Monday, June 30, 2025

Willie Nelson Sings Rodney Crowell


In my previous post I mentioned that Mr. Brown set me up with a small cache of burned CDs for our drive from Chicago back to Tennessee. One of those was the newest Willie Nelson album, Oh What A Beautiful World, wherein Nelson plays the songs of Rodney Crowell. 

I've loved seeing my friend fall in love with both these gentlemen's music, and in on-brand fashion for myself, I've engaged with everything he's shared with me by both, but not really jumped 'feet first.'

That may have just changed. 

I have a previous connection with Willie Nelson; in 2015, in a misguided attempt to, ah, save our marriage, my ex and I saw Nelson at L.A.'s Greek Theatre. I'd obviously been as vaguely familiar with Nelson's music as any other music-minded person in our time would be, with maybe a little bit of extra exposure here and there. 



Watch:

Yesterday, K and I accompanied my Dad to see the new Joseph Kosinski film, F1, starring Brad Pitt, Damson Idris and Kerry Condon. 


I know nothing about racing, and I've never seen another film by Mr. Kosinski. This, however, was fantastic; a truly epic experience at the movies on a Sunday with the family. Man can not live by Horror alone, and it's nice every once in a while to take in a well-made, big studio film and feel the exhilaration they can offer when done right. F1 hits all the standard "Save the Cat" beats but does so with bravado and confidence that make this a thrilling theatrical viewing. Not sure it would carry as much weight at home, so if you've any interest, see it in the theatre. 



Read:

Although I will freely admit that it is never a good idea to read more than one book at a time, I stumbled upon David Sodergren's new Splatterpunk novel, Death Spell, a few days ago and have been voraciously devouring it since. 


Fantastic novel. Fantastic prose, vivid - and gnarly - imagery, and some insane shocks. Mr. Sodergren likes to punch the tropes in the nuts, and I'm all for that. Here's the solicitation from Barnes and Noble's website:

"25 years ago, young businessman Ron Jarvis made a sinister deal that changed his life forever. The cost was high... but who can put a price on power? Now, Ron is the CEO of a global media empire, and one of the richest men in the world. And yet, to help his daughter, Ron will once more seek out the architect of that hideous pact, bringing death, despair, and total destruction to all around him in a jaw-dropping frenzy of outrageous, bloody carnage."

The Author himself describes this book on his Instagram page as, "H.G. Lewis directing a Shaw Brothers black magic film." This hits all the right notes, and I'd add that there's such a harmonic resonance here with a lot of the Indonesian Horror films I've become enamored with over the last few years that this is really scratching an itch I didn't know needed scratching. Black Magick feels extra threatening when wrapped in the heat, insects and vastness of the jungle. 

Available anywhere you buy your books, you can check out all Mr. Sodergren's books here on his Indiebound page.




Playlist:

Willie Nelson - Oh What a Beautiful World Songs of Rodney Crowell
Willie Nelson & Leon Russell - One for the Road
The Jesus Lizard - Goat
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
Deadguy - Work Ethic EP
Emma Ruth Rundle & Thou - May Our Chambers Be Full
Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power
Wake the Devil - Eternally Under Your Spell (single)
Roy Head - Same People (That You Meet Going Up, You Meet Coming Down)
Rodney Crowell - Airline Highway (pre-release singles)
Rodney Crowell - Triage
The Cops - Free Electricity
Kneecap - H.O.O.D
Ty Segall - Possession
YUNGBLUD - Idols




Card:

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


• Ten of Pentacles
• Knight of Swords
• Four of Wands

The determination for success requires harmony. Obvious, right? I drew a determining card and received the Nine of Pentacles: Abundance. Is this a nod toward success? Maybe, but that's a pretty dangerous tact to take. In other words, my takeaway here doesn't come from the cards, but what I read in between the cards: Stay hungry.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Wake the Devil - Eternally Under Your Spell!!!


