Monday, September 9, 2024

Sway 7A, Baby

 

It's just the best Rock n' Roll song ever recorded from the best Rock n' Roll album ever released.




Watch:

This recent trend with prequels to 70s Horror classics hasn't given us very much in the way of anything worth hanging onto. The idea that Paramount has a Rosemary's Baby prequel called Apartment 7A coming straight to Paramount Plus didn't move the needle with me at all until I saw Julia Garner is the lead. She will FOREVER be in my good book for Ruth from Ozark. Here's the trailer, which I didn't bother with; I'll just watch and assess when it lands on the streamer come September 27th:

 

I should also mention that there's more good news: Apartment 7A is Directed and Co-written by Natalie Erika James, whose 2020 flick Relic made quite the impression on me (it's definitely time for a rewatch of that one, and it's currently streaming on Shudder).


Read:

I blew through Nathan Ballingrud's novella Crypt of the Moon Spider yesterday. Both the Hardcover and Paperback are currently available; I posted the paperback's cover art last week, primarily because that's the version I chose for my shelf, as I liked the art just a smidge more; here's the Hardback:


It's fantastic but short, and the advance chapter from the second book of his Lunar Gothic Trilogy that serves as an epilogue to this volume only made me want MORE! Seriously, Ballingrud writes Science Fiction with a silver lining of Horror and it's GLORIOUS! 

Now, however, I'm in between books. Bad Hand Books began shipping Laird Barron's new collection, Not A Speck of Light, last week. However, I've not received a shipment notice yet, so I have some time to kill, and I'm not quite sure what will adequately follow Ballingrud. 




Playlist:

Ministry - Psalm 69
Bauhaus - Go Away White
Ghost Bath - Self Loather
The Cops - Free Electricity
Chasms - On The Legs Of Love Purified
Megadeth - Rust in Peace 




Friday, September 6, 2024

Bauhaus - Adrenaline


From their 2008 album Go Away White, which caught a fair amount of slack when it came out, but honestly, always sounded pretty fucking great to me.
 


Watch:

Writing this Friday night with a pretty good head of steam. Since I pretty much passed out after the second movie of Joe Bob's Nightmareathon last week, I'm picking up the slack this week. I started with Fade to Black, a flick I've started watching several times before and never finished (not the movie's fault), and I found it to be just okay until the third act, which I actually thought was pretty fantastic.

   

The Nightmareathon segued into Children of the Corn after Fade to Black, and I wasn't in the mood for that, so I decided to re-watch Joe Bob host Spookies from The Last Drive-In Season three. Talk about a damn good time:


Some of the sound design really blew me away, and overall, you really have to admire anyone who makes such an absolutely batshit crazy flick. 




Playlist:

The Cure - The Top
Miranda Sex Garden - Fairytales of Slavery
Bauhaus - Gotham
Blut Aus Nord - 777: Cosmosophy
Bauhaus - Go Away White
Joy Division - Still
Blackbraid - Warriors (single)
Ghost Bath - Moonlover
The Body - I Have Fought Against It, But I Can't Any Longer.

I guess it's Fall, eh?




Card:

Today's card for study is II: The Priestess:

Alchemical marriage of elements to conceive a new thing (idea, being). This is the cosmic womb that takes I: The Magus's seed and gestates it into a new form. 

Raw Creation, and thus, Will. Tapping into a power greater than your own.

New Music from Jerry Cantrell!!!

 

The second single from Jerry Cantrell's upcoming album, I Want Blood, out on October 18th. Pre-order HERE.

Loving this new record so far. Jerry Cantrell is one of those humans who I root for 



Watch:


I am unfamiliar with Patricio Valladares's previous films; however, when I first read about her upcoming Invoking Yell, she instantly caught my attention. A found footage film that follows an all-female Black Metal band in Chile, set in the 90s? Events go awry through their penchant for recording paranormal phenomena for their records? What a fantastic idea. 

 

Invoking Yell hits VOD on September 20th.


Read:

I woke up early this morning and blew through pretty much the entirety of Sandman Volume 2: The Doll's House. I honestly don't know if there is a work of graphic fiction I love more than this one, especially issue #14:

This was instrumental in so much of who I have become. The dialogue, plotting, characters, and the way Gaiman weaves his own brand of dream logic throughout the series, as well as the way a large part of that crescendoes in this volume. We get the resolution for the missing Nightmares Brute and Glob, and how their machinations have affected the world - and the DCU - while Morpheus was indisposed. We are introduced to Lyta and Hector Hall, tying directly into previous Golden Age (?) iterations of 'The Sandman." We get the Corinthian and the Cereal convention, more of those amazing 'confessional' moments that echo back to Volume #1's 24 Hours. Gaiman knows spooky fantasy, but he also knows human nature at its lightest and darkest. Oh yeah, and we meet Hob Gadling, so Gaiman knows his classic English Literature and folklore as well. 




