Electrik Collage show #13 Mar 2025

Show #13, a Baker’s Dozen is how I’m finishing this first run on ROVR Radio. There’s a lot of instrumental downtempo beats in this episode courtesy of the Legacy Echo label run by Chilla Ninja in Manchester, thanks for the records guys. More Monastry, a couple of old Linkwood tracks from the now defunt Firecracker label and a vintage megamix in the form of a 1987 Trax selection from a promo tape I found last summer. For some modern reconstructions of old classics check out Disco Police‘s stunning recreation of Tom Browne‘s ‘Funkin’ For Jamaica’, Magic Source‘s cover of ‘Voodoo Ray’ and my own deconstruction of Roy Ayers‘ ‘We Live In Brooklyn Baby’ – RIP Roy.

You can listen today at 2pm-4pm wherever you are in the world, https://www.rovr.live/
Listen back via the archive (search for ‘DJ Food’ or ‘Electrik Collage’)

It’s been a year since I started this and this is my last show for ROVR for the moment. I will be carrying on under my own steam each month but the show will take on a slightly different form, I doubt it’ll be two hours each month for one thing. I loved being asked by ROVR to do a monthly show but when I signed up it was on the provision that it would be a test for a year. My main worry was the way the shows were constructed for the station which involves uploading the individual tracks directly to a back end area where you order your show selection, adding metadata etc. so that tracks can be indentified online once playing. Once the two hour limit has been filled you then choose an option that auto-blends the start and end points of the songs for a seamless transition, not beat matching, just fading. This was hit and miss for me and not the way I make mixes, being more of a mix DJ who layers tracks and samples up. I was assured that they were working on a DAW for this that would give DJs more control over how they blended tracks together, unfortunatley this hasn’t materialised after a year and I don’t feel I’m doing good work here as a result. I also had no way of knowing listening figures for either my shows or the station in general so I have no idea what sort of audience I was getting. But no bridges have been burnt, if the DAW materialises and works well then I may be back.

But, the year is up and I’m keen to construct things in my studio as I always have and hopefully provide listeners with a better show as a result, getting back to mixing, away from the digital playlist format whilst hopefully being more creative. I’ll upload to Mixcloud and that will allow listening figures and comments as well as a trackmarked playlist. It won’t be behind a paywall like the archive uploads I’ve been doing so everyone can listen and it will be easier to share and embed into websites after it’s published. The Electrik Collage shows have all been about getting back to doing radio with an empahsis on current music like Solid Steel used to be (I estimate at least 75% of each EC show is contemporary releases from the last year or so) but I also want to experiment with the format too. What that will entail I’m not sure but we’ll see next month, until then, enjoy the new show.

DJ Food – Electrik Collage #1
Linkwood Family – Piece of Mind
Monastry – Respite
Linkwood – Hear The Sun
Disco Police – Jamaica (Sir Dancealot Deconstructed Regroove)
Chop – Monolith
Magic Source – Voodoo Ray (Radio Edit)
Various Artists – Trax Megamix 1987
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #15
Deadchannel9000 – Concrete Science
2S.Beatz Productions – L.Y.W.B.
Kristian Gjerstad – Drops, Slops & Chops
Chop – Psycho Bubble
Chilla Ninja – Good Time All The Time
Atoribeats – Whoz Da Mann!?
Funkychild – Iguazu
Jon Fu – Revival
Champagne Dub – Thuggin
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #10
The In-Sect – Brooklyn (DJ Food Restructure)
Hot Chocolate – Sugar Daddy
Mandrake Handshake – Emonzaemon
The Psyclops Trees – Oscars Groove Part 2 (Alt. take)
Space Drum Meditation – Water Sirens
Djrum – Frekm pt. 2
Monastry – Destination
Kosmologic Research Society – Rift
D.K. – Untitled Pt.6

RIP Roy Ayers

Roy Ayers
Another musical giant gone – the incredible Roy Ayers has left the building. I probably first heard snatches of his music via samples in 80s hip hop by the likes of the Jungle Brothers but caught up with the real thing in the 90s. He was on the same bill at a French festival once when I toured with The Herbaliser so we had a view of his set from the side of stage, the photos of which I’ll add here if I can find them.

