Dick Dale was known as the King of Surf Guitar.  I am including this link to a story reported in Rolling Stone magazine.  It tells Dale’s story better than I could: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/dick-dale-surf-guitar-king-dead-obituary-809294/ I saw Dale perform at a small club a few years back.  His band definitely didn’t hold back on the volume!  Treble, reverb, noise showered the crowd.   A beautiful thing.
“A Tab In The Ocean”: a 16 minute opus from the band Nektar.  This is in many ways as much a rock opera as The Who’s “Tommy”.   Riffs and phrases repeat throughout the extended length song.  Monster riffs, guitars, a majestic organ line, and impassioned singing make this a truly memorable track.  Did Rush get inspiration from this number and apply it toward their own epic composition, “2112”?  You betcha.
“Below” is a nifty, submarine, World War II, ghost story all rolled into one.  A submarine on search and destroy patrol in the Atlantic Ocean seems to be itself a cursed, doomed vehicle.  Creepy events unfold and ghostly ambience abounds as the submarine meets with one disaster after another.  I’ve watched it a couple of times at night and creeped myself out!  Nice performance from Bruce Greenwood as the “new” captain of the boat.
“In Search Of” was a documentary series hosted by actor Leonard Nimoy.  The show ran in the 1970’s and it’s subject matter covered the mysterious, the supernatural, the uncanny and the just plain weird.  Here is a sample episode that pursued the topic of Bigfoot.  I remember watching this program religiously on Sunday evenings and enjoying it immensely.  A precursor to the vast amount of supernatural/docudrama series which populate the cable TV landscape today.  Worth seeking out.
“What is this place?”  It is not as if we haven’t been here before or heard this particular line repeated over and over again in a multitude of movies.  I would have to categorize this sample of dialogue as one of the quite often imitated exclamations of myriad characters who become the mouthpieces of unimaginative script writers.  Call it dependence on cliché, simple laziness or a belated regurgitation of all of the media crap they have ingested over the years but this particular example of puzzled profundity pops up a lot.  Here’s just one example from one of The X-Men movies.  [More]
A camera set to take photographs at select time intervals catches a strange shape rising out of a lake near Loch Ness.  Is it a log, a large fish, a camera aberration?  You be the judge.  The Internet is just full of such mysterious photos/videos that allegedly show proof of mythic beasts.  One day solid proof of such unusual phenomenon may materialize.
Make no mistake about it:  everything has a lifespan.  What was once utilized and depended on will one day outlive its usefulness and figuratively end up on the proverbial scrapheap.  The important thing is that it was all fun while it lasted!  Check out the link to a slideshow which shows old derelict forms of transportation rotting in nature. http://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/article/40-eerie-images-of-abandoned-transportation-from-around-the-world/ss-AApLbTy?ocid=spartanntp#image=40 Meanwhile, check out this video from the Explore With Us channel on YouTube as they continue their beautiful pursuit of exploring old mines, Area 51 and abandoned shacks which they scout out on Google Earth.  Good stuff!
“…and it will not stop coming after you until you are dead!”  Well, that was a line from an ’80’s science fiction film but this REAL!  This weird, robot contraption kind of gives me the creeps.
There has been a lot of discussion lately involving Clint Eastwood’s new film, “American Sniper”.  But Eastwood has had a couple brushes in the past with sniper related elements in his movies.  “Dirty Harry” featured a psycho killer who dispatches a lovely swimming in a pool from long range with a sniper rifle.  “Joe Kidd” contained a character who uses a high powered rifle with a scope in the Old West to pick off victims.  “The Enforcer” was the third picture in the “Dirty Harry” series.  It ends up that Eastwood’s unorthodox cop, Harry Callahan, resorts to utilizing a laz [More]
“Chato’s Land” was a late entry in the Western film genre that had proliferated at the movie theaters for 50 years but started to fall out of favor by the 1970’s.  To draw in viewers who might be lured away by other fare, some of these latter day “oaters” resorted to adding more violence and depravity.   That sensibility shows up in this film, a blood soaked tale of a hastily drawn together posse of cruds who go off in pursuit of a wrongly accused Indian who kills a lawman in their town. As the misbegotten mob gets drawn deeper into his “Land”, a [More]
Until Ken Burns comes around to create the definitive UFO documentary, whet your appetite for extraterrestrial visitation speculation with this 1970’s compendium of still photos, film footage and witness interviews. A lot of zooming and panning across still images of alien abductions and weird encounters taking place are in full representation in this film.  Very serious narration bolsters the claims of pilots, military personnel and civilians that they have been in the presence of other worldly beings and craft.  Nice, electronic music flourishes, combined with canned orchestral passages provide the musical bed for this piece.  It all has a very ’70’s [More]
Hello.  Back after a long absence of laying around.  So as not to strain myself too much, I am sharing a link for an article I found which talks about what the article considers the worst horror movies of all time.  I have to agree with a lot of them and then there are the many that I haven’t seen so I can’t really comment on those. For one, I thought “The Darkness” was not that terrible.  I thought it had some good sequences which built up the tension of an unexpected demon settling in to a family’s home.  Slightly [More]
“Father Christmas” is the great rock band, The Kinks, hamming it up and clowning in their Christmas getups in this satirical music video.  The Kinks’ main songwriter, Ray Davies, wrote this Christmas song in 1977 and its theme and attitude fits the times. Punk rock had basically broken out over the airwaves and this song talks about angry, annoyed kids demanding cash money and no toys for Christmas and beating up and mugging department store Santas and generally behaving very badly.  Punk rock was antiestablishment and Christmas is based on long standing traditions, and,  you get the idea.  The music is very spirited and aggressive and [More]
Dave Brock, longtime Hawkwind guitarist. This concert footage of Hawkwind illustrates their cool use of stage dressing and lights.  I mean, have you ever seen anything like this?  Probably, since this was a tour which ran back in the early 1990’s.  I saw them in a small club in Northern California a few years ago and the intensity of sound volume and shifting, strobing lights and lasers was pretty overwhelming.  I loved it!