Saturday, July 4, 2015

William Stout's "Legends of the Blues"

William Stout has built a formidable body of work in his 40+ year long art career, ranging from comics and album art to storyboarding and conceptual art in film and television.  In 2013, Abrams ComicArts published his "Legends of the Blues" book which builds where Robert Crumb's classic "Heroes of the Blues" trading card set from 1980 left off.  Stout renders over 100 Blues titans in his own version of Crumb's iconic, bold crosshatched style, and wrote a short biography to accompany each entry.  Oftentimes, Stout weaves in symbolic imagery in the backgrounds to enhance the individual's mythology.  It's a brilliant collection of images, and the book is a must have for any fan of illustration or the blues.

here are some examples.  buy the book HERE.














Thursday, June 18, 2015

Rick Griffin - "Surfer Movies" (1971)

In 1971, legendary psychedelic concert poster artist Rick Griffin (American 1944-1991) produced Tales from the Tube, an underground comix insert to Surfer Magazine.  It included work by Robert Crumb, S. Clay Wilson, and Robert Williams, among others.  Here is one of Griffen's strips, "Surfer Movies."








Monday, June 8, 2015

The Jaipur Kawa Brass Band: Dance of the Cobra



The Jaipur Kawa Brass Band is a collection of Rajasthani gypsies in Northern India, led by renowned bandleader Hameed Khan Kawa.  The group hails from the Thar Desert, "The Original Land of Gypsies," and merges their traditional sounds with classical Indian music and  popular Bollywood movie soundtracks, all with the rousing brass marching band traditions that flooded the country with British colonialism in the 1700s.   It's an unexpectedly badass mix, sounding like some exotic James Bond chase theme, as you can see for yourself...

keep in mind that the band is often accompanied by a female Sapera dancer from the snake charming Kabelian tribe, where snakes are worshiped as guardians of spiritual truth, as well as by a sword swallowing/fire eating fakir (magician). 




Jaipur Kawa Brass Band released their album, Dance of the Cobra, in 2013 through the UK label World Music Network/Riverboat Records.  a little research showed that Dance of the Cobra is full of classic Bollywood soundtrack hits, performed mostly as instrumentals, but completely reformed when blasting through the horns and percussion of the Thar Desert in a marching band procession.  it's unlike anything i've heard.


here are some key tracks, and if you like what you hear, go to World Music Network's site, pick up a copy of the album HERE , and put some money in their pockets.








~kojak

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Friday, June 5, 2015

Pretty Lightning - "A Magic Lane of Light and Rain" (Cardinal Fuzz 2015)



Pretty Lightning
A Magic Lane of Light and Rain
Cardinal Fuzz Records 2015





Pretty Lightning draw their life force from the swampy drone of North Mississippi Hill Country Blues masters Junior Kimbrough and R.L. Burnside, and filters it through a ghostly, hallucinogenic fog.  It is a limitless source of inspiration, always ripe for exploration, and the German guitar/organ/drums duo dig in and root down with the best of em.  

Pretty Lightning's sophmore album, A Magic Lane of Light and Rain, naturally builds upon the sounds of their 2012 debut, There Are Witches In The Woods, and in the process stumbles upon the common ground between Kimbrough and Krautrock.  These grooves could spiral out into infinity, but the fact that Pretty Lightning can hammer them into actual songs, with memorable hooks and melodies, is rare.  The recordings themselves are clear but raw... focused, but fuzzy in the peripheral... which should translate well to their live show.

It will be interesting to see where Pretty Lightning goes from here, as their sound deepens and congeals even more.

prettylightning.com/

Stand out tracks:  The Rainbow Machine, Bow Low, Woodlands



Thursday, May 28, 2015

Milo Manara does Marvel

Milo Manara, the legendary French erotic comics master, unwittingly found himself at the center of a heated debate on the oversexualization of women in American comics with his infamous Spider-woman cover.  Manara did what he has done best over his decades-long career, seductive women in provocative poses, and the internet broke as a result.  His other Marvel covers were cancelled in the wake of the outrage.  America is still a place with rigid Puritanical views on sexuality, yet openly flaunts death and destruction in every available medium, and Manara's work simply doesn't jive with these sensibilities.  It is unlikely we will ever see the Master's work published through mainstream comics on this side of the ocean again, so here is a collection of his Marvel covers, as well as some pages from his 2010 graphic novel, X-Women, written by Chris Claremont (download a Spanish copy HERE, for scholarly review of course).