ii016 cover2 web
By weird chance I used parts of the Roy Ayers Ubiquity track ‘We Live In Brooklyn Baby’ only last month whilst experimenting with some software. This is what resulted, not a normal remix. I played it to PC and he commented, “Cellular restructure. Certifiable.” which I took as a compliment. RIP Roy

RIP Mark Pawson

Mark Pawson Groovy Record Fayre 2021
Very sad to hear of the passing of Mark Pawson today. A unique figure on the counter cultural art and publishing scene who I would regularly see at zine fairs and the like. His was always the most interesting stall with the most bizarre underground books and comics from all over the world. I’d end up buying some beautifully screen printed French comics from him, the likes of which you’d never see anywhere else and would never see again if you didn’t buy them there and then.

IMG_3835
IMG_3836
IMG_3843
IMG_3842
I first got to know Mark in the early 90s when he was around on the scene when I worked at Ambient Soho, he was the badge man who would make all sorts of badges for the shop, and our Telepathic Fish parties. I still have a load of badges he made using my Openmind logo and was going to get him to make more this summer for the release of a record. He’d sell artbooks and badges he made of his own work using photocopiers and also made badges featuring Negativland and Bob Dobbs.

IMG_3841
IMG_3840
IMG_3839
His classic ‘Mark’s Little Book of Kinder Eggs’ and book of plug wirings were always in print and I think the ‘Assume This Phone Is Tapped’ sticker was also one of his. There are phrases I’ll always associate with his work like ‘Aggressive School of Cultural Workers’, ‘Demolish Serious Culture’, ‘Book Shops Not Bombs’ and ‘N©’. He belonged to the anti-establishment DIY scene who used whatever they could to make art, was involved in The Exploding Cinema early on as well as the international mail art scene. It’s shocking to know he’s gone, a truly one of a kind figure. I’m sad I won’t bump into him at the fairs any more. RIP Mark

IMG_3838
IMG_3837
IMG_3844
IMG_3845

Posted in Art, Books, Design, Oddities. | 6 Comments | Tags:

Lears Magical Lantern show

Lears badges web
I bought some badges at the weekend at my local carboot; two lovely Epcot Centre ones – Disney’s futuristic science centre from the 80s, a Freak Out one which I’m unsure is original or not and another named ‘Lears Magical Lanterns’. The last one had piqued my interest as magic lanterns are the original light shows from Victorian times, a now obsolete curio of the past that still retains a devoted following online. I wasn’t familiar with the name but thought I’d add to my small collection of light show-related badges and look it up when I got home. This fascinating 1983 BBC documentary on the Lear family and their travelling magic lantern show (via two canal boats!) was the first to appear. It’s a beautiful look back at an idyllic age where the young family pursue their passion, preserving the outdated artform for audiences whilst travelling the UK’s canals. There’s a particularly good Chromatrope display around the 16 minute mark.

My good friend Neil Rice knew the Lears well and visited them at their home in the 80s, fuelling his fascination with the history of projection in the process. He remembers they had, “Lanterns of every shape and size which they knew the life history of. Plus circa 10,000 slides, hand painted and early photographic. 3000 of them mechanical.” The Lears also visited his Optikinetics lighting business in Luton and even performed at the dealer launch of their early ‘80s Mode/Optikinetics roadshow.

In its algorithmic wisdom YouTube served up this later programme from 1992 directly after the first, revisiting Doug Lear nearly a decade later. Times have changed and their marriage is on the rocks with Anita filing for divorce, bringing dire consequences for the magic lantern show. They now have a museum for the lanterns and optical toys in Wales but financial burdens facing Doug mean he might have to sell their collection of antique projection equipment to pay the bills. It’s not a straight forward documentary like the first, but contains flashback period pieces inserted to illustrate the golden age of magic lanterns. It’s an all too familiar tale of technology slowly but surely evolving to make way for the latest innovations, mercilessly leaving yesterday’s practitioners in its wake as audiences move on to the latest thing. We’re left hanging at the end as to Doug’s fate as he walks into the light and ponders what to do as next.