When The Thirsty Crows broke up a couple years ago, man, it hurt. Bass player Chris Saunders is a good friend - so good that, admittedly, the last few years I lived in California, I totally took the Crows for granted. Despite Chris always keeping me up to date on shows, I only saw them a handful of times and really didn't support them at all. But like Tom Keifer sang, you don't know what you got 'til it's gone. I moved, the Crows broke up, and I realized that Hangman's Noose is one of my favorite albums of the last ten years, and really, the only Rockabilly/Psychobilly record I care about outside the first five Reverend Horton Heat albums. 

Anyway, when Chris told me he and some of the other Crows had a new band, I was instantly intrigued, and everything I've heard has made this my most anticipated release of the year. And the first single only fuels that fervor. "Eternally Under Your Spell" is half Psychobilly and half straight up fucking Metal and I love it. 

Can't wait to get the first proper release from these guys, whether it's an EP or an album. I'll buy whatever they're selling. 



Watch:

New Yorgos Lanthimos in October??? This man has become one of the most confident and prolific filmmakers of the current era, and as I type this, I realize I still haven't seen his most recent film, Kinds of Kindness, which - perhaps it's just me - felt like a total stealth release. 


I watched this trailer without sound, and it intrigued me to no end. Totally in, so I'll be there come October 24th when Bugonia hits theatres. A remake of the 2003 Korean film Save the Green Planet, which appears to be streaming only on Kanopy. 




Playlist:

Rodney Crowell - Triage
Willie Nelson - Oh What a Beautiful World Songs of Rodney Crowell
Ren - Sick Boi
Meat Puppets - Dusty Notes
Big Black - Lungs
Slayer - Diabolus In Musica
Slayer - Seasons in the Abyss
Wake the Devil - Eternally Under Your Spell (Single)
Baroness - Live at Maida Vale, Vol. 1
Baroness - Live at Maida Vale, Vol. 2
Spoon - Lucifer on the Sofa
Frank Black and the Catholics - One More Road for the Hit
Jozef Van Wissem/SQÜRL - Only Lovers Left Alive OST
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
YUNGBLUD - Idols
Temple of the Dog - Say Hello 2 Heaven (single)



Card:

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


• Eight of Pentacles
• Six of Swords
• XVII: The Star

The dedication of the Eight of Pentacles leads to the great objectivity of the Six of Swords. Actual "Science," or proven results. That, my friend, is the path to enlightenment often hinted at by XVII: The Star.

And yes, that's all a bit woo-woo, but it's more fuel on the fire for reengaging with my Art. I've yet to jump back into writing full-on; I received some amazing news on BG&BH's yesterday, and that should be enough to incite reengagement with my Craft. Gotta move that needle, though. 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Nite Owls

 
From JD McPherson's excellent 2024 album Nite Owls. I gave this one a spin a few times last year, but on the way back from Chicago over the weekend, Mr. Brown threw me a burned copy and I stepped into its sonic beauty early yesterday and just couldn't get out. Fabulous, and one of those that should have made my "Best of" list last year (there are always regrets).

You can snag a copy of Nite Owls from New West Records HERE and it's available on every streaming platform. Especially with the heat we're experiencing in the MidWest/South right now, the guitar on this track is like a cool drink of minty water. Love it!




NCBD:

This week's Pull has a couple of new number ones I'm absolutely ecstatic about. Let's get into it:


The penultimate issue of Tyler Boss & Adriano Turtulici's You'll Do Bad Things. I LOVE this book. The Giallo description is spot on - there have been a few moments that remind of lesser-known Gialli - and Turtulici's art is perfect for that particular genre-tone. 


Man, after last month's issue 19 of Void Rivals, I am ready for more total expanded Transformers Universe action! This book continues to impress the hell out of me. And now we have Solilia and Darak in opposition again??? This year's Energon Special sets us up for The Quintesson War, starting in issue 25 - that's five issues to go! In the interim, a lot of pieces are moving around Kirkman's cosmic board, and it's nothing short of thrilling watching elements of Cobra-La, the Transformers, the Great Ring, and the Quints make moves on one another. 