Playlist:

Black Sabbath - Eponymous
Blut Aus Nord - Memoria Vetusta III: Saturnian Poetry
Blut Aus Nord - Memoria Vetusta II: Dialogue with the Stars
Blut Aus Nord - 777 Sect(s)
Blut Aus Nord - 777 The Desanctification
Blut Aus Nord - 777 Cosmosophy
METZ - Up On Gravity Hill (Thanks, Jacob!!!)




Card:

Today's card for study is IV - The Emperor:


Rules that govern Life. THIS is an important aspect of the card that I tend to gloss over. When this comes up, it's a reminder to adhere to the boundaries of life, i.e., what keeps you alive. There's also the martial aspect, a further reminder of rigor. That said, there's also a flipside that reminds us not to let rationality and, by extension, civilization become a prison. So balance. That's the name of the game, and it's borne out by the image on the card. 

Decisiveness and linear thinking. 

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Brigitte Calls Me Baby - Too Easy

 

From their forthcoming debut full-length album Too Easy, out now. Order HERE. Really digging this band. 
 


Watch:

Wes Craven passed away on August 30th, 2015, so for the last few nights, I've been watching some of his lesser-known works for a tribute episode we're going to do on The Horror Vision. Last night, I chose Shocker.

 

I saw this back when it first hit VHS, but not since. Let me tell you, this was way more enjoyable than I remembered! Shocker is a totally misguided attempt to make another Freddy-level character/mythology, and while the film fails to do that, it ends up being super fun just from how hard it swings for that ball. Mitch Pileggi deserves a goddamn award for how 'all-in' he goes with the role of Horace Pinker, and while a whole lotta the movie makes no sense whatsoever - why park a van with your name on it in front of the house where you're killing people? Why does Jonathan's girlfriend come back as a powerful spirit for good? How could all the police in this town be that fucking stupid? - none of the inconsistencies, absurdities and downright missteps do anything but add to the fun. 




Playlist:

Perturbator - Dangerous Days
Blut Aus Nord - Memoria Vetusta III: Saturnian Poetry
Prince - Little Red Corvette (single)
Horrendous - Ontological Mysterium
The Ocean - Heliocentric
Protomartyr - The Agent Intellect
Mastodon - Emperor of Sand
Peter Gabriel - So
Oranssi Pazuzu - Valotus (pre-release single)




Card:

Today's card for study is the Six of Wands: Victory.


View troubles and disruptions as lessons - they have been necessary to grow. Life is Victory simply by living. Not everyone makes it out of the Strife and Chaos of the Fives. 

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Godflesh - For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)

 

I had no idea this existed. Reposted from BlackSunHorizon's YouTube channel, which is full of sludgy goodness. Check it out HERE.

The song itself is taken from the Covered in Black album, an Industrial tribute to AC/DC. If I knew about this back when it came out in 2000 on Cleopatra Records, I had long since forgotten it until stumbling across this track on Apple Music this morning.
 


NCBD:

Here's what I'm bringing home from the comic shop tonight:


Again, I have to say that this series is really just a corridor for me on the way to the rest of the Energon Universe. I don't hate it, but the fervor I had for the Duke and Cobra Commander mini-series is gone.


Very excited for a new book from Jeff Lemire. Especially one he is 


Penultimate issue! Shit is about to get real and hopefully coalesce into a satisfying conclusion. Tony Fleecs has laid all the pieces out in a very pleasing story of past/present/future - something that isn't easy to do in 2024, where time travel is even more overdone than meta. Every once in a while, though, someone takes the concept and really makes it work. Maybe here it's because Army of Darkness did it long before a lot of other cinematic franchises, or maybe it's just great to have multiple versions of Ash running around. Either way, buckle up.


Get Fury has been another sleeper hit of my 2024. Ennis and Burrows really bring their ultra-violent storytelling to the Marvel Universe with two of the best possible choices for telling this story - Frank Castle and Nicolas Fury! Love it.




Watch:

I'm posting this here, but I'm not going to watch it, as I'm assuming I'll have to get pretty creative not to see this a million times before it hits theatres on October 18th.


After initially dismissing it, I loved the first Smile and ended up seeing it three times in theaters, so I have high hopes for this one.