After the Lears split up, Christies auctioned their collection in the mid 90s, fetching circa half a million pounds with most of it going to the Getty Museum. Anita pursued a career in laser-cut marquetry with customers like Stella McCartney while Doug studied the Turin Shroud at Birmingham University, continuing his musical career before eventually meeting a new partner and settling in North West Wales. Doug and Anita made their peace before she passed away in 2017 and there is more about the Lears in her obituary on the Magic Lantern Society website. Amazing what the purchase of one small badge can uncover.

Christies Lear collection

Mick Jones’ Rock’n’Roll Public Library

kiosk
I visited Mick JonesRRPL exhibition at the Farsight Gallery on Friday courtesy of Stephen Coates (seen above at the magazine kiosk inside the venue). For anyone who doesn’t know, Mick is a collector, an understatement when you realise that the amount of ephemera, memorabilia and esoteria on display is possibly only 5% of his archive. Although I can’t claim to be a huge Clash or B.A.D. fan there’s no denying that the collection on display is impressive and wide-ranging. From toys, games, comics, magazines, records, tapes, clothes to art, posters, projection equipment, videos, music gear and pop culture artifacts, it seems there is very little that Mick doesn’t collect.

Ft2 cover
Ft2 label
Primarily of interest to me were his pieces of hip hop ephemera including several by Futura from the early 80s when he and Mick wrote ‘The Escapes of Futura 2000’ with The Clash as backing band. Inside one of the glass cabinets I noticed Futura’s handwritten lyrics to the song, beautifully enscribed in his recognisable style. In another was a customised boombox with drawings by Dondi and Zephyr, a Rammellzee flyer and Beastie Boys tour pass – what a time to be in New York!

Futura lyrics
Futura boombox
Dondi
zephyr
Clash canvas
Of course there is loads of Clash-related memorabilia too, from equipment to tapes, toys to merchandise, press coverage to what appears to be a Futura-sprayed canvas.

T shirt 2
T shirt 1
mickey model
Clash toys
Clash case
Punk fanzine
Fanzines were a huge part of the punk movement and there are plenty here although most have been photocopied and pasted up as wallpaper at various points to aid ease of display.

fanzines
Ted vs Punks
flintstones
Forbidden planet
There are also a number of huge colour-themed collages of all manner of ephemera, an ingenious way to display many of the items that were found without an obvious home.

black
yellow
white
red
And it goes on and on… there’s even the first in a projected series of magazines devoted to highlights from the collection on sale inside. I highly recommend you try and visit if you’re in the centre of London with an hour or two to spare. It’s free, open daily from midday – 7pm and the gallery is at the end of Denmark St. tucked round the corner by St. Giles church, nearest tube, Tottenham Court Road. Be quick though as it’s only on until March 16th – more info here www.rocknrollpl.com and on Instagram @rocknrollpl

Toys
projectors
electric guitar
dread
Ampro
badges

Buy Music Club March

Buy Music Club Mar 2025
More fabulous music to wrap your ears around – the Legacy Echo label conduct a tribute to ATCQ‘s Midnight Marauders album and Magic Source magic up a disco version of ‘Voodoo Ray’ as Disco Police twist Tom Browne‘s ‘Funkin’ For Jamaica’ inside out for eight and a half minutes on their Crate Diggers album. Visioneers conjure up new version of tracks from the recent album and there’s a version of UFOrb sitting on Bandcamp from a source you wouldn’t expect. New music in the form of Space Drum Meditation, Syon Ward and Mandrake Handshake who come over like a kind of King Gizzard meets Stereolab in places. Jungle Boogie (JB) is my old friend Bunky K Brown improvising long bass meditations with percussionist bandmate Britt Walford.

My next ROVR radio show featuring some of these will air on Friday March 14th and the shows are available to listen back to now via the ROVR live app AND the desktop player (at last!) APPLE or ANDROID

Posted in Music, Records. | No Comments | Tags:

Psychedelic poster auction highlights

FD Presents R Griffin
Selections from the Jasper 52 auction of psychedelic posters which closes on March 9th. Above: rare Family Dog poster by Rick Griffin.

Mouse & Kelley FD-109
Above: Mouse & Kelley Family Dog poster, 1968, below: Randy Tuten Family Dog poster, 1968

Randy Tuten 1968 FD poster
Moscoso Jungle Juice comic
Above: Victor Moscoso Jungle Juice comic, below: Eye Ball poster and Ripped Van Winkle poster, 1988

Moscoso Eye Ball
Ripped Van Winkle

Jerry Garcia poster Mouse'Kelley
Above: Bob Fried Memorial Boogie by various artists, below: Wes Wilson, The New Mobilization March anti-war march in San Francisco, 1969.