I picked up the first issue of Zander Cannon's Sleep last week based on my constant impulse to find the next book that will blow me away. At first glance, I didn't think it was going to be for me, as the art style took a little getting used to. By the end of the issue, however, I recognized Cannon's art as a


A new book from That Texas Blood author Chris Condon, so I am in! I have not read the solicitation and I'm unfamiliar with artist Jeffrey Alan Love, so I'm going in totally blind. Best possible way to experience anything, especially a writer as cinematic as Condon!


Building up to a reread on this one. I love the worlds that Lemire creates and the textures he creates them with when he writes and draws. 


It has been SO Long since Lazarus graced comic shop shelves. Not a complaint, but in the intervening years, I've come to reference this book to anyone I talk politically/socially to, because it's undeniable - the future Rucka and Lark set out in this series is our future. Chilling. 




Watch:

Monday night K and I saw Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's 28 Years Later, and today as I'm typing this, I'm not really sure how I feel about it. 


Let me say this up front - 28 Years Later is not a bad film. Anything I didn't like about it is, in my mind at this time, suspect, because it's all due to the unique approach to pretty much everything that Boyle took.

It's already become common knowledge that Boyle used iPhones for some of the filming. In fact, an article I read on Wire discussed how he used specially built rigs that held 20 iPhones, allowing them to film the action from slightly different angles and cut between them. I think the result of this "poor man's bullet time" as he called it created a different and jarring visual experience. It's not bad at all, but it really helped the film usurp pretty much all of my expectations. 

There are a lot of other off-putting textures here as well: old movie footage sewn in periodically as a kind of juxtaposition between the world as they know it and the world as it used to be. A heightened sense of motion that made me wonder if there was a different frame rate involved. All of this combined to make for such a startlingly different cinematic experience than I've ever had before. 

And then there were the track suits. But I'm leaving that out for now, as ultimately, I think 28 Years Later is going to remain slightly uncemented in my mind until I see the sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (or whatever the second in the new trilogy's title ends up being).  




Playlist:

Pixies - The Night the Zombies Came
Low Cut Connie - Art Dealer
YUNGBLUD - Idols
Dan Le Sac Scroobius Pip - Thou Shalt Always Kill (single)
Ren - Sick Boi
Drug Church - Prude
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
Frank Black and the Catholics - One More Road For the Hit
Childish Gambino - Because the Internet
Cocksure - K.K.E.P.
Cocksure - Corporate_Sting
JD McPherson - Nite Owls
Amigo the Devil - Vol. 1
Willie Nelson - Oh What a Beautiful World Songs of Rodney Crowell
The Reverend Horton Heat - Space Heater
Meat Puppets - Dusty Notes
What's the Furthest Place From Here? 7" Series - Chapter 006
What's the Furthest Place From Here? 7" Series  - Chapter 004
Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine - White People and the Damage Done
Primus - Frizzle Fry
The Cult - Electric
Ween - Painting the Town Brown




Card:

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


• XIX: The Sun
• Six of Cups
• Ace of Cups

Open your eyes!!! Six of Cups indicates speaking directly to the "Godhead," which I'll interpret here as the sub or superconscious. GNOSIS is the breakthrough the Ace of Cups suggests. 

Specifically vague? Yes and no. I, of course, interpret this as having something to do with writing, which I started on full-bore again yesterday. I think there's an inkling here that the story I'm trying to tell is inside my mind, it just keeps getting blocked up on its way out, so that a ton of extra ideas end up bogging it down, i.e. capricious ideas that catch my fancy like the jingle of keys in front of a cat. I've said this here before and never follow up, but I need to begin meditating. No cleaner way to start a conversation with the deeper well inside.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Ren - Money Game Part 3


I don't know much about UK rapper/musician Ren, but K has been listening to him for quite some time. I've liked what she's played me before, but this... I'm just blown away. Listen to the way the piano becomes more complex over the course of the song and how his word flow changes to match it. This reminds of of The Streets, Eminem (a little) and Scroobius Pip. Fantastic stuff.

From the 2023 album Sick Boi, which currently appears to be sold out as physical media, but you can stream anywhere or grab digitally from Ren's Bandcamp HERE.
 



