Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Wordsmith.org's Anagram Server

http://wordsmith.org/anagram/index.html



Did you know that parliament is an anagram of partial men? Or, Clint Eastwood an anagram of Old West Action? Someone once said, "All the life's wisdom can be found in anagrams. Anagrams never lie." Here is your chance to discover the wisdom of anagrams.

What is an Anagram?
anagram (AN-uh-gram)
noun: A word or phrase formed by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase. For example, Elvis to Lives.
verb: To rearrange letters in such a way. To anagrammatize.
[From Greek anagrammatismos, ana- (up, again, back, new) + -gram (letter).]

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

R. Crumb and Bigfoot (from CRYPTOMUNDO)


http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptozoo-news/r-crumb-bf/
Posted by: Loren Coleman on January 26th, 2007

Mark Frauenfelder recently posted at Boing Boing about the wonderful past era of beautiful art to be found on old covers of Fate.

Mark also mentioned a recent blog by David Pescovitz about the New York Times article “Mr. and Mrs. Natural,” and the author of that article contacted Mark to say two of Fate covers done in the last decade have been illustrated by the underground comics genius R. Crumb. Actually, it was three, two of which had Bigfoot themes and one was of an alien shown near a bed.

One of those covers - specifically because of Crumb’s art - has become apparently the most popular cover in Fate history. It is the Crumb Bigfoot cover shown at the top of this blog. I feel honored that my column, “Mysterious World: Bigfoot-like Creatures Roam the Eastern U.S.” appeared in the November 2000 issue of that Fate. Thus, as such things go, my column has been vaguely associated with and said to be partially responsible for R. Crumb’s artwork. It probably was just a coincidence, but it is one of those cool cosmic overlaps that I appreciate being part of, especially since I always liked his comix, like Zap.

he other Fate R. Crumb cover was of snowy Bigfoot-types in Russia. Intriguingly, it was also used to promote a Wisconsin Bigfoot novel from Galde Press (the current owners of Fate).

R. Crumb has been interested in Bigfoot for a long time, having penned the classic “Whiteman meets Bigfoot” in Home Grown Funnies, no. 1, back in 1971.

Anyone out there have any scans of R. Crumb’s 1971 comic art of Bigfoot?

As far as the popular cultural significance of R. Crumb, all you have to do, if you were part of the 1960s, is remember his images associated with Mr. Natural, Fritz the Cat, Keep On Truckin’, and Janis Joplin’s Cheap Thrills album cover.

Perhaps someday R. Crumb will even draw a Bigfoot exclusively for Cryptomundo.

Hey, unlike the The New York Times which has decided to print the word “hippy,” I spell “hippie” the way we used to in the 60s!

THEN FROM BOINGBOING:
http://www.boingboing.net/2009/03/08/drew-friedman-paints.html

Drew Friedman paints Robert Crumb presenting Cheap Thrills album cover to Janis Joplin
POSTED BY MARK FRAUENFELDER, MARCH 8, 2009 5:19 PM

Our pal Drew Friedman painted this great moment in freak history.

This recent piece is a depiction of my old friend (and favorite artist) Robert Crumb presenting his original "Cheap Thrills" comic strip cover art to Janis Joplin, (with various members of "The Holding Company" lurking behind), backstage at the Filmore West in San Fran' in 1968. It was commissioned by the private collector who owns the original Crumb "Cheap Thrills" art, as a companion piece to hang along side it in his office. Interestingly, Crumb's original intention was for this art to run on the back cover and a portrait of Joplin to run on the front. But Joplin loved the the comic strip art so much, (she was an avid underground comics fan, especially the work of Crumb, and already at that point in her escalating career, had the power to hire her own cover artist), she decided to run it on the front. It's arguably the SECOND most famous album cover ever, after Sgt. Pepper. One amusing side note: bending no doubt to pressure, Crumb wore his hair for a time at it's longest in '68, which I try to show. Joplin was also encouraging him to "loosen up" and wear "hippie clothes and beads" but he just couldn't go that far.