Wes Wilson
East Totem West
Above: East Totem West head shop poster, below: Neon Park Family Dog poster, 1968.

Neon Park 1968 FD-108

Rice Is Nice


On Sunday Hannah Brown, Heena Song, Julian Hand and I visited Optikinetics co-founder Neil Rice at his home to pick up some of his old projectors and talk general light show shop.

While we were there he gave us an impromptu light show using a four-projector, colour wheel and vintage Optikinetics Solar System set up he’d made then let us all have a play. Here’s a clip of just some of what we achieved using the kit with a set of custom slides I’d made under his direction. This is all analogue, no digital FX, shot against the wall in his living room by Hannah using her phone then edited in Premiere later.

The song is an edit of ‘Through With You’ by The Lemon Pipers, one of Neil’s favourites, they also have a song called ‘Rice Is Nice’, hence the title of this post.

Electrik Collage show #12 Feb 2025


My latest radio show is streaming from 2pm today wherever you are in the world on ROVR radio. I’m constantly amazed at the amount of great new music that’s out there and this month features new tracks from Awkward, LF58, Create-A-Mess, Apta, the Cheeba Cheeba label and some great reworks by Disco Police. There’s a classic megamix in the form of Cuco‘s Disco Breaks re-edit of Martin Circus ‘Disco Circus’ and a little trio of versions of Malcolm McLaren‘s ‘World Famous’ classic, it’s quite beat-heavy this month and, dare I say it?, a little trip-hoppy in places (not a bad thing in my book).

Listen back here https://www.rovr.live/show/4699

Show #12 Feb 2025
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #7
Monastry – Origin
Type Raw, Alcynoos & Parental – Poetry
Create-A-Mess – Denmark Hill (DJ Food slight re-edit)
Dr.Doppler – Gardens in Spain
David Beast – Racial Riots
Awkward – The Shift
Monastry – In the Machine
Disco Police – Masterpiece (Bop Gun Slow Blow Mix)
E20 Trio – S950 Is a Verb
131 – I Cant Find My Way Home
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #44
Martin Circus – The Circus (Disco Breaks mix) (The Cuco re-edit remastered)
Disco Police – Caramel (Bop Gun Primordial DISKO Tech Mix)
Akufen – Play (Never Work Till Monday)
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #39
Chop – Oscillo
LF58 – Radials Part Two (excerpt 3)
Anne Dudley – Close (To The Edit) diverted with World’s Famous
DJ Koco – World’s Famous feat. 45trio
Malcolm McLaren – World’s Famous
Run DMC – Peter Piper (Brat mash-up DJ Food Re-edit)
Redman – Dont Wanna C Me Rich
Create-A-Mess – Fly Humans
Disco Police – God Make Me Funky (Bop Gun Cosmic Regroove)
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #18
Djrum – Frekm pt. 1
Chop – Rioflection
Lone Bison – Origin Story
Awkward – Last Fiend
ill-sugi – rah
Apta – Sink
Apta – Meniscus
LF58 – Radials Part Two (excerpt 4)

Buy Music Club Feb 2025

Buy Music Club Feb 2025
After the longest month of the year we finally hit February, Bandcamp Friday is on the 7th so fill your baskets in readiness for that day when 100% of the profits go to the artists and labels. Hieroglypic Being has released three albums so far this past month, not a bad start for him and two from Inhmost feature in this list as they were a new discovery for me. Talking of older records I’d missed, the ‘Collage’ album by Monastry is a sample-filled trip hop winner from an Australian duo that dates from last summer, as does the (Mr) Chop album on Madlib Invasionz.

Anticipating the return of Little Barrie and Malcolm Catto‘s new album this April I was checking out the album Barrie had made with Shawn Lee under the name Ultrasonic Grand Prix last year – an intriguing mix of vintage guitars and drum machines. DJ Koco‘s take on the Malcolm McLaren classic, ‘World’s Famous’ was out late last year on a 45 and will endure all year whilst Jonny Cuba‘s first solo outing under the name Create-A-Mess is finally released after literally years in production limbo.