Watch:

I've been holding off on posting a trailer for Macon Blair's The Toxic Avenger remake for a while now. Reason? Well, this played at Beyondfest almost two years ago, and based on how long it took to finally surface, I wanted to wait a bit. Also, I wanted to wait it out a bit, because I figured the two years of scarcity had created a certain flavor of mythology for the film, and yeah, that seems to be the case. Which is great. Although I'm not really a fan of the original, I can't wait for this and want it to succeed beyond all expectations. 

 

I only had to watch half of this to get excited. Hitting theatres - hopefully all theatres - on August 29th, I believe this will prove to be one of the funnest films of the summer, so strap in. And the cast! I mean, it's a so stacked I can hardly believe it. 

Hopefully this brings Blair considerably more clout. I'm a HUGE fan of I Don't Feel At Home in This World Anymore, and would love for Blair to be able to hit us with features on a regular basis.




Playlist:

Greg Puciato - Mirrorcell
Dum Dum Girls - Too True
Jane's Addiction - Ritual de lo Habitual
Van Halen - 1984
Marilyn Manson - Antichrist Superstar
Blur - Coffee & TV (single)
Billy Idol - Rebel Yell (single)
Young Widows - Power Sucker
Black Sabbath - Eponymous
Black Sabbath - Paranoid
Black Sabbath - Master of Reality
Black Sabbath - Vol. 4
The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion - Now I Got Worry
Westworld - Movers & Shakers
ten Athlone - Street Trash E.P.
Spoon - Lucifer on the Sofa
Mclusky - The World is Still Here and So Are We
Eythl Meatplow - Happy Days Sweetheart
Anthrax - Among the Living
Willie Nelson - Oh What a Beautiful World Songs of Rodney Crowell
Meat Puppets - Dusty Noes
The Reverend Horton Heat - It's Martini Time
Sofia Isella - I'm camera E.P.
YUNGBLUD - Idols
Ren - Sick Boi
Childish Gambino - The Library/I.Crawl (single)



Card:

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


• 0: The Fool
• Six of Pentacles
• Six of Swords

So, this Pull was actually supposed to land last Friday, but I ran out of time before we headed out to Chicago for the weekend. I didn't have time to do a new one today, so I thought I'd look at this in hindsight and see how it matches the trip.

The Fool is, of course, the start of a new journey. Six of Pentacles indicates a balance between giving and receiving, and Six of Swords evokes transitioning from a difficult to a calmer period. This seems to be saying that when I punch in for the first time in four days in a few moments, there may be some soma at my workplace. It also perfectly illustrates my relationships back home, where we all kind of look our for one another, swap music and ideas, and just generally try to make each other's lives better. In the storm of the world's current paradigm, that is always a much-needed balm.

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Dethroned Under a NCBD Haze


As the wait for the next Perturbator album announcement languishes on into June, I find myself drawing even more inspiration from his previous albums than previously. Which is really saying something because since discovering James Kent's music circa 2015, thanks to Bloody Disgusting, Perturbator and all of his side projects have become integral to my own creative process. 

In particular, 2019's Lustful Sacraments continue to fascinate and inspire me. There's such an amazing evolution here; not content to remain defined by a genre he helped popularize the modern version of, Kent has moved away from the sound of his earlier records and really begun incorporating new elements into his compositions. My two favorites of Kent's records so far remain this one and his 2022 collaboration with Cult of Luna's Johannes Persson (Final Light). Where I'd consider Dangerous Days and The Uncanny Valley to be the two best examples of modern "Synthwave," I'd say Kent's newer work is unlike anything I've heard prior. Oh the places these records take me!




NCBD:

Here's this week's pull, with a side note that I'll be stopping at my shop in Chicago to grab some stuff as well.


The final issue of the gloriously resurrected EC's Horror Anthology series Epitaphs From the Abyss doesn't sting so much now that I've read Blood Type and realize Oni will be continuing this brand with full-issue mini-series anthologies, as well as the new anthology Catacombs of Torment, out July 16th.

Life is good for Horror fans. It's good for comic fans. And it's especially good for Horror comic fans!!!


The first issue of James Tynion IV and Michael Walsh's Exquisite Corpses was kind of a cross between Rob Zombie's 31 and 


Judging by this cover, one of the plot points of this book that has kind of irked me may finally be resolved with this issue. 

