Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Chat Pile and Hayden Pedigo!

 
Mr. Brown sent this track to me at some point in the last week or two, and I'm just getting around to it now. Holy smokes! With a video directed by Writer/Director of 2014's Faults - fabulous film - Chat Pile and Hayden Pedigo have instantly captured my attention.

It's been a minute since I've talked about my growing fascination with Chat Pile here; I got into their 2022 debut full-length, God's Country, late, and their 2024 album Cool World just narrowly missed being incorporated into my best of list last year. Hayden Pedigo, on the other hand, I am not nearly as familiar with, despite a dalliance with their 2021 album, Letting Go, last year, courtesy of a recommendation from my cousin Charles. 

The album, In the Earth Again, is due out October 31st and can be pre-ordered from Computer Students HERE



NCBD:

As always, a lot of great stuff this week, so let's talk about what I'm bringing home for NCBD September 3rd, 2025:
 

Jason Aaron's TMNT continues to drop at a bi-monthly pace and I love him for it! A great relaunch of the 2012 IDW reboot that I'm so fond of that really shines as we follow the four brothers into the trials and tribulations of adulthood (Janika has her own book).


Look at that Mignola cover! This tenth issue of the anthological Savage Sword of Conan apparently begins a new mini-series that will run through all three tales in this issue, all penned by Jim Zub. While dipping into The Black Stone spin-off mini taught me to stick to what's in this main title, I'm here for whatever they have to say inside this bi-monthly mag.


Third story arc, "The Horror Men," comes to a close and Jeff Lemire and Gabriel H. Walta's Phantom Road goes back on hiatus, much to my chagrin. I love this book, and I'm always a bit blue during its off-seasons. 
 
Revisiting Larry Hama's ongoing, now 43-year-long run on this G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero has been loads of fun and does not appear to be slowing down any time soon. Luckily, despite my card-carrying status as a completionist with comics, I feel zero urge to fill in the 150+ issues I missed that would connect the last time I picked up the Marvel iteration in 1994 and the first Image issue going on two years ago. That said, I have begun looking into filling in a few of the gaps for the central part of Hama's original Marvel run, eyeing connecting the dots that would give me a solid run from issue 26 through to issue 126. It's only seven issues, so I figured, why not?


And finally, a new re-start of the flagship Batman book being written by Matt Fraction? Definitely going to give this one a shot, as Hayden Sherman and Dan Watters' "Dark Patterns" is closing out in a few months and it's been so good, it's given me a taste for a regular Bat-book. 



Watch:

Monday night K took control of the remote and picked a film I'd never heard of before, Phillip Kaufman's 1979 film The Wanderers


First, check out this cast: Ken Wahl, Karen Allen, Dolph Sweet (!), Ken Foree, Linda Manz. The list goes on with a lot of people I recognized, but those are the heavy hitters to me. Ostensibly another "The American Teenagers of early 60s" story a la American Graffiti, The Outsiders, etc. The Wanderers does a pretty good job of adding to that pot with likeable characters and an intricate hierarchy of Street Gangs and the characters' allegiances/associations with them. Where this film really stuck in my head, though, is in three key scenes that introduce a definite Horror element. It dawned on me while watching the second of these scenes - a scene where a character stumbles into the Ducky Boys' territory - that this film may have been meant as a metaphor for the changes Hollywood underwent between the 1960s and 1970s. 

First, the Elements of Horror. 

The Ducky Boys appear in three scenes in this film. The first is while the main characters are driving and accidentally encroach on the Ducky Boys' side of town. The film takes place in the Bronx in 1963, and up until this key moment, it's a representation of NY in the 60s that's right in line with most of the other movies like this have painted. This, however... there's something so intentionally nightmarish and surreal about this scene that I was immediately taken aback. While watching, I assumed Kaufman had chosen this route to convey the 'we're out of our territory' fears of a teenager in the 60s whose entire world revolved around their block. Taking into account the next two scenes that feature the Ducky Boys—the one where a protagonist is killed while in their neighborhood, and the other, the climactic gang battle at the end of the film, which the film does a great job of subverting until the Ducky Boys arrive. It was a combination of these two scenes that led me to my second point. Is The Wanderers a cinematic metaphor for the changing American Film Zeitgeist in the 1970s? 