Playlist:

Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Allelujah! Don't Bend! Ascend!
Perterbator - Bloodlust (single)
Braindamage - The Downfall
Tim Hecker - Infinity Pool OST
The Ocean - Heliocentric
Pepper Adams - Encounter!
Godflesh - Pure
Godflesh - In All Languages
Behemoth - Cursed Angel of Doom Live (pre-release single)
JK Flesh - Posthuman
Godflesh - Hymns
Grimes - Art Angels
Grimes - Miss Anthropocene
Zeal & Ardor - GREIF
Cristobal Tapia De Veer - Smile OST
The Fixx - Reach the Beach
Perturbator - Dangerous Days




Card:

Today's card is The Knight of Cups:


The Firey aspect of Water or the Will as applied to the Emotions. Don't be overwhelmed by emotion. The deluge is not without its rewards. 

Act fast!

Monday, September 2, 2024

Better Lovers!

 

From the forthcoming album Highly Irresponsible, out on October 25th on SharpTone Records. Pre-order HERE.
 


Watch:

Never been a Demi Moore fan, but maybe anybody can redeem themselves with the right Body Horror movie.


This trailer definitely evokes the work of Brandon Cronenberg and also, Ana Lily Amirpour's episode of GDT's Cabinet of Curiosities, titled The Outside. Hell, maybe even a bit of Larry Cohen's The Stuff.  Writer/Director Coralie Fargeat's previous film Revenge crossed way too many lines for me, but I loved the look of what little I saw of it. Very much looking forward to seeing The Substance on the big screen when it opens on September 18th.




Read:

I finished Professor John Trafton's BRILLIANT Movie-Made Los Angeles last week, and after such an academic deep-dive into film and regional history - that I really can't recommend enough - I started Ramon Glazov's newly published English translation of Giorgio De Maria's 1975 novel The Twenty Days of Turin.  


I posted about this early last week, how I hadn't been able to stop thinking about what little I knew about the premise via a post author Warren Ellis made on his LTD:

"A decade previously, Turin suffered twenty days of mass insomnia marked by nightly massacres committed by persons unseen or indescribable. The many hundreds of witnesses cannot explain what happened."

 Something about this rattled around in my brain for several days until I finished John's book and promptly ordered a copy of De Maria's novel. Something about that setup reminded me of Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Shadow of the Wind, and my expectations only grew. 

I received the book yesterday, and at ~65% of the way through, I can confirm The Twenty Days of Turin is a fantastically creepy read. What's more, not only does it remind me of Zafón's work, but reading this is stirring up a desire to re-read Clive Barker's The Great and Secret Show for the first time since I was a Freshman in High School, circa 1991. Both novels deal with secrets gleaned from the throwaway detritus of life - notes, scraps of paper, mail. I've always found the idea fascinating, and realize now there's a throughline between where it was introduced to me with Barker's opus, picked up later (in a manner of speaking) by Zafón's Cemetery of Forgotten Books series, and now reintroduced to me with De Maria's novel. I'm curious if there are more ideas like this out there, and if so, how I might find them.




Playlist:

Feel the Knife - So Raw... So Nasty... So Hideous.
Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Grey Rubble - Green Shoots (pre-release single)
Perturbator - Lustful Sacraments
Frank Black - Teenager of the Year
Nature Sounds - Pure Nature (Track 7: Bird Calls)
Revocation - Fathomless Catacombs (single)
Braindamage - The Downfall
Perturbator - Bloodlust (single)
Perturbator - The Uncanny Valley (Expansion)
L'Enfant De La Forêt - ABRAXAS
Gang of Four - Return the Gift Part 1




Card:

Going to change the way I do this for a while. I'm feeling a bit rusty and disconnected from the cards, so I'm going to take 72 days and go through every card, in whatever order I draw them in, and explore them here. First up - XV: The Devil:


Bringing knowledge. "Bringing light into darkness" - the Lightbringer, as one of Lucifer's many names suggests. This card, like IX, warns against following dogmatic answers laid out by other people's spiritual systems. Worship thine self!!!

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Feel the Knife


I've never heard Feel the Knife until just now, but after trying to make it through The Last Drive-In's six-film Nightmareathon last night (and failing miserably), this just felt right, and I'm really digging it. But then, when I find the following description on a band's Bandcamp as a sort of mission statement, I know I'm in familiar territory. Sounds like a warm blanket to me...

"Thrash Metal band created in 2018 with lyrics about 80's horror, 
science fiction, vengeance and dark rituals."

You can head over and listen to and support these guys on their Bandcamp HERE.