"The Horror Men" has proven a fantastic arc for the overall Phantom Road mythology. I love seeing some of this world's history, especially because it feels like learning about the start of this weird in-between place will carry over to big things when we move back to the current timeline with Dom and Bev.


I should finally be picking up my Z-News backlog this weekend when I'm in Chicago. Can't wait!


Another new book from Oni Press, this one sounds as though it's modeled after Phillip K. Dick's life, so I'm definitely giving it a try. Here's the solicitation from League of Comic Geeks:

"More than just a writer, more than just a science-fiction icon, Benjamin J. Carp was a cultural revolutionary. Across 44 novels and hundreds of short stories-including the counterculture classic The Man They Couldn't Erase-Carp pushed the boundaries of literary respectability for the sci-fi genre and his readers' perception of reality itself . . . until decades of amphetamine abuse and Southern California excess finally ended a mind-bending career that always just escaped mainstream success. He died in 1982. Until 2025 . . . when Benjamin J. Carp awakens, alive, in a burned-out motel on the fringes of Los Angeles. He remembers dying. He knows he shouldn't exist. Is he a dream? A robot? A ghost? A clone? A simulation? In his own time, Carp pondered all of these scenarios intensely through his fiction-and, now, as he treks from Studio City to Venice Beach and onward into the paranoid sprawl of 21st-century Los Angeles, he will be called to investigate his greatest mystery yet: himself. In the tradition of Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly and Thomas Pynchon's Inherent Vice comes a uniquely fascinating and hilariously deranged excursion into the metatextual nexus where existence and oblivion, past and future, genius and madness, and glitter and grim reality all meet just beyond Hollywood Boulevard . . ."




Watch:

Aaron Martin and Ian Carpenter's new series Hell Motel premiered on Shudder with two episodes yesterday and I have to say, so far, I love it! The setting, lighting and camera work are top-notch, as is the writing. There are some very intriguing plotting mechanisms at work here, and they made for a pretty thrilling two-episode premiere. We're going to be covering this weekly on The Horror Vision - first episode will drop next Monday, then every Wednesday thereafter (the show airs on Tuesdays). 


From what I've seen of the two creators' other series, the anthology Slasher, it appears to be a bit of a mixed bag. That said, I've only watched Flesh & Blood and two episodes of Ripper. I loved the former but did not care for the latter. I dig these guys' style overall, though; there's something of a Channel Zero-meets-AHS, with the influence of AHS being more dominant but little flourishes here and there that make me think of Zero. 

Top all this off with the fact that Adam MacDonald looks to be the series Director (he did the first two episodes but is listed as "Director" on the series' main IMDB page) and you've got a great schematic. And they deliver, big time. I watched episodes one and two TWICE today and found I liked it more the second time around. 



Playlist:

Perturbator - The Uncanny Valley
Various - Learn to Relax: A Tribute to Jehu
Oranssi Pazuzu - Muuntautuja
Calderum - Mystical Fortress of Iberian Lands 
Perturbator - Lustful Sacraments
John Harrison - Day of the Dead OST
Tangerine Dream - Sorceror OST
Greg Puciato - Mirrorcell
Hangman's Chair - Saddiction
Young Widows - Power Sucker
NIN - Pretty Hate Machine



Card:

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


• Nine of Swords
• Ace of Pentacles
• Eight of Cups

The Nine of Cups can denote Cruelty, Bad Dreams and/or Violence. Ace of Pentacles is a breakthrough in Earthly concerns, nad Eight of Cups is poison. Sounds to me like the Earthly breakthrough - i.e. success - may be arrived at through violence or poison. That's a scary sentiment; I've long held people who use violence or hurtful machinations as a way to get what they want are the definition of evil. I realize while typing this that this Pull is a reminder to tread lightly with certain people at work, as I deal with a lot of "Corporate People" and those are often the people who operate in this capacity.

Monday, June 16, 2025

Clean Up that Street Trash on Planet Death!

