Tag Archive for 'music'

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News Bites: Propnomicon Kickstarter, Tigz Rice Book, Music

Propnomicon Kickstarter

As I mentioned a while back, Propnomicon created a Kickstarter project which was successfully funded. I got my gear in the mail yesterday and it’s very cool. Here are photos. Check out Propnomicon’s site for more info, and don’t forget that the awesome Propnomicon Miskatonic University shirts on Zazzle make great holiday gifts for that special horrorshow in your life who has everything.

Dreams Are The Genus: Nightmares the Species

I don’t usually do press releases, but this one might be for a good cause (I think it is but I can’t tell) and the story is good and the photos look cool so here it is. More pictures of the art on this blog post.

Are you afraid of the dark? You should be…

Halloween is fast approaching and what better way to embrace your dark side than to take a peek at this frightening new art book entitled ‘Dreams Are The Genus: Nightmares The Species’. Featuring 7 dark artists and one truly terrifying writer Helen Calcutt, this book is bound to give you the chills!

This new collaborative project, edited by alternative photographer and illustrator Tigz Rice, will get your heart pounding, your knees shaking and your lips quivering as you delve into this delightful little treat of horror and darkness. Inspired by her own dark thoughts, nightmares and fantasies, the book features a fantastic line up of UK – based artists, including Tigz Rice, Matt Grundy, Audrey Newhouse, Peter Tinkler, Kirsty Greenwood, Nelson Evergreen and Natsuki Otani.

Dark, sexy mysterious and fun: this is the ideal coffee table chiller. For your viewing pleasure, here’s a sneak peek inside the book as we are pleased to announce this deliciously devilish book is now available for pre-order. You can order your copy via Tigz’s website at www.tigzrice.com or via Etsy at http://www.etsy.com/listing/58675812/dreams-are-the-genus-nightmares-the

This book is both designed and printed in the UK to show support for the creative industries. For more information, please contact Tigz Rice at hello@tigzrice.com.

Music

Having gone from mild disappointment to bitter disillusionment with my music collection, I have done the unthinkable and turned to the Internets for new sources of music. The first thing I decided to try was Pandora, and as soon as I can find the right controls for this thing, I’m sure that there will be lots of great music playing in my humble basement. What Pandora really needs is some knobs. Like let’s say, maybe they need a knob labeled Crazy and a knob labeled Folk Singing. In this imaginary utopian world where Pandora was equipped with knobs, I would be able to make a radio station based on Rasputina, and I would turn down the Folk Singing and turn up the Crazy. Mmmmmm. Crazy.

I love this album by Orion Rigel Dommisse. It’s kind of dark, kind of sad, and kind of silly all at the same time. It features a really lovely sounding singer who must be fascinated with the morbid and is pretty hard to understand a good part of the time (not that there’s anything wrong with that). There are not one, not two, not three, but four tracks about death on this album. I am no good at talking about music. This might make your skin crawl. Either with disgust or delight, depending on your tastes.

Pinup of the Week: Dime Mystery October 1938

Dime Mystery October 1938 10

DEATH DANCES ON THE TURNPIKE
a starkly vivid mystery-terror novel
by FRANCIS JAMES

THE FLOWERING CORPSES
bizarre novelette of exotic menace
by NAT SCHACHNER

LEON BYRNE
ARTHUR LEO ZAGAT
GRENDON ALZEE
AND OTHERS

darkinthedark does not claim copyright on these images. If you are the copyright holder and object to their presence here, please contact me and I will remove them.

* Search for Shudder Pulps on eBay *

Monster Alphabet: L is for Licking the Belly of Gaga

What is Lady Gaga doing on my favorite blog? You might be wondering that to yourself right now. Lady Gaga ended up on my radar when somebody sent me an interview clip where she talked about being fascinated with monsters. I was immediately charmed. I Googled her and found pictures of her in all kinds of awesome costumes. Then I went from “charmed” to “enchanted”. So I did what anyone else would do in my position: I ordered my rat army to the nearest record store to secure a copy of all her music (“and no chewing on the packaging this time!” I added.)

Rawr!

Look at her! She’s saying “RAWR!”

I figured that anybody who looked that amazing and hot would be putting out some really bizarre music. In my mind’s ear I heard J.G. Thirlwell and The Knife with a dash of ’80s-era Madonna. Or something. What I got was all of the latter and none of the former. It was a letdown. I recovered quickly and simply contented myself with watching her great costumes. That’s enough for an old monster like me, who bumps around in attics. You can tell me that she’s really subversive under all that pop music and I’ll believe you, really I will. I mean, she’s on the Vigilant Citizen’s short list.