The film goes from the streets-of-New-York, day-in-the-life Golden Age of Hollywood storytelling trope to the more epic, artistic weirdness of the New Hollywood era. 

If this was intentional and not just me reading into things, The Wanderers is a piece of genius cinema that is content to masquerade as 'just another 60s West Side Story throwback.'



Playlist:

Steve Moore - VFW OST
The Cure - Pornography
Deftones - Diamond Eyes
Radiohead - Kid A
How to Destroy Angeles - Welcome Oblivion
The Knife - Silent Shout
Kane Parsons - Backrooms OST
Chat Pile/Hayden Perdigo - Radioactive Dreams (single)
Deftones - private music




Card:

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


• VIII: Strength
• Page of Swords
• XIII: Death


Tuesday, September 2, 2025

The Body - Lathspell I Name You


Somehow, I missed that The Body had a new album come out a few months back, even though by now I should know to expect a new release at least once a year. All the Waters of the Earth Turn to Blood is another challenging masterpiece from these guys, its majesty crystallized in this final track.




Watch:

I rewatched Toby Wilkins' 2008 film Splinter over the weekend. I had only ever seen this one once before, back when my good friend Grimm came out and visited me in 2011. He's the one who turned me onto this film, and rewatching it after so long, I had to message him a note of thanks. I don't know how I haven't rewatched this once more, but it's definitely on my permanent radar now. 


The creature FX in this film are outstanding. Sure, the filmmakers are a bit coy with the camera on the monster at times, but that gives this really intense, "What the fuck did I just see?" feeling that helps to put you in the place of the characters. In fact, it's Nelson Cragg's camera work that makes me think of Samy Inayeh's work behind the lens on another creature-feature favorite of mine, Jeremy Gillespie and Steven Kostanski's 2011 masterpiece The Void. I'm writing this Saturday afternoon, and I'd wager by the time this posts on Tuesday, I'll probably have rewatched Kostanski & Gillespie's film, too.




Playlist:

Blut Aus Nord - The Mystical Beast of Rebellion
Blut Aus Nord - 777 - Sect(s)
Blut Aus Nord - Codex Obscura Nomina
Anthrax - Persistence of Time
Anthrax - Stomp 442
Deftones - private music
Ruelle - Emerge
Dead Man's Bones - Eponymous
Man Man - Life Fantastic
The Dead Weather - Dodge and Burn
The Body - All the Waters of the Earth Turn to Blood
Spectral Tilt - Sleepers (single)
lords. - Bleeding Out (single)
lords. - aven (single)
leaving_forever & stream_error - nobody home




Card:

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


• XVIII The Moon
• Three of Cups 
• Knight of Cups

A lot of emotion can obscure what you're looking for. 

Not sure how to read this one. Work-related? Maybe. Also, Thinking it might be for someone else, but who that would be, at this point, I'm not sure. 


Friday, August 29, 2025

New Music from Idles!


From the soundtrack to the new Darren Aronofsky film, Caught Stealing, which I was interested in seeing until I was subjected to the trailer before every movie I've seen at the theatre for the last month and a half. Still, great song. Always cool to get some new music from Idles!


Watch:


Stephen Kostansky's remake of Roger Corman's Deathstalker finally received a trailer and it. Looks. AWESOME!


In theatres October 10th, I am crossing my fingers I'll get to see this on the big screen!




Playlist:

Ennio Morricone - The Thing OST
Mastodon - Emperor of Sand
The Cure - Splintered in Her Head (single)
Deftones - private music
Sleep - Dopesmoker
Shrinebuilder - Eponymous
Velvet Revolver - Contraband




Card:

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


• Three of Swords
• King of Cups
• IV: The Emperor

Regardless of what 'they' have led you to believe, do not undermine your emotions in a time of loss. 