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: The Attack / The Syn

SO MANY RECORDS, SO LITTLE TIME: The Attack / The Syn

If ever you wanted to hear the ultimate English group sound - you are in the right place. For two reasons: The Attack and The Syn.

Let's start with The Attack. Originally known as The Soul System, the group signed to Decca UK in late '66, changing their moniker to The Attack. Despite various line-up changes, which included two future alumni of The Nice, Brian Davidson and David O'List, as well a soon to be mainstay of The Marmalade, Alan Whitehead, the band spawned four flawless singles. Their 2nd in the UK, and lone US release on sister label London, 'Hi Ho Silver Lining', lost out in the British chart battle to Jeff Beck's version, which reached #14 in '67, then #17 in '72 and yet again #62 in '82. Embarrassingly, it peaked here at #123 in '67 due to very little airplay, a pathetically common tale known as the sewer of US radio. The competing versions also gave The Attack controversial attention in the British press claiming Beck had nicked the song from them.


Amazingly, despite having been damaged by the Jeff Beck fiasco, Decca chose to release the terrific follow-up, 'Created By Clive' on the very same day as it's in house subsidiary label, Deram, issued The Syn's version of the exact same song. Each are posted above to let you hear that although the marketing blunder damaged both, the two records are equally superb. And with haunting clairvoyance, the song unknowingly predates Clive Davis' eventual destruction of the record business with frightening accuracy by some 40 years.



Their fourth and final single, 'Neville Thumbcatch' closely matches The Kinks 'Big Sky' alarmingly, despite with flattering and positive LSD drenched results.

Follow link to original blog to hear these...

Monday, March 9, 2009

Creative Grooming???

http://www.pinkcoyote.net/creativegrooming.html



They call this "creative grooming"???
Poor Cindy the Poodle!!!
Check link for additional entertaining photos of Cindy...
Thanks to Ms Dembling for sending this to Ms Kritt...

T. Tex Edwards on Reverb Nation

http://www.reverbnation.com/ttexedwards
T.%20Tex%20EdwardsQuantcast




Tunes, Videos, Photos, Bio, Press Clippings, Gig Information & so on and so on...

Dali & Amanda Lear



Salvador Dali & Amanda Lear

Sunday, March 8, 2009

World Radio Premiere of the newest Nervebreakers tune on RADIO NAPALM


RADIO NAPALM will broadcast the World Radio Premiere of the newest Nervebreakers tune, "Face Up to Reality" (from the upcoming Nervebreakers album of the same name) on March 11.

"RADIO NAPALM": A weekly 2 hour musical journey through rock 'n' roll, punk rock, glam, r&b, garage, blues, and whatever else tickles our fancy. Hosted by noted punk rock musician and writer TIM NAPALM, Wednesdays, 10 PM eastern, 9 PM Central, 8 PM Mountain, and 7 PM Pacific over http://www.woodyradio.com/ . Here you will find playlists, downloadable podcasts of each episode, and other goodies and gewgaws related to "RADIO NAPALM!"
http://www.myspace.com/officialradionapalm

http://www.woodyradio.com/
Hit that page, scroll down, and choose your player (or listen via iTunes). And don't forget the liveliest chatroom on the internet, either. Be there!

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Video from the Low Countries- Maskers / Dracula

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYONDENtBjs



Maskers - Dracula
From the Netherlands. KILLER!
Great stages moves, Dutchies!

Friday, March 6, 2009

C2C Today in Strangeness - 3/06




Today in Strangeness:

On this date in 1899, Bayer received a patent for their new pain reliever-- aspirin. Pharmacist Felix Hoffman was said to synthesize heroin and aspirin in the same month. In 1950, Silly Putty was introduced as a toy by Peter Hodgson. Packaged in plastic eggs, the one-ounce pieces of rubber-like material could be used to transfer colored ink from newsprint.