Uncomfotable

Observe as Lady Gaga makes everyone else on stage uncomfortable. Mmmmmm. The woman on the left is faking cool, I can tell.

Hello operator. Give me number 9. And if you disconnect me. I’ll grab you from behind.

Enough of the eye candy. On to the belly. Here is Lady Gaga crowd-surfing.

Lady Gaga Crowd Surfing

You can see our belly licker in this next picture. Amazed to find himself in this position.

And here it goes!

It’s only fair for me to say that I was alerted to this development by this post on Gawker. They also have a great graphic which I didn’t want to pilfer, and is totally worth it. You can also see video of this here on Youtube.

Album Review: Sister Kinderhook by Rasputina

Dear Melora,

Melora, if you’re reading this, there’s a reason I’m writing this as a break up letter. I’m trying to figure out if the problem here is me. Like many of your fans, I’ve been following Rasputina for more than a decade and it’s been interesting watching you grow as an artist. You keep trying new things to keep your music fresh and relevant. You’ve also been through a lot of band members, and in addition released a solo record as Melora Creager.

I fell in love with you the first time I heard “Dig Ophelia”. I thrilled in a white trashy way when you sang “Trenchmouth”. You broke my heart so deftly with “Hunter’s Kiss”, having first announced that it would be a sad story, and I watched admiringly from a distance when you sang “Saline the Salt Lake Queen”. I agreed with you when you stated that the cello is the saddest instrument. Your solo album was interesting but also kind of forgettable, but then O Perilous World came along with some really good songs and an interesting idea. And I was happy.

And now Sister Kinderhook. Like most of the rest of your albums, the songs can be broken into four categories: 1) The brilliant songs we love you for. 2) Some songs that are OK and might be the ones we like later when we get tired of the ones we liked first. 3) A few songs that are mostly amazing but have something really annoying about them (like the frenetic part of “Draconian Crackdown”, which is otherwise rocking). 4) One or two real stinkers. Please note that only one of your albums has no stinkers. That is as much a product of your experimentation as anything else, and when I buy your albums I don’t mind the stinkers because the rest is always so interesting.

Can I tell you that there isn’t anybody else I know of anywhere who is doing what you do? There are some bands that can be compared, but you are very unique.

I read a discussion on a fan site where some people were talking about whether or not you were going to drag out the dulcimer again. The point being that the dulcimer was really grating. And don’t get me wrong – there is something intrinsically grating about your music. Sometimes that’s a good thing, like in “Saline” or “Crosswalk”. Other times, not so much. Like in “The 2 Miss Leavens” which is grating and (I think it’s best to be blunt here) boring. I pre-ordered Sister Kinderhook and got the fan, thank you. Then I listened to the album some. And then stopped listening to it. Then I listened to it some more. Then I stopped listening to it. Then I tried listening to it on shuffle with the other Rasputina albums. Here are my thoughts.

I love love love “Sweet Sister Temperance” and “Meant to be Dutch”. “Dutch” in particular makes me think of Chinese railroad laborers and theremin. The tracks “Kinderhook Hoopskirt Works” and “Afternoon of the Fawn” are good. “Kinderhook Hoopskirt Works” suffers in that it’s the same flavor as “Shirtwaist Fire” and “My Orphanage” but isn’t quite as good. “Utopian Society” is funny and I love the accent. The song is like “My Captivity by Savages” or “Kate Moss” so it ends up getting limited play time with me, being a novelty song. I have to be honest with you that the rest of the album is a little tedious. In the middle. For a long time. I read that you wanted to get back to your roots and I think this album proves that you can never really go home. Not really. And yet the music does mesh well with your other albums so maybe it’s something else. I don’t know. I’ve been spending some time trying to figure out if it’s YOU, of if it’s ME. Maybe I’ve become jaded. I’m wishing for some more cello. I don’t really feel like you’re rocking out on this album, and there something missing. Some extra X factor.

Can I tell you again that there isn’t anybody else I know of anywhere who is doing what you do? I think everyone should listen to your music. I plan to see you when you come to Portland, and no, the love affair isn’t really over. But I’m feeling jaded and blue.

Sister Kinderhook by Rasputina – Filthy Bonnet – 2010
Buy Sister Kinderhook on Amazon

See you next time!

Salad Fingers

Join Salad Fingers and its rotten teeth as it licks, fondles, squishes, and negligently murders the desolate world that it finds himself in. More information about the artist, here and here.

Om nom nom nom.

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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