Watch:

I'm not much on Anime (LOVE Cowboy Bebop, but that is the work that transcends the genre), and I'm also not much on anything named Terminator after the first movie (the second movie still needs to be reassessed, as I haven't seen it since it was in the theatre), but THIS article on Bloody Disgusting made me think I might give this a chance:


It's long occurred to me that the feel of James Cameron's original film separates itself from all that comes after by essentially being a big-budget exploitation film of the Slasher variety, so the idea that someone might take it back to those roots makes me think this show and I will get along. Also, part of the issue with any of the Terminator sequels is the star power that always seems to come first. None of that shit here, boy. One way that, even as someone who does not count themselves an Anime fan can admit the genre/style's superiority in a case such as this. 




Playlist:

The Veils - Total Depravity
Miranda Sex Garden - Carnival of Souls
The Damned - Night of A Thousand Vampires
Low Flying Hawks - Out For Blood (pre-release single)
Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Grey Rubble - Green Shoots (pre-release single)
The Damned - Phantasmagoria
Saigon Blue Rain - Oko
Melvins - (A) Senile Animal
Mastodon - Emperor of Sand
Horrendous - Ontological Mysterium
Death - Human
The Cops - Free Electricity




Card:

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


• Six of Cups
• VIII: Strength
• Five of Pentacles

Emotional balance creates a strength that may lead to biting off more than can be chewed. The first two cards suggest positive reinforcement of current ideologies, but the last card reminds me to be weary of overexertion. Also, this little nugget from the Grimoire seems worth remembering:

"Needed: Break the Cycle. Pattern Interrupt a definite counter to this card's presence. Physically write down the object/cause of anxiety.

No anxiety yet. Well, that's not exactly true...

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Jet of the Moon Spider

 

I heard this while drinking with friends this past Saturday night in Nashville. It was a guys' trip for my good friend Grez's 50th birthday, and we spent Friday night/all day Saturday hanging out on Music Row and in East Nashville (fuck the strip). Our last stop Saturday night was Duke's, which Grez and I felt was a proper substitution for Chicago's Estelle's, the late-night Rock n' Roll bar we grew up hanging out at until the wee hours. Duke's was awesome, and the DJ there fired one great tune after another, quite a few of which I had never heard before. When Jet came on, it was loud AF and sounded oh so sweet. I'm not much of a Beatles fan - they are obviously important and have their place in history, as well as their moments I enjoy - but they're the most overrated band ever, in my opinion. I've made the statement "I prefer Wings" for years as a kind of inciting statement when questioned about my stance on John, Paul, Ringo and George, and hearing this Saturday, I can confirm it is, in fact, the truth.
 


Watch:

Shudder released a teaser for V/H/S/Beyond, which drops on October 11th, and while this series doesn't have the best track record with me, based on the Directors lined up, I'm cautiously optimistic:


This one features Kate Siegel's directorial debut on a short written by her frequent collaborator Mike Flanagan, so that should be cool. And Justin Long is directing one? Interesting. 




Read:

It completely slipped my mind that Nathan Ballingrud's Crypt of the Moon Spider came out this past week:


This is part one of Ballingrud's Lunar Gothic Trilogy, and seeing the words "Lunar" and "Gothic" together to describe a novel makes me more excited than I can possibly relate.




Playlist:

High on Fire - Cometh the Storm
The Damned - Evil Spirits
Mike Campbell & The Dirty Knobs - Vagabonds, Virgins & Misfits
Garland Jeffreys - Ghost Writer
Bohren and der Club of Gore - Sunset Mission
Calexico - Black Light
The Veils - Total Depravity
Ian Lynch - All You Need is Death OST
X - Under the Big Black Sun
X - Los Angeles
Zen Guerilla - Positronic Raygun
Japandroids - Celebration Rock
James - Wah Wah
Emma Ruth Rundle & Thou - May Our Chambers Be Full
Amigo the Devil - Born Against
The Fabulous Thunderbirds - Tuff Enuff (single)




Card:

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


• Eight of Pentacles
• XVIII: The Moon
• Five of Cups

Concentration on what previously seemed mastered reveals unknown damage. This is 100% an editing reminder, as I'm at the point where Black Gloves & Broken Hearts is finished; it just has to be edited again. 

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Jay Reatard - The Night of Broken Glass

 

Been thinking about this man of late. Damn, 14 years this past January.
 


NCBD:

Pretty cool Pull this week:


I feel like it's been forever since the previous issue of SIKTC! Can't wait to dig back in. 


