Showing posts with label popular music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label popular music. Show all posts

14 March 2014

[design] USPS Hendrix Stamp: 'Scuse Me, While I Lick This Guy

3031.
The USPS, one of the few places you can learn something about popular history without an agenda, has just released a pretty cool stamp.

It's pretty cool, are, for more than one reason:
The artist created the selvage and stamp art with acrylic paint and colored pencils. His choice of colors and designs introduced elements of movement and rhythm with an almost musical flow, paying homage to the 1960s without directly imitating the era’s art.
The stamp sheet, designed to resemble a vintage 45 rpm record sleeve, features a painting of Hendrix’s face surrounded by colorful swirls and small icons that reference song lyrics or aspects of Hendrix’s life.
And here's what it looks like:

Philatelists will note, and you can buy them at your local PO, or here.

(NB: They're self-adhesive. Those of you born in the current age will hopefully have been told that you used to have to lick your stamps. Don't lick these however. Oh, the sacrifices I'll make for a joke).

21 May 2012

[liff] In Praise of BeeGees

2825.Today, after the news that Robin Gibb has departed us, I can't help but remember my favorite story about how the BeeGees got started. It has become somewhat of a legend. I'm not really sure if it's true but it's charming and sweet and antic. 
As the legend goes, as lads in Oz, they enjoyed performing at the local moviehouse; just before the show or during the intermission, they'd have this 78 RPM record, and play it, and get up on stage with their little-dude make-believe band and lip-synch the song. And this pleased people, presumably because they were adorable little guys and were giving it their all.

Well, one day, on the way to the cinema, they dropped the record.

It shattered, of course. 

But the boys were troupers. They went up on stage and actually sang. And that went over even bigger and better than the lip-synched song went. And an act was, if not born, certainly germinated. And during the 60s they became popular. And during the 70s … well, they became ridiculously huge. 

I always did like the BeeGees, even though the disco period left me a bit cold. Now, I'm not just saying that to prevent being indicted for ever liking disco. I remember when that stuff came in. And if you weren't part of the moneyed set, just some school kid going to dances, heck … for a while, when it was new, it was innocent fun. All the music seemed peppy, upbeat, not just proud of its synths and airy strings and overproduction, but fairly wallowing in it. You couldn't not get up and dance, even if you were an awkward, weird teenager (who would grow into an awkward, weird adult, so, as you can see, preparation is everything. But that's another program altogether). 
Dark, moody, thoughtful, serious music could wait another day. It will still be there when you're done bein' goofy.
To say that the BeeGees were just disco is to be gravely unjust, however. They were insanely famous for that, and that's true enough. But they had a long road up to that pinnacle. Just before the disco era they were one of the more renowned pop harmony groups, kind of a poor-mans Beatles (poor-man in the good way). And this is kind of a clumsy way of blundering into recommending one of my favorite albums, and one of the better albums done anywhere by anyone … the album that stood at the inflection point between the pop years and the dance years, and that's 1975's Main Course.

This was the album that brought us "Jive Talkin'" and "Nights on Broadway", both of which had about equal parts of melody and lyrics and disco. They are also extremely listenable. The album goes deep and complex and quirky, though, with samples of country and western style ("Country Roads"), soft psychedelia (the almost Jabberwocky-like "Edge of the Universe"), and swaggering sexy-time ("All This Making Love"). The album takes the best of both worlds they straddled and left behind the bad things. 

As I listened to it and got into it, I made peace with my liking of the BeeGees. I suppose the disco era was going to get on everyone's nerves, after a while; after the novelty wore off the truth was, all the songs began to seem derivative, dull, and tedious. There's only so much movin' you can get out of cymbals, a back beat, and airy strings.

But Main Course … that's some satisfying music. Almost experimental in a couple of places, by a band who was unafraid of what they were doing and ready to take off, whether they knew it was going to work or not. 

I believe this album got on one of those Albums-You-Must-Listen-To-Before-You-Die lists.

It earned the place.

RIP, Robin Gibb, 1943-2012. 

12 January 2009

In The Year 2525 ...

1909.A little pictorial satire, set to the "tune" of the famous Zager & Evans song from 1969. Please note, this post has extra added exordium and terminus for your viewing pleasure.





Klicken Sie hier to view it bigly.

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