 
I rewatched Ryan Kruger's Street Trash sequel this weekend, and it put ten Althone back on my radar. LOVE this track. You can support the band at any of the links on their Link Tree HERE.




Watch:


I'd been waiting for Writer/Director Joshua Erkman's debut, A Desert, since March. Co-written with Bossi Baker, these two gentlemen have indeed delivered what will no doubt be one of my favorite films of the year. Subtle, creepy, emotional and WEIRD in all the best ways. 


Plus, pretty sure this is the biggest role The Jesus Lizard's frontman David Yow has had in a film, and he NAILS it. A Desert is currently a $6.99 rental on Prime, and it is worth every penny.




Read:

Another book I picked up last week at the comic shop* was something I stumbled across on the racks from a while ago - April 30th, to be exact. Planet Death issue 0:


When I found this, the cover and interior art immediately made me think of 80s-era Dark Horse Comics. Don't let this pristine jpg I grabbed online fool you - Planet Death 0 was printed on a wonderfully sturdy newsprint stock. One that, according to the afterward by the publisher, they actually had to seek out and purchase the entire stock to procure it. This is a wonderfully tactile reading experience.

Seeing the "Bad Idea" imprint name, I assumed I was supporting a local or super-indie book, and while this is indie, it's not 100% indie. The creator is Derek Kolstad, the screenwriter behind John Wick. So yeah, there's some inertia here. Apparently, this was the largest order for an indie comic since Image's fabled launch, with this issue bringing in 655,000 copies ordered. So much for helping the underdog!

Seriously though, I'd still consider this an underdog. Everything that isn't the Big 2 kind of is, and if you want to expand that definition's net a bit further, Bad Idea and Planet Death are still largely unknown and have no name recognition beyond the John Wick DNA. Still, as popular as the Wick movies are, there are very few Screenwriters who achieve the kind of recognition that can help carry a small comic company into the black. 

But Planet Death is cool, super cool, and while a lot of why I feel that way may be linked to nostalgia, I still think its gritty Cyber-Punk space marine feel will appeal to a lot of comic fans. The first issue lands July 9th, and I'll definitely be grabbing that. From there, the afterward makes it clear the subsequent issues will be released when they are complete and perfect, and that sounds great to me. I'm looking forward to this, but I don't necessarily want another monthly book, nor do I feel like this will require a regular schedule. The story seems like it will work on it's own terms. Here's the solicitation from League of Comic Geeks

"Millions of miles from home, hundreds of ships descend into the stormy atmosphere of a hostile frozen world. On board, an army of resolute men and women brace for the coming assault. They are an invasion force, on an impossible mission — destroy the devastating enemy weapon garrisoned below. Corporal Scott and his battalion are in the vanguard but the human forces are no match for their brutal alien adversaries. Scott’s battalion is dead within moments. He is its lone survivor. The landing force annihilated, the battle is lost. Against overwhelming odds, Scott dares the unthinkable — cross behind enemy lines, survive the lethal landscape, evade capture by ruthless enemies, resist natural predators, face human deserters and finish the mission singlehandedly. Locked in his suit of full combat battle armor, sustained only by what he can carry, and driven by Earth’s wrath, Scott must do by himself what an entire army could not. Destroy the weapon. Return home."


* See? All that and I still ended up needed two days to talk about it all. 



Playlist:

Faith No More - Angel Dust
Mr. Bungle - Eponymous
Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power
GBH - City Baby Attacked By Rats
LARD - Pure Chewing Satisfaction
Mothers of Invention - Freak Out!
ten Athlone - Street Trash E.P.
ten Athlone - Travelator
Amigo the Devil - Born Against
The Cops - Free Electricity
Jenny Lewis - Acid Tongue
The Jeff Healey Band - Road House (The Lost Soundtrack)
Anthrax - Worship Music
Billy Idol - Rebel Yell
Judas Priest - Painkiller
Perturbator - Lustful Sacraments




Card:

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

• I: The Magician
• Ace of Swords
• Three of Cups

The Spark of Essence. A Breakthrough of Intellect. Solid Emotional Outcome.