After re-reading The Nice House By the Lake and going directly into The Nice House By The Sea issue #1, I am psyched for this book! The first series proved to be even more psychologically profound than I'd remembered, and things are certainly ramping up to a new level in this second phase. Can't wait to see where this goes. 


I have many of the original Marvel Transformers issues, starting at, I think, issue # 4. I do not have nor have I ever read number 1, so this facsimile edition is kind of a nostalgic must. 


Quintessons! Quintessons! Quintessons!!!


I have been waiting for this one for a while now. A Frankenstein series that tells the story of each major body part and where it came from is just too good to pass up, even if this one didn't have the added luster of Michael Walsh being the creator. 


Whenever I see Saga show up on my pull, it always feels like an afterthought these days. Then I read the issue and I remember why the book is so great. Not gonna lie - I really think that four-year hiatus hurt this book's momentum. I've loved it from the beginning, and I'm certainly not going anywhere, but it just doesn't feel the same. Maybe a re-read would help? Yeah, well, take a number...


I've been seeing a lot of Etrigan of late, what with re-reading Alan Moore's Swamp Thing, continuing on from that into Neil Gaiman's Sandman, and contemplating a Hit Man re-read somewhere in the not-so-distant future. And then, here he is again. 




Watch:

See and read nothing:


Solid thriller, and knowing absolutely nothing made this a fantastic viewing experience. Props to Zoe Kravitz.




Playlist:

The Damned - Night of A Thousand Vampires
The Veils - Total Depravity
Jim Williams - Possessor OST
Ian Lynch - All You Need is Death OST
Herweer - Paracelsus Fiebertraum 
Zeal & Ardor - GREIF
Zeal & Ardor - Stranger Fruit
Joe Jackson - Night and Day
David Bowie - Heroes
Sinéad O'Connor - The Lion and the Cobra




Card:

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


• Ace of Wands
• I: The Magician
• Knight of Wands

A breakthrough of Will leads to a successful business transaction and a renewed energy of creative force.

Pretty sure I know exactly what this is referring to.

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

The Damned - Beauty of the Beast (Live in London)


From The Damned's double live disc Night of A Thousand Vampires, which Mr. Brown gifted me a few months back, and has in the last week or two, become an indispensable part of my morning ritual and one of my favorite live albums of all time.




Watch:

Last night, I took K to see the new Crow movie. You can read my thoughts over on Letterbxd, but in a nutshell, skip it unless you like having dirt rubbed directly into your eyes.


This is the only Crow I will likely ever recognize. 




Read:

I cannot remember the last time I was so excited to read a book:


Written by Giorgio De Maria in 1975 but not translated into English until this year, Warren Ellis posted about The Twenty Days of Turin on his LTD earlier in the week, and the second I read the synopsis, my mind locked with anticipation for reading this. As Ellis writes by way of summary:

"A decade previously, Turin suffered twenty days of mass insomnia marked by nightly massacres committed by persons unseen or indescribable. The many hundreds of witnesses cannot explain what happened."

Literally, all I needed to become obsessed. I've been hemming and hawing with what my next book to read will be, just found it. 




Playlist:

The Damned - Night of A Thousand Vampires
Zeal & Ardor - GREIF
Dave Edmunds - Chronicles 1968-1984
Sweet Lizzy Project - High (single)
Arab Strap - I'm Totally Fine With It Don't Give a F**k Anymore
Turnstile - GLOW ON
Jim Williams - Possessor OST
The Veils - Total Depravity




Monday, August 26, 2024

Amigo the Devil - I'm Going to Heaven


A little Amigo the Devil to start the week.




Watch:

Go. In. Blind.


Fantastic film with extremely strong performances by both Willa Fitzgerald and Kyle Gallner. JT Mollner created what will possibly rank as the best thriller of the year with this one.




Playlist:

Zeal & Ardor - GREIF
Uniform - American Standard
Jay Reatard - Singles 06-07
T. Rex - Eponymous
The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are the Roaring Night
Pepper Adams - Encounter!
Amigo the Devil - Born Against
Deftones - White Pony
Wings - Band on the Run




Card:

Using my mini Thoth deck for today's Pull. 


• Prince of Disks
• II: The Empress
• Two of Swords: Peace

Thoughtful invention manifests during downtime. Pay close attention to fleeting ideas, as they could become the backbone of strong new ideas/projects. Really good advice for any creative person and something I used to be a lot better at. I think it's time to drill back down on keeping daily notes. K gifted me a couple of moleskins for Christmas last year, one for the book and one for daily notes. I've been using that all year but have kind of slacked off in the last month or so. Great ideas sometimes come from random jottings.

Friday, August 23, 2024

New Zeal & Ardor album GREIF out today!!!