My next ROVR radio show featuring some of these will air on Friday Feb 14th and the shows are available to listen back to now via the ROVR live app AND the desktop player (at last!) APPLE or ANDROID

Posted in Music, Records. | 2 Comments | Tags:

5 hour set at Brvtvs in Marlow this Saturday

___Saturdays_DJFood
This Saturday I will be playing at Brvtvs in Marlow, a hi-fi listening bar/restaurant. Not only that, support will be from my old partner in crime, DK!
We’ve not played together on the same bill for over a decade but I’m really looking forward to hearing what he pulls out for a mini Solid Steel reunion. I think you have to book a table if you want to come before 10pm so maybe contact them to check availability if you’re planning to travel far.

Posted in DJ Food, Gigs, Records. | 3 Comments | Tags: , ,

The expanded Raiding the 20th Century turns twenty

Raiding 20th expansion
Hard to believe, this is 20 years old today. My 59 minute extension of the history of the cut up, featuring Paul Morley‘s narration, largely adapted from his book, Words & Music. Between creating the original 40 minute version for The Remix’s guest spot on XFM in 2004 I’d read Paul’s book and there was so much crossover between the contents that it sparked an idea to rework the mix out of it’s original constraints into something more definitive. Part mix, part documentary, all copyright-infringement, so much so that I eventually received a cease and desist letter from Universal about a year later after the horse had bolted.

Raiding cover
The Delic Records label, a bastion of all things sample-based, cut up and collaged, released the original mix in a cassette edition a year ago and now they offer the expanded version on its 20th anniversary. Each cassette has been designed by yours truly with a QR code on the back that opens some exclusive material like a key to all the people on the inside image, the full tracklist (updated and corrected although I still managed to miss a couple of mistakes) and my original handwritten making-of notes. Sadly I couldn’t find the cease and desist letter…
Order a copy from here, also grab a copy of the MagicTouch 45 while you’re there.
UPDATE – these sold out super fast, they still have the earlier 40 minute edition if you want to pick up a copy, only 8 left I think.

Raiding inlay and tape
Raiding inside
Raiding spines

Electrik Collage show #11 Jan 2025


My latest radio show is streaming from 2pm today wherever you are in the world on ROVR radio. Kicking off with another vintage megamix from the vaults and new music from Disco Police, Awkward, MagicTouch, Space Drum Meditation, the Cheeba Cheeba label and more.

Listen back at https://www.rovr.live/show/4589

Show #11 Jan 2025
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #42
MagicTouch – Kyousoku 3
Awkward – The Grand Deal
Dr.Doppler – 00.Ocimum
Kentorako – BarbedWireStew
Alcynoos & Parental – Chase
Beautify Junkyards – Sonora
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #21
Awkward – The Subway And Rammellzee (refix 24.6)
Disco Police – Disco Queen (Bubbling Minds DISCO Mix)
David Beast – Endurance Test
Nebulon Systems – Music Is (DJ Food Radio edit)
Silvia Sommer – Tinguely
LF58 – Radials Part Two (excerpt 1)
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #34
Crazy John – Electro 1984 (Hully Gully Mix)
Disco Police – Space Is The Place (Bubbling Minds Proto Detroit Techno Mix)
Midnight Heist – Shiny
Akufen – My Blue House
Paul Funk – Don’t Make Me Wait For Acid
Nebulon Systems – Orangutan (DJ Food Radio edit)
DJ Food – Electrik Collage #8
Lone Bison – Origin Story (Paul Cousins Remix)
Beautify Junkyards – Sister Moon
Kosmologic Research Society – Hippocampus
James Adrian Brown – Limbic System (Demo)
LF58 – Radials Part Two (excerpt 2)
Space Drum Meditation – False Dawn

Big Numbers #3 original art

Columbia, Al -BigNumbers print

This post was started back in 2022, during lockdown when we had more time on our hands, and it sat unfinished for various reasons until now.

I’ve become a bit obsessed by Alan Moore and Bill Sienkiewicz‘s unfinished Big Numbers of late – the projected twelve issue comic stalled at issue 2 when Sienkiewicz left the project due to the workload he’d imposed on himself. Young understudy Al Columbia was asked to continue for issue 4 and, depending on which version of events you believe, he either didn’t finish it, had a nervous breakdown or destroyed the work he did do. One of the only things to officially emerge was the print above, published by Mad Love/Tundra before his scheduled debut on the book.