Sounds a lot like a three-step plan to get my ass back in gear. I've been slowly dipping my toe back into Shadow Play, but I've had a lot of distractions. This coming weekend is a trip to Chicago, after that, I'm calling it now: Full Immersion!!!

Friday, June 13, 2025

New Music from Ganser!


From Ganser's new album, Animal Hospital, out August 29th on the always wonderful Felte Records. Pre-order HERE.




NCBD:

I've kind of unofficially switched to a M-W-F posting schedule here for the time being, and I'm still getting used to that. I'll use this as the reason I somehow forgot to feature my NCBD pulls in Wednesday's post - when I'm working on these a day or two out, it's easy to forget what day you're aiming for. Anyway, This week's pull ended up being considerable, so in this case, hindsight helps condense what otherwise would have been two consecutive posts.


Turns out, Batman: Dark Patterns is going even longer than I originally thought. This is the most consecutive months I've read a Batman book since Grant Morrison's run ended!


Already read this one - dark times for the Autobots, man. And more Bruticus! In fact, we have an all-out combiner battle with Bruticus and Devastator versus Superion! I can't even believe how this book taps into all my childhood play fantasies about the Transformers. 

More dark times for heroes. It's definitely in the air - I mean, art reflects life and looks at the world we live in. Some really interesting developments in this issue, and the bi-monthly release schedule is still really working for me, partly as a respite for the old wallet and partly as a suspense builder. 


This issue of SIKTC features some of the best trademark James Tyion IV dialogue. From the two clerks talking about mustache-shaving daydreams to the Jaws discussion, this one's all set, but holy cow - things are going to go off next issue!


The first issue was so-so for me, but I'm looking forward to sticking around and seeing where this pretty deft send-up of Black Metal culture goes. 


Once again - Oni for the win! A new Horror Anthology featuring Andrea Sorrentino? You don't need to say another word. 

But wait - there's MORE!!!

Earlier in the week, my good friend and frequent collaborator Grimm pointed me to the fact that Titan Books has been publishing a new Savage Sword of Conan magazine-sized book for eight issues now. I'm not a card-carrying Conan fan, per se, but back shortly after I discovered H.P. Lovecraft, I picked up a mass-market paperback copy of Howard's Tales from the Cthulhu Mythos and have long thought it one of the best I cut my Robert E. Howard 

Looks more like "Savage Sword of Danzig" to me!

This issue of The Savage Sword of Conan features six tales that all revolve around Howard's The Black Stone. THIS is my REH wheelhouse - The Black Stone is probably the short story that left the deepest impression on me from that Mythos paperback, and I think it's fantastic that writer Jim Zub is using it as a jumping-off point to weave the Black Stone through a myriad of Howard's characters - from the Cimmerian to El Borak to Soloman Kane. Granted, these stories just made me spring for a set of the spin-off Black Stone series on eBay, but that's fine. Just like so many other power-mad sorcerers, I'm willing to pay for more exposure to the titular monument. 


Issue eight was really what sparked my interest, as Grimm sent his joyous accolades for this series along with a picture from issue 8's The Wuthering:


'Nuff said! Seriously though, this entire book is gorgeous, and it was a real treat to discover the first story herein was drawn by Jason "Nameless" Burnham!




Playlist:

Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
The Devil's Blood - The Thousandfold Epicentre
Marilyn Manson - One Assassination Under God - Chapter 1
Deafheaven - Lonely People With Power
Melvins - (A) Senile Animal
Thou - Summit
Deee-Lite - Dewdrops in the Garden
Black Sabbath - Paranoid
Big Black - The Rich Man's Eight Track Tape
Rapeman - Two Nuns and a Pack Mule/Budd E.P.
Killdozer - God Hears the Pleas of the Innocent
The High Confessions - Turning Lead Into Gold with the High Confessions
Metallica - Ride the Lightning




Card:

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


• Page of Wands
• Two of Pentacles
• Three of Pentacles

Decisions about Earthly matters should be made from a place of strong support. What the hell does that mean, exactly? I'm far too tired to figure this out at the time of typing this, so I'll be staring at these cards all day on my desk. 

I hate when the pull interpretation comes out sounding like an exaggerated fortune cookie!!!