THIS RECORD IS BLOWING MY F**KING MIND!!!!!!

From the new Zeal & Ardor album GREIF, out today. Order direct from the band HERE.
 


Watch:

Ed Brubaker is one of the Executive Producers of Amazon's new Caped Crusader cartoon. I was skeptical about this; Batman is OVERDONE, to say the least, and 


I've watched two of these so far, and I really like it. I'm not going to go on my "Fuck commercials on a service I already pay for" rant anymore - the next stage is acceptance, so I'll just pay $2.99 and go commercial-free. The ads are seriously creating way more mental destabilization than you might anticipate. I've boiled that down to them being continuous reminders of the completely corporate world we live in now, but that's a discussion for another time. In the interim, I'm digging this Caped Crusader show a lot, primarily because it's set in the 1940s. That was a stroke of brilliance. 




Play:

Whoah. Might be time for me to pick up an Xbox or PS:

 

I'm not sure if that would be a total waste of time, as the amount of time I allocate to gaming now is minuscule, and I don't really want to raise it by much. But this... breathtaking.
 


Playlist:

Uniform - American Standard (pre-release singles)
High on Fire - Cometh the Storm
Moon Wizard - Sirens
Thee Oh Sees - SORCS 80
Amigo the Devil - Born Against
Mastodon - Emperor of Sand
Type O Negative - Dead Again
Godflesh - Hymns
The Damned - Night of 1000 Vampires



Wednesday, August 21, 2024

The Cops - It's Epidemic


From The Cops' 2007 album Free Electricity. This was a mainstay in my car stereo for much of the late '00s, and then, somehow, it slipped off my radar. Rifling through a CD binder last week, I came across it and the instant I hit play, I fell in love again. This is one of those every-fucking-song albums, meaning every song is fantastic. Check out The Cops Bandcamp HERE




Watch:

All I had to do was watch the first minute of this to know just how goddamn in I am. 


I'm overjoyed that Steven Kostanski is bringing back something of the Ghoulies formula and marrying it to a slightly 976-EVIL idea. It says, "In Theatres October 4th," and I can only hope this will land here in Clarksville.




NCBD:

Short list this week. 


I LOVE this cover! Also, I have to say, I'm pretty freakin' invested in this book. Really digging seeing Garth Ennis and Jacen Burrows play around with Marvel history with two of its most badass characters.


My monthly grilled cheese with tomato soup on the side. I'm not even entirely sure I remember what happened last issue, but it doesn't matter. Restarting GIJOE: ARAH was just a curiosity at first, but I'm enjoying this, so I'll be sticking around for a while.


Chameleon vs. Detro. 'Nuff said. Granted, Chameleon is a character I only know through the IDW Cobra series, and this is obviously a decidedly different version, but still. 




Playlist:

Swans - The Glowing Man
Frankie and the Witch Fingers - Data Doom
Blue Karma - The Communication
Black Pyramid - The Paths of Time are Vast
Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings - Give the People What They Want
Idles - Joy as an Act of Rebellion




Card:

Sticking with the Thoth for a bit. Feels right:


• 5 of Cups: Disappointment
• V: The Hierophant
• 3 of Cups: Abundance

Operating systems, ideas, all networks of the mind and routine have to be balanced right to run smoothly. Adding one too many facets can tip the entire thing out of proportion. I think I'm there with something, I'm just not quite sure what.

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

New Music from Chat Pile

 

Chat Pile blows me away. I won't pretend to have clocked a lot of hours on their stuff, but the handful of rotations I've given their first full-length, God's Country, affected me deeply. I've heard comparisons to King Missle, and there's an element of that in lead vocalist Raygun Busch's approach, for sure. Except, as much as I like some King Missle, their music is largely about being clever; there's no soul-searing vitriol mixed in like there is here. Also, the music sounds like The Jesus Lizard and Thrall in a blender with a can of dirt-streaked brown paint. That bass sound! 

The new album Cool World is up for pre-order now HERE.
 


Watch:

Stumbling across the trailer for the Butcher Brothers Consumed this morning, I could have sworn I'd posted about this film at some point in the past. I couldn't find anything, though, so here we go:


This one doesn't exactly look like my cuppa. However, if there's a Wendigo involved, I feel like I have to investigate. I'm not familiar with the Butchers' work, but I believe The Hamiltons is Masters of Horror season one, which I bought on a digital sale a few years back, so I'll have to check that out soon. Meantime, I've added Consumed to the list.

(I have to admit, the title drew my eye because I thought for a second we were finally getting that adaptation of David Cronenberg's BRILLIANT novel of the same name. No dice.)