No context for this whatsoever at the moment, and honestly, I hope it remains that way.

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Dead Man's Bones Conjure NCBD


Tracked a copy of Ryan Gosling and Zach Shields' 2009 Dead Man's Bones last night. Super excited. This is one of those weird, one-off records from the 00s that I adore but often forget about. With all the bands currently pulling their music from Streaming, I've been thinking a lot about musical sustainability. I've always preferred physical media, but have come to rely on streaming a lot over the past decade. I think a healthy mix of the two is the best way to navigate the world in 2025; however, the idea that some music could disappear from my life scares me terribly. This is one of those albums I need to make sure I always have access to, even if I don't access it a lot. 




NCBD:

Huge pull this week. Damn! Let's get into it:


We're inching closer to the Quintesson War, and for those who don't see Void Rivals as a monthly Transformers book, you're wrong. 


On the fence with this one-shot from Image. Here's the solicitation from League of Comic Geeks: 

"A nightmarish terror once again haunts the shadowy woods of a small town community. Three young friends have to confront their own childhood fears, undead creatures that stalk the living, an enigmatic tree that seemingly collects souls, and an ancient forest entity that seeks to reclaim these lands as its own. It's Tom Sawyer meets Pan's Labyrinth meets It in this coming-of-age tale of redemption and courage in the face of pure evil."

Sounds fantastic, but it's already a tall week in the duckets column. We'll see.


I love Zander Cannon's Sleep so much that it's become one of my most anticipated reads every month. 


Jeff Lemire's Minor Arcana continues to be one of the books I most look forward to each month. Not Horror, but more of a 'supernatural drama,' if you will. The idea of a real psychic taking over her fake psychic mother's psychic shop in a small, podunk town really resonates. Maybe it's the dabs of Seaside Horror that I pick up in this one, but it just feels so mysterious. Love it so much. 


It's awesome to see this final iteration of Greg Rucka and Michael Lark's Lazarus come out on the nose every month. I've been buying these but not reading them, as I still have not begun my reread of the previous two series. That's coming soon, though!


JG Jones and Phil Bram's delightfully twisted Dust Bowl horror, Dust to Dust, returns. I'll admit that I'm going to require a re-read to move forward, but I look forward to revisiting this one. A very nuanced tale of Americana Horror that would make a great "double feature" with Scott Snyder and Scott Tuft's Severed.


While picking up issue 1 was something of a lark, so far, I'm enjoying this. Even though the importance of these "Death of" books is all self-invented and transient. Still, it's been a while since I read anything with the Surfer, so this five-issue mini-series is a nice dalliance with a character I've always admired from afar. 


The final issue of this Black Metal piss-take. I've really enjoyed Dark Regards




Watch:

Monday night I hit the local theatre for a re-release of 2013's The Conjuring. This is a flick I really liked when it came out, but that all the spin-offs and sequels had convinced me was no longer worth my time. My disdain for the handling of the property crept backward, and when I saw it would be on the big screen again, like I saw it the first time, I figured, let's give it a day in court, shall we?


Glad I did. James Wan's original The Conjuring 100% holds up as one of the best haunted house flicks of the modern era. Yes, the spin-offs and franchising has dragged the overall name down, but this first film... It's almost breathtaking at times with the sequences of sustained fear peppered throughout. 

Here's short IG video I did to sum up how I felt directly after leaving the theatre Monday night.




