It's about five guys from Macau, childhood friends, who became gangsters, and one of them apparently shot the boss. Now his four friends are split; two are loyal to the boss and have been dispatched to rub him out. The other two are loyal to him and determined to stop the other guys. At least that's how it starts. But you know how gangsters are, always flipping sides. This goes for the bosses as well, and before long everyone is blasting away.
Simon Lam turns in a frightening performance as Boss Fay, but Anthony Wong merely phones it in (or perhaps he was directed that way -- I don't know, I'm forever ruined after seeing his performances in The Untold Story and Ebola Syndrome). Lam Suet, the John Goodman of contemporary Hong Kong cinema, is great as usual, and Nick Cheung shows his range (compare his taciturn family man here with his vicious assassin in Beast Stalker).
I need to see more Johhnie To films (and there are certainly plenty to see), but this one just didn't do it for me. I much prefer something like PTU.
Anthony Vukojevich covers Rom 17
Labels:
Al Milgrom,
Anthony Vukojevich,
Colossus,
Frank Miller,
Nightcrawler,
Rom,
Storm,
Wolverine,
X-men
World of Hurt Cover Art!!
If you were smart enough to take my advice and get down with the World of Hurt: The Thrill Seekers Kickstarter campaign, this is the cover art for the hardcover Graphic Novel you will eventually get!
"I received the cover illustration back from my colorist, Jeremy Summey, and I had to share it with all of you..." said series writer, artist and hnic Jay Potts. "I'll finish formatting the book this weekend. The print schedule got pushed back, but once I send it to the printer I'll be able to let you know a firm delivery date for the completed books."
And of course, when I find out how late-comers can cop the book, I'll be sure to let you know. Or if you want the knowledge first hand, hit up worldofhurtonline.com or Jay's twitter.
"I received the cover illustration back from my colorist, Jeremy Summey, and I had to share it with all of you..." said series writer, artist and hnic Jay Potts. "I'll finish formatting the book this weekend. The print schedule got pushed back, but once I send it to the printer I'll be able to let you know a firm delivery date for the completed books."
And of course, when I find out how late-comers can cop the book, I'll be sure to let you know. Or if you want the knowledge first hand, hit up worldofhurtonline.com or Jay's twitter.
holla!
samax.
Labels:
ghettoManga,
kickstarter,
preview,
World of Hurt
Donnerstag, 26. Mai 2011
Mixed message
For a movie about the ruination of the environment, the makers of the 1971 giant monster flick Godzilla Vs. Hedorah certainly threw a lot of garbage into the water.
PREVIEW: Iron Man 2.0 #6
Looks like the brotha formerly known as War Machine is in the middle of a bangin' world-saving adventure guest-starring the immortal Iron Fist and company. In addition to the sweet Salvador Larocca cover above, peep the beautiful painted artwork to Iron Man 2.0 #6 by your man Ariel Olivetti...
Here's the Sales Pitch:
The evil forces of the Serpent sweep across the Earth…and it’s up to War Machine, the Immortal Iron Fist, and the Weapons of the Seven Capital Cities of Heaven to stop two of the strongest before they lay waste to an entire continent!
Word is this somehow ties into the latest Marvel U crossover "Fear Itself"... which I know nothing about (sorry). I just couldn't resist posting this art! Looks like my boy Jim Rhodes is in capable hands. Anyways, Iron Man 2.0 #6 lands in stores June 22nd.
Here's the Sales Pitch:
The evil forces of the Serpent sweep across the Earth…and it’s up to War Machine, the Immortal Iron Fist, and the Weapons of the Seven Capital Cities of Heaven to stop two of the strongest before they lay waste to an entire continent!
Word is this somehow ties into the latest Marvel U crossover "Fear Itself"... which I know nothing about (sorry). I just couldn't resist posting this art! Looks like my boy Jim Rhodes is in capable hands. Anyways, Iron Man 2.0 #6 lands in stores June 22nd.
holla!
samax.
Labels:
comics,
Iron Man,
Marvel Comics,
preview,
War Machine
Josh Burggraf covers Adventures of Bob Hope 101
Labels:
1966,
Adventures of Bob Hope,
Bob Hope,
Bob Oksner,
DC,
Josh Burggraf
Mittwoch, 25. Mai 2011
KG covers Incredible Hulk 49
Original cover by Kaare Andrews; Marvel 2003. KG's website is here and his original cover is available for purchase here.
Dienstag, 24. Mai 2011
Jamie Hibdon covers Madman Comics 6
Labels:
1995,
Big Guy,
Dark Horse,
Geof Darrow,
Madman,
Mike Allred
Montag, 23. Mai 2011
Tiina Birgitta Räisänen covers Sensation Comics 1
Original cover by Harry G. Peter and Jon L. Blummer; DC 1942. Tiina Birgitta Räisänen's website is here.
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