Read:

After beginning last Spring (I think), I finally jumped in and finished my re-read of IDW's Cobra series from the 2010s. I'd read the series monthly, but not since, and I wasn't quite prepared for the insane level of head-fuckery this book takes on, especially once it gets to the Las Vegas chapter. 


The idea of a small unit housing Tomax Paoli as a prisoner in his own Casino, exploring intel he's giving them they know is tainted but have to act on anyway, is a great start, but by the time the series restarts the final time as The Cobra Files, the level of deep psychological control Paoli - whose twin brother Xamot was killed very early on in the series - exerts through his malicious mental influence on several team members is downright frightening.


This book really pulls no punches, and once again, I am utterly floored by what a fresh, dark take on the property IDW allowed Mike Costa and Antonio Fuso to take with this book. I never got into the other IDW Joe titles and still don't really have any interest in doing so. This, however, is one for the ages.




Playlist:

Danzig - Danzig II: Lucifuge
Sam Hain - Unholy Passion
Sam Hain - Final Descent
M83 - Before the Dawn Heals Us
Tomahawk - Oddfellows
Japandroids - Celebration Rock
Idles - Joy As An Act of Rebellion




Card:

Back to my trusty old Thoth deck for a while. I've been missing it:


• XX: The Aeon
• XI: Lust
• 10 of Wands: Oppression

"Taking the pill will open your eyes." The pull of unconnected processes. Oppression (read at face value). This points to a theory I'm developing for a story that is quite important in my understanding of how to navigate this world of corporate dominance. 

Monday, August 19, 2024

Japandroids - Chicago

 

I'm way late in posting this first single off Japandroids forthcoming and final album Fate & Alcohol, out October 18th on Anti. Pre-order HERE.




Watch:

I've been meaning to post about this one for a while. Eight Eyes is the feature film directorial debut from Austin Jennings, Producer/Director of The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs and Diana Prince. 


This looks Grimy A.F.! Seriously, I'm kind of wondering if it will end up crossing some of my lines, but we'll see. This is the first original co-production from Vinegar Syndrome Pictures, the newly-launched production arm of one of the boutique home video label, along with Shudder and Not the Funeral Home. 

You can order the Blu-Ray from Vinegar Syndrome HERE, and you can read more about the film on the official website HERE




Read:

Somehow, I missed the fact that the new Brubaker/Phillips HC Graphic Novel hit the stands on Wednesday. I was actually only a few hours back from Rick's Comic City with my weekly pull when my good friend Chris Saunders messaged to see if I'd snagged it. One quick message to Rick's in the morning and I had Houses of the Unholy waiting for me in my box. 


Another fantastic novel from this team who seem pretty much unstoppable at this point. I wanted more from the ending, but then, I'm also always okay with ambiguity, so aside from that minor issue that can easily be forgiven, this one rocked. Essentially a tale about the aftermath of America's great Satanic Panic in the 80s, this goes to some interesting places, and in typical Brubaker fashion, the plot takes turns you'd never see coming. 




Playlist:

Primus - Antipop
Primus - Green Naugahyde
The Cops - Free Electricity
Thievery Corporation - The Outernational Sound
Z-Rock Hawaii - Eponymous
The Soundtrack of Our Lives - Behind the Music
Zeal & Ardor - Eponymous
PJ Harvey - Stories from the City Stories from the Sea
Roy Orbison - Mystery Girl
Nico Vega - Lead to Light
Danzig - Black Aria
Danzig - Black Aria II
Ian Lynch - All You Need is Death OST




Card:

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


• Four of Cups
• V: The Hierophant
• XIV: Temperance

The luxury of establishing a routine that works specifically in my own private microcosm has to spread out and establish itself after a new idea is added. Whatever this is, I'm assuming it's writing, Process, and that my own will slip a bit before recovering. Once back online, however, I should be stronger. 

Friday, August 16, 2024

Simon Waskow - Soft Array


From Simon Waskow's incredible score for Tilman Singer's Luz. I love this film, and a lot of that love comes from the score (not to diminish the film in any way; I feel about this the way I do M83's score for Knife + Heart - they are intertwined perfectly).  



Watch:

K and I hit the local theatre's 7:20 PM screening of Fede Alvarez's Alien: Romulus last night.


This is everything you want from an Alien film. There's just the right amount of fan service, I think, and that's refreshing after Deadpool Loves Wolverine,  which I enjoyed, but which was 90% fan service. But of course, Fede Alvarez was going to know how to make an incredible Alien film - he already proved his ability to pick up an iconic franchise with 2013's Evil Dead.