Playlist:

Massive Attack - Blue Lines
Ruelle - Emerge
Woodkid - Woodkid for Death Stranding 2: On the Beach
Mastodon - Emperor of Sand
How To Destroy Angels - Eponymous EP
Slipknot - Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses)
Judas Priest - Screaming for Vengeance
Dead Man's Bones - Eponymous
PLaNETS - THEDARKWOODS
Deadguy - Near-Death Travel Services
Deafheaven - Sunbather
Ghostbath - Moonlover
The Body - All the Waters of the Earth Turn to Blood




Card:

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


• Three of Cups
• VI: The Lovers
• XVII: The Star

Love brings abundance and a positive turning point. Oh boy. This may be directly related to something in Black Gloves and Broken Hearts. I can't say anymore at this point, but I may have to spend part of my writing time this afternoon addressing this. 

Monday, August 25, 2025

Anthrax's Persistence of Time at 35


I was taken aback when I saw Scott Ian's post recognizing that Persistence of Time came out 35 years ago yesterday. I mean, I remember buying that cassette like it was yesterday. Persistence was my first Anthrax album, and I bought it the year it came out, 1990. Since then, it has always remained my favorite of the band's records. 




Watch:

I rewatched Michael Sarnoski's Pig this past Saturday night. What a fantastic film!


First, Cinematographer Pat Scola photographs the Pacific Northwest in a way that really sends me there. You can practically smell the trees and feel the misting rain. Even the neighborhoods come alive with an extra dimension - the brief scene where Cage's Robin revisits his old home really put me there, on the sidewalk along the side of the house, into the backyard. 

Alexis Grapass and Philip Klein provide a score that is wondrous - it moves through the different scenes of the city and moods of the characters in a way that really enhances the performance without ever dictating emotion. And emotion is where Nick Cage comes in. There's something starkly beautiful about his sorrow and persistence. Robin is motivated by love and loss, and I feel that so acutely that my eyes harbor tears for most of the film. 

Alex Wolf and Adam Arkin are no slouches, either. Both have an arc that moves me in a secondary way to Cage's story, so that it all comes together in one of those simple films that feels so robust, as though it can encompass every emotional state of the human experience. 



Read:

With secondary hype from the Fantastic Four film I'll probably never see, I'd gotten back around to thinking about the mid-80s Walt Simonson run on the book. I didn't read it at the time, but I was very aware of it all throughout my burgeoning comic book-collecting years, which really hit hyperdrive in 1986, the same year Simonson took over "The World's Greatest Comics Magazine."

As I said on a recent Drinking with Comics, I was a total Marvel Zombie as a child, and I bought into the hype on the FF even if I didn't have the allowance to venture into reading it. So over the years, while I've grabbed an issue here or there, I've never had a concentrated plan of attack for going back and reading some of that stuff.

Until now.


I finally pinned down Simonson's first issue as Writer and Artist and started there, snagging a copy of #337 off eBay a few weeks ago. I wasn't sure how this would read to my eyes in 2025, but I needn't have worried; Into the Time Stream is a fantastic jumping-on point, as well as a great example of Simonson's art and writing complementing each other. The issue is heavy on the 80s Marvel time-travel talk, but honestly, it all sounds very modern. The terminology reminded me a lot of reading Grant Morrison circa 2000. And the thing is, Simonson's art matches that heady, scientific approach perfectly!


I feel like, when you stop to consider the image above, you see how adept Walter Simonson is as an artist of the abstract. This image really sells the "mumbo-jumbo" Reed Richards spouts in this issue, and helps us 'buy into' the weird, fringe science as a reality because, hey, we can see it right there. Similarly, I love this panel as well, where the FF and their Avengers counterparts enter the 'time bubble' from an unknown future that has jeopardized their present.


Even though I didn't read his run on FF until now, Walter Simonson's art was among the first I marveled at outside of 80's G.I. Joe comics because he did a big stint illustrating his wife Louise's run as writer on X-Factor, the first X-Book I picked up. I dug a few of those out this weekend as well. It's cool to really dip back in on his 80s work - both what I know and what I don't - and celebrate one of the artists that made me the comic fan I am. 




