Un amplificador se convierte en un armadillo y se estrella contra el
piso. Tiene sentido.
[From Revisto Pelo, ca. 1970, found here, comic artist unknown.]
Un amplificador se convierte en un armadillo y se estrella contra el
piso. Tiene sentido.
[From Revisto Pelo, ca. 1970, found here, comic artist unknown.]
Wen Dixon-Whiley of Adelaide does really cool stuff.
[Found via American Digest (R.I.P. Vanderleun).]
So I was looking for an illustration to go with a story about the Little League World Series for posting on another website, and started with Charlie Brown. The pic was kind of boring by itself, and I wondered what the AI Deep Dreams Generator might come up with. Lower right is the cumulative result. Trip city.
[Source: Allen & Ginter Cigarette Cards 1888-1889]
On My Own, The Muffs, (2019) The Muffs were a successful punk band from SoCal, formed by bassist, guitarist and lead singer Kim “Kimba” Shattock in 1991. Shattock suffered from ALS (aka Lou Gehrig’s Disease) for several years, and soon after recording the band’s final album No Holiday, she passed away in 2019 at the age of 56.
HO Spiral 1
HO Spiral 2
HO Dilemma
Sound up for the SkaFire.
A big test is coming October 4.
Those terrifying little upticks…
Theft-proof suitcase [via Bunkerville].
Pasta la vista, baby [via Mme. Jujujive].
“We have never seen anything like this.”
Doodling on a glow-in-the dark LP with a laser pointer.
[via Memo Of The Air]
[Top image found here, unknown origin.]
From the Archives: 1 year ago. 5 years ago. 10 years ago. 15 years ago.
Brit busker Markus K slaps a groove on Suzy. Dale Hawkins would be proud.
Ida Mae is husband/wife team Christopher and Stephanie Jean Turpin, roots rock musicians from Norfolk, UK, who met after joining a soul band while attending Bath Spa University. Now they’re recording in Nashville, Tennessee.
This blues rock indie band formed in 2012 in Reykjavik, Iceland, but KALEO means “the voice” in Hawaiian. three albums and ten years in they’re already touring the world.
Guess that’ll do for now. Have a great weekend, see you back here tomorrow and we’ll resolve the world’s problems. Again.
[Found here. h/t Charlene604.]
These retro-future fictitious covers are the work of Chet Phillips.
Silent film actress Alberta Vaughn was featured in a surrealist artwork by Persian artist Jon S. Oshanna (1895-1980) circa 1924. Oshanna was a muralist and commercial artist, active in California.
[Found here.]