I don't want to say too much, but I will say the trailers gave nothing away on this one, and that makes me super happy. That said, I'm still only posting that first teaser. The less you see, the better. The tone and story of Romulus advance the world of "The Company" in a way that I very much appreciated, and a lot of the opening chapter's set designs remind me of that wonderful Metal Hulant Sci-Fi from the 70s/80s.




Read:

Having finished Alan Moore's Swamp Thing last weekend, I began Neil Gaiman's Sandman. Nearing the end of the first collected volume, Preludes and Nocturnes, I'm reminded how much I absolutely love this book. The John Dee chapters are my favorites, and "24 Hours" stands as a watershed moment in my comic book reading life. 


I can still vividly remember the way this book made me feel the first time I read it, and that's rare (although not rare for 80s/90s Vertigo comics). Storywise, Dream doesn't even enter the picture until the last page or so, and that time spent away, watching a demented man amuse himself with the lives of others, as careless as if he were throwing dice, it just sunk in and took root. There is real Horror here, and it's steeped in a glorious 80s Post Punk flavor that just kicked open all kinds of new doors for me at the time I read it in High School, circa... 92 or 93, I think.

Onward to my favorite collected edition - The Doll's House, which will be the first volume that draws from Moore's Swamp Thing by incorporating a transmogrified Matthew Cable as Matthew the Raven and the references to Moore's The Boogeyman Killer. I'm hoping as I read these I might find some other references I'm not familiar with. 




Playlist:

Primus - Antipop
QOTSA - Era Vulgaris B-Sides/Lullabies to Paralyze Vinyl Exclusives
Japandroids - Celebration Rock
Jon Cleary - Jon Cleary and the Absolute Monster Gentlemen
Danzig - Danzig 4
Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin II
Matt Cameron - Gory Scorch Cretins
Melvins - (A) Senile Animal
Primus - Green Gnaugahyde




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE. Also, Grimm's Kickstarter for the Hand of Doom Tarot Art Book is up for four more days. Check it out HERE.


• Ace of Swords
• Two of Pentacles
• Queen of Pentacles

A breakthrough of intellect leads to collaboration and a nurturing future endeavor. Interesting... at least with Vol. 4 published, I can stop reading all of these are pertaining to finishing that book.

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

New Music from A Place to Bury Strangers!

 

From the forthcoming album Synthesizer, out October 4th on Dedstrange. Pre-order HERE.




NCBD:

Throwing a couple of last-minute titles on the list this week. Here we go:


How can I pass up a facsimile edition of the first appearance of Swamp Thing in The House of Secrets #93 when I just finished reading all six volumes of Alan Moore's Swamp Thing? The short answer is, I can't.


This new Werewolf By Night series is apparently the first "Red Band" Marvel book, so I have to check it out. Okay Marvel, Thrill me.


More Shockwave. More! More! That's still not enough Shockwave! MORE!!!


This series is seriously unnerving me. Reminds me a lot of Jeff Vandermeer's Southern Reach trilogy, which I read earlier this year. Call it the junction point where Cosmic Horror meets Body Horror. Science Horror? Any way you call it, I'm digging Into the Unbeing.




Playlist:

Final Light - Eponypous
Shellac - To All Trains
QOTSA - In Times New Roman
Assembly Line People Program - Eponymous EP
Zeal & Ardor - Eponymous
The Darts - I Like You But Not Like That
Dead Milkmen - Quaker City Quiet Pills
T. Rex - The Slider
Amigo the Devil - Yours Until the War is Over
Barry Adamson - Cut to Black
Japandroids - Celebration Rock
Mr. Bungle - Disco Volante




Card:

From Jonathan Grimm's Hand of Doom Tarot, which you can buy HERE. Also, Grimm's Kickstarter for the Hand of Doom Tarot Art Book is up for five more days. Check it out HERE.



• XIV: Temperance (aka ART)
• Knight of Wands
• Four of Cups

 Elements previously thought divisive begin to fall into a cooperative allure, creating stability previously overlooked or unfounded.

Shawn C. Baker - VOL. 4 Available Now!!!


 Despite all my bitching about amazon of late - there's a lot to bitch about - I'm acting as a total hypocrite and released my new short story collection Vol. 4 as a Kind Exclusive. This was meant to be a free collection. However, I realized too late that Amazon requires a minimum purchase price of $0.99. So there it is and here's a link. Cover concept by me, actual artistic execution by Jonathan Grimm Art - whose Kickstarter for the Art of the Bound Tarot book is still running.