Playlist:

Deftones - private music
Testament - Infanticide A.I. (pre-release single)
Testament - The New Order
Testament - Titans of Creation
Walter Rizatti - House By the Cemetery OST
Sam Cooke - One Night Stand! Live at the Harlem Square Club, 1963
Anthrax - Persistence of Time
Baroness - Stone
Black Sabbath - Sabotage
Blackbraid - Blackbraid III
The Veils - Total Depravity
The Ocean - Fog Diver
Revocation - The Outer Ones




Card:

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


• Page of Swords
• VIII: Strength
• Six of Swords

When attacked on Earthly grounds, the Strength of Science will be the best defense. 

Okay, that's pretty vague from the outside looking in, but I'm picking up what these 70s Wizard cards are putting down. To fight a good fight, keep emotional responses from poisoning logic. 

Friday, August 22, 2025

New Music from Testament!!!


The first track off Testament's upcoming fourteenth studio album, Para Bellum, is out October 10th on Nuclear Blast Records. You can pre-order a copy HERE.

Fourteen albums? That just blows me away. I've dodged in and out of keeping tabs on these guys. Most of their records still sound fantastic to me, and if this first track is any indication, Para Bellum will be no different.




Watch:

Last night I saw Shinji Higuchi and Hideaki Anno's 2016 Shin Godzilla on the big screen for the second time in three days.


Unlike many of my friends, I did not grow up with Godzilla. Certainly, I knew what the monster was. Who doesn't? The big G has occupied a fairly lofty space in the cultural lexicon for longer than I have been alive. I'm not sure that, without that layer of nostalgia, I'll ever be able to go back and embrace the Godzilla movies of the past (maybe, though), but between this and Minus One, hot damn am I a convery. This movie is STUNNING. Some of the best effects I have ever seen theatrically. They build a world and destroy it and, although I know I'm not watching half a dozen skyscrapers in Tokyo topple, I believe that's exactly what I'm seeing. 




Read:

I'm halfway through Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, and to complement it as research for Shadow Play Book Two, I've also procured a $10 Kindle copy of Richard Ellmann's celebrated biography of Wilde, Oscar Wilde:


This is often shown titled as Oscar Wilde: Pulitzer Prize Winner; however, I find that adding the book's accolade to the title is a bit churlish, to say the least. 

I've pretty much accepted that despite the literal tower of books on my 'to-read' pile, the remainder of my 2025 reading will most likely be reserved specifically for research. Two exceptions are the Nathan Ballingrud and Laird Barron novellas due next month. Other than that, I'm all in on researching both Victorian and Elizabethan England, which have winnowed their way into my novel as main characters of the second act. 




Playlist:

Windhand - Eternal Return
Sleep - Dopesmoker
White Zombie - La Sexorcisto: Devil Music, Vol. 1
Steve Moore - VFW OST
Blackbraid - Blackbraid III
Testament - Infanticide AI (single)
Mastodon - Leviathan
Testament - The Gathering
Portishead - Third
Faetooth - Remnants of the Vessel
Hall & Oats - Rock 'N' Soul, Part 1
Deftones - private music




Card:

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


• XVII: The Star
• XX: Adjustment
• Eight of Swords

Struggling interrupts the path to enlightenment. 

That's a pretty vague interpretation, but I'm picking up what I'm putting down. This is a work-oriented Pull, letting me know that the theoretical middle finger roadblocks I'm throwing in certain folks' direction are perhaps counterproductive. I would argue that corporate backstabbing and rigamarole are also counterproductive, but that's just it - stop pointing that out and try to work past it. 


Thursday, August 21, 2025

RIP Brent Hinds

News of former Mastodon founding member Brent Hinds' death filtered in this morning and really kind of left me aghast. Hinds had recently left the band, and from a lot of the videos my algorithm tries to feed me but I avoid, he'd gone on something of a tear speaking out against his former bandmates. Whatever drama ensued, it's all over now, and a very talented artist is gone. Crazy how monumental shifts can follow one another so quickly, or perhaps one brings on the other.