BN3 pg3 painted
Issue 3 did actually get finished and surfaced some years back in the form of a photocopy of the lettered pages that was found on eBay and then uploaded to the web. The line work is devoid of most of the texture you’d associate with Sienkiewicz’s work but ten unlettered pages were also printed in a fanzine, presumably taken from the original art. Over the years original pages have surfaced on places like Comic Art Fans where you can see the painterly tones he was going for far better – see above and below.

BN 3 pg14
As with so many things on the web, a lot of the images are low quality and small in size but now we can rectify this. I’ve recently been playing with Topaz’s Gigapixel AI app which gives incredible results when upscaling digital images. Using this on low res scans gives the work a whole new clarity and fuzzy details come into focus like never before. I’ve managed to put together a readable cbz edition of issue 3, including the 40 pg photocopy version, 17 painted or toned pages, only minus the back cover and end papers. Back cover artwork exists for issues 4 and 6 and the cover for issue 6 was sold at Heritage Auctions some years back. I doubt we’ll ever see the finished book sadly as Moore isn’t interested.

Big Numbers website image
The nearest we may come is in the form of a website by James Harvey. This appeared in June 2020, outlining each of the 12 issues, each character and what happened to them in each issue, based on original plot notes and interview transcriptions with Alan Moore. A projected TV series that never happened also fills in some of the gaps as an extract of a 280 page interview transcript that the producers had with Moore is published in the side bar. It’s a mind-boggling collection and gives a glimpse at what could have been, put aside an afternoon to go through it. Also check out James’ own comic work as he’s an excellent artist, recently completing Pete Townsend‘s legendary Lifehouse project in comic form with David Hine.

Big Number website

DJ Food – Genius and Soul Mix

Genius + Soul logo
Doing a bit more clearing out over the holiday…

I was asked to provide a mix for a new show that started in 2022 – Genius and Soul, run by Joseph who has featured me on both his Solipsistic Nation and Soundwave shows before. The rough brief for G&S was Jazz and Black Classical Music and the many styles that grow from those trees. I put together a 45 min mix and the tracklist below has buy links if you want to explore further. The first episode featured Brian Jackson and upcoming guests were to include Carlos Nino, King Britt and Matt Black amongst many more. This series seems to have faltered after four months so here’s the mix as it seems a shame for it just to sit on a hard drive. The Annabel (lee) track is now officially released.

Track list:
DJ Format – The Light (Project Blue Book)  https://djformat.bandcamp.com/
Annabel (lee) – Blackstar (unreleased)  https://annabel-lee.bandcamp.com/
Aver & Move 78 – Follow The Earworm (Village Live). https://villagelive.bandcamp.com/
Nevergrand – The Storm (Spun Out Sounds) https://bit.ly/3eKM6OW
dgoHn – Electryon (Love Love Records) https://dgohn-music.bandcamp.com/
clipping. – Say The Name (Sub Pop) https://clppng.bandcamp.com/album/visions-of-bodies-being-burned
Planet Battagon – Hygiea (On The Corner Records) https://planetbattagon.bandcamp.com/
DNGDNGDNG – Atlantida (On The Corner Records) https://onthecornerrecords.bandcamp.com/music
Jazzuelle feat. Kirsten Adams – 48 Stay (CTEMF 2020) https://bit.ly/3eJvU0w
Laraaji – Illusion of Time (Ahead Of Our Time) https://coldcut.bandcamp.com/album/0

The Real Tuesday Weld – Blood (CD edition)

Blood CD expanded front

Posting this today because I found it in my ‘drafts’ in WordPress and it’s now two years old. This was originally written Dec 2022, intended to be published back then but I must have missed it somehow. This was the CD version of the first part of an intended trilogy for The Real Tuesday WeldSwan Songs – encapsulating ‘Blood’, ‘Dream’ and ‘Bone’ LPs plus additional cassette extras. Three years on and the first two are out but ‘Bone’ has been languishing unfinished for a while as the ever-manic Stephen Coates attends to his many distractions from the Bureau of Lost Culture podcast to the London Month of the Dead and Century Club programming. In between he’s also created two Clerkenwell Kid albums (‘Songs for Crow’ – Dec 2024 and the forthcoming ‘Junkshop Melodies’ as well as the ‘Winter Warmers’ 3″ CD of Xmas 2023. He assures me this will be the year we wrap things up for a project that started in 2019 and half the artwork for ‘Bone’ is done but we’ll see…

