Showing posts with label Imperial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Imperial. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Hulk Smash Brand X

 
A friend recently turned me on to 70s fusion group Brand X, by way of their 1977 album Morrocan Roll. This is some intense stuff; I hear influences either given or received from Goblin (Morrocan Roll and the Suspiria OST were released two months apart in the spring of 1977), Genesis (according to my friend, Phil Collins was apparently Brand X's drummer for one album), and they definitely influenced one Les Claypool. The album starts a bit slow for my taste, but once we get to this, the fourth track, things really flip out, and it's pretty awesome to behold. 

Man, there was so much interesting music happening on the fringes of Jazz and Prog at this time. Not all of it is to my liking, but it's definitely worth exploring. 



Watch:

That time on Lettermen when Iggy Pop told the story of how he met David Bowie!


I've really been enjoying having the ability to comb through classic NBC Lettermen clips on the Lettermen YouTube channel. This is just another example of the treasure available there. Props to the historians who curate, clean up and catalogue this stuff. 




Read:

Re-reading Imperial #1, I find I'm not quite done pontificating on "Cosmic Marvel,' because my connections to it actually go further back than I realized when I wrote Monday's entry. 

While it's true that 1992's Infinity Gauntlet was my direct entry point to anything outside street-level Marvel,* I did get a more narrow taste of Cosmic Marvel with The Incredible Hulk.

I grew up as a big fan of Peter David's run on Marvel Comics' The Incredible Hulk. However, prior to David's run, series writer Bill Mantlo played considerably more with Cosmic stories for Marvel's green brute, and as a kid, I had a disparate number of these and they fascinated me to no end. 


In fact, I've come to realize that, just as Imperial begins with Hulk as our entry into the larger Cosmic conspiracy, the character has long been associated with intergalactic elements of Marvel's continuity and often had a hand in piquing my interest in that direction. 


These random issues from Mantlo's run did not make it out of my early childhood but were something I sought out in back issues later in life, so strong was the memory of them for me even into my adult comic book reading. And they hold up, especially the "Crossroads" stories from the late 290s-early300s of Incredible. They hold up so well, in fact, that Peter David returned to this era a few years ago with a Symbiote Spider-Man story that set Spidey in the Crossroads era with Hulk. A good time was had by all, I can tell you!


All that aside, there is one other Cosmic Hulk era I began to latch onto (well after the fact) and never finished but have gone back to now. That is none other than Grep Pak's Planet Hulk.

I bought the collected Planet Hulk back around five or six years ago, started it, but somehow ended up getting pulled away before getting very far. When the series was being published weekly, I was in an anti-Marvel/indie books-only turn, so I barely paid attention to it, despite the residual hype that coated the walls of the burgeoning online comic book community at the time. I'm not sure what prompted me to pick up the collection on Kindle when I did, but now that Imperial has captured me and spins somewhat directly out of the events of Planet Hulk, it's time.


This is total throwback, 70s Sci-Fi, and I think Bill Mantlo would be a super fan of this storyline. There are definite similarities, what with Hulk finding camaraderie with alien outsiders, similar to the Puffball Collective in Crossroads. The planet Sakaar serves as a melting pot for a number of alien races due to its proximity to the wormhole above it, and that adds a nice 70s Sci-Fi aesthetic, that kind of tribalism that is then mashed up with the rule of an evil Emperor. You can really see how Greg Pak designed this to be a timeless tale, and it does wonders for Hulk. This isn't the savage Hulk, or Joe Fixit, or Banner in a green body, but it sort of splits the difference between those first two iterations I mention and gives us a savage but brooding Hulk that can think as much as he can bash. This, too, is fun for everyone involved. 


• Even Claremont's X-Men run stayed largely Earth-bound for most of my infatuation with it. I started Uncanny X-Men with the Mutant Massacre and from that point on, I don't think there were any Intergalactic stories until Lila Cheney showed up in issue 272 to pull the team into space to save Chuck. Hell, even the Brood made the trip to Earth (232-234)!



Playlist:

Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats - Nell' ora blu
The Clash - Sandinista!
Black Sabbath - Eponymous
Pink Floyd - Ummagumma (Disc 2)
Brand X - Morrocan Roll
Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Black Sabbath - Master of Reality
SQÜRL - Live at Third Man Records
Turnstile - NEVER ENOUGH
Explode Into Color - Eyes Hands Mouth (single)
Blood Incantation - Absolute Everywhere
Ganser - Black Sand (pre-release single)
High on Fire - Live from the Relapse Contamination Festival



Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Ace of Swords
• King of Wands
• XV: The Devil

A breakthrough in intellect leads to a strong alternate philosophy on how to achieve a goal. 

Monday, June 9, 2025

Rebel Waltz Meet Imperial Predator


It occurred to me while watching Tony Hawk's "What's In My Bag" on the Amoeba music YouTube channel that it's been quite some time since I gave The Clash's Sandinista! a fair shake.

I had this on vinyl in a former life, and while I LOVE some of the songs on it, a double-double album or whatever it is just seems inherently ridiculous. Granted, London Calling is possibly the best double album ever (The Wall is better conceptually, but not necessarily when taken song-by-song), so if anyone was going to pull off an exponential attempt on the concept, The Clash was smart money.

However, Sandinista! always felt a bit too long, the 'sides' and even tracks often a bit too disparate. I mean, "The Magnificent Seven" to "Hitsville UK" to the idle reggae of "Junco Partner"? And that happens a couple of times, this kind of "reggae segue" that feels a bit forced. There are obviously reggae elements on London Calling, but it's all mixed into the songwriting in a way that those moments feel elegant and natural. They've always felt a bit ostentatious to me on Sandinista!.

My point here is it's been quite some time since I've actually listened to the record, and people change. So that's one of my current musical missions for the foreseeable future.




Watch:

I had successfully avoided the trailer for Predator: Killer of Killers before its release this weekend,  so going into it blind the other night was a super treat! I'm pretty hard on animation - unless it's Cowboy Bebop or Transformers '86 I don't generally take to it. This, however, blew me away.


I will say, I preferred the animation in the first two segments, but the third one had HEART, so I was still completely "in." I love that we've had to travel almost 40 years to finally get good entries into the cinematic Predator universe. Sure, there are things about several of the other movies I dig, but overall, every movie after the original film has always been a disappointment. Maybe that's just because the original was so damn good, or maybe it's because, as a sequel, Dark Horse's Concrete Jungle has always reigned supreme in my mind. 


This four-issue mini-series is a perfect follow-up to the original film, and while it's clear it was a kind of road map for the eventual Predator 2, the film leaves out many of the best parts. Regardless of all this now-ancient history, Dan Trachtenberg has really proved to be the savior the franchise needed, and I can't wait for Predator: Badlands, due out later this year.


I think the best thing that ever happened to Predator was moving to different timelines and now, even different worlds like the Dark Horse comics did long ago.




Read:

I ended up picking up more than I was planning to at the comic shop last Wednesday, but when I saw Jonathan Hickman had turned his attention to the cosmic end of the Marvel Universe, I was instantly intrigued.


I am well aware this is a case of me still pining for Krakoa-era X-Men, but that's okay. The cosmic end of Marvel has never really been my forte. 

Like a lot of 80s comics readers, I read The Infinity Gauntlet as it came out and fell instantly under its sway. This led to dabbling with The Silver Surfer around the same time (I remember the 50th issue being a big deal, but I no longer have that or really remember why). However, trying to keep up with 1992's Gauntlet follow-up Operation Galactic Storm* - a weekly event that ran through pretty much all the Marvel titles I didn't read at the time kind of broke me on the cosmic end of Marvel. I think at the time, my 16-year-old self thought this series was going to be my road into the bigger Universe, only I really didn't connect with any of the titles or the event in general, and I largely stayed away from 'cosmic Marvel' ever since.

Until...

Part of Hickman's Krakoa-era was Al Ewing's S.W.O.R.D. - a cosmic X-Men title that I adored and led directly into the events of Planet-sized X-Men and X-Men: Red, still probably the best Marvel series I've read in decades, and which definitely played with the cosmic end of things. 


It's the little I picked up in these titles that has me most interested in modern cosmic Marvel continuity and the first issue of Imperial delivered. There's no shortage on political intrigue here, but played across the stars, Hickman makes the old 'game-of-thrones' concept feel fresh and thrilling. The story encompasses a myriad of cosmic empires I know (Sh'iar; Kree-Skrull) as well as many more I don't (who are those Horse-people???). We also get some familiar faces for a newbie like me; Hulk mourning a son I didn't know he had, Nova and Starlord trying to head whatever is happening off at the pass, as well as a lot of folks I'm completely unacquainted with. So many agendas, so many allegiances - secret or otherwise - and two mysterious chess players who are (apparently) controlling everything. Oh yeah, and Wakanda involved in a nefarious plot to derail peace in the universe?

It's a lot, and I'm really only treading water with the continuity, but it's Hickman and it has a certain charge to it and I'm in.


* Cringe at that title!



Playlist:

Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Black Sabbath - Technical Ecstasy
Ozzie Osbourne - Patient No. 9
Turnstile - NEVER ENOUGH
Damone - From the Attic
Turnstile - GLOW ON
The Dillinger Escape Plan - One of Us is the Killer
Mastodon - Once More 'Round the Sun
Television - Marquee Moon
Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers - L.A.M.F.: The Lost '77 Mixes
The Clash - Sandinista!




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE.


• Page of Wands
• VI: The Lovers
• Queen of Cups

Inexperience can be overcome with partnership.