Another black and red sleeve, I swore I’d use less black in my designs in 2022 but it’s not working is it? To be fair though, both this and the Cinematic Orchestra covers are from 2021 and 2002 respectively. Today sees the release of the CD edition of The Real Tuesday Weld‘s ‘Blood‘ album on CD. The vinyl sold out quickly and people asked for a CD (not everyone wants vinyl) and Antique Beat listened.

Blood CD expanded back
We’ve shrunk the artwork and presented a CD version of the vinyl design, complete with reversible inner sleeve with die cut centre and vinyl groove effect on the black CD disc. Order here.
Blood CD back + inner reversed
Blood CD back + inner
Blood CD back
Blood CD disc
Blood CD expanded again
Blood CD expanded vert

Psychedelic Crunchie Bomb poster offer, 1969

Crunchie 3
A rare set of four “Crunchie Bomb” posters commissioned in 1969 by Frys Chocolate, measuring 20×15 inches. Two designed by graphic artist and Professor of Illustration at the RCA, Dan Fern, two by renowned designer Chris McEwan. They were available in exchange for 3 Crunchie wrappers – see the last photo of the original advert.

Crunchie 4
Crunchie 5
Crunchie 6
Crunchie offer-topaz-text-shapes-4x
Seems like Crunchie were really trying to tap into the youth market in the late sixties, check out this reworking of the Beach Boys‘ ‘Good Vibrations’ TV ad, complete with zany visual effects.

Steve Harradine posters and original art

Damo Suzuki Steve Harradine
The other day I ran across an eBay seller offering a whole load of Steve Harradine posters and originals. The name was new to me but this UK ex-pat now living in America has shades of Martin Sharp‘s poster genius in some of his work and appears to only have a sparse website. His subject matter seems to mainly be rock music from the 60s through to the 80s but with some contemporary bands too, drawn in pencil or biro and very much in the maximalist psychedelic style of old. All images here are cleaned up from the ebay account linked above.
Below: The original for a Dylan poster from 2001 and an unfinished version from 2002

Dylan original 2001 Steve Harradine 2002
Bob Dylan unfinished 2002
PF Steve Harradine 2005
Above: A reimaging of a 60s Pink Floyd poster from 2005 and
Below: a Paul McCartney print from 2015, Harradine has done the other three Beatles too.

PMC Steve Harradine 2015
Below: A Sky Saxon poster from 2005 with art resued from a withdrawn Widespread Panic poster design from 2002 by Harradine.
Sky Saxon poster-topaz-4x
Widespread Panic Steve Harradine
This fabulous Bowie poster is upscaled from the only tiny image on the web I can find.

Bowie-topaz-low resolution v2-4x

Buy Music Club Recommends Jan 2025

BMC Jan 2025
And we don’t stop – Happy New Year! Here’s a bunch of music from the last month to get your teeth into for 2025. There’s a new Hieroglyphic Being album – one of his best for a while, an old Akufen I discovered recently through Bandcamp – absolutely stunning. The new Arcadia library compilation on Buried Treasure is full of treats as is the Kosmologic Research Society – the return of an old project featuring Markey Funk. Space is the place for that one, both inner and outer as is the latet LF58 album on Astral Industries who I’d slept on in recent years but hoovered up several titles from during their Xmas sale. For the beat heads look no further than a new album by Awkward which collects various beats and pieces together and the MagicTouch ‘Lessons’-style 45 on Delic Records, out this month. The new Special Request album wasn’t totally my bag if I’m honest except for the track ‘Don’t Hold Back’ which is dancefloor destruction and will get you from 140-160 bpm with ease during a set.

My next ROVR radio show featuring some of these will air on Friday Jan 17th and this year’s ten shows should be available to listen back to now via the ROVR live app APPLE or ANDROID

Posted in Music, Records. | No Comments | Tags: