Monday, 11 March 2013

Pop Culture Pilgrimage: Marvel Comics

This is the first in what will be a series of articles revolving around the concept of Pop Culture Pilgrimage.  The idea is to highlight pilgrimages based on visiting locations that have been the basis for locations appearing in Pop Culture, or Pop Counter-Culture. 

MARVEL COMICS

Superman lives and operates in Metropolis.  Batman is the protector of Gotham City.  But the Marvel super-heroes, by and large, lived and and jumped around in a real city, Manhattan, New York.  Sure, Gotham City has been described by Dennis O'Neil in these terms, "Batman's Gotham City is Manhattan below Fourteenth Street at eleven minutes past midnight on the coldest night in November."  This is the mood Gotham is intended to establish, and the term "Gotham" itself was a well-known nickname for New York city, even before Batman was published.  







But it remains a fictional city.  Manhattan, however, is very real, and the various locations depicted in Marvel Comics can be visited.  

Some of the locations, and street names, have been fictionalised.  The infamous Yancy Street, home of the Yancy Street Gang and former stomping ground of The Thing, doesn't exist.  But there is a Delancey Street on Manhattan's Lower East Side, which probably served as the inspiration for Yancy Street, and Fantastic Four co-creator Jack Kirby was born in the Delancey Street neighbourhood.  Similarly, the Daily Bugle (where Peter Parker used to work as a photographer) has a real address (East 39th Street and Second Avenue) but in the real Manhattan there is an apartment block at that address.  The movie placed the Daily Bugle in the Flatiron Building on 23rd Street, which in the comics served as the site of the offices of Damage Control Inc.  Spider-Man and Doctor Octopus have also battled on this building (Deadline #2, July 2002).  The Baxter Building (the headquarters of the Fantastic Four), Doctor Strange's Sanctum Sanctorium and the Avengers mansion also have real addresses, but don't actually exist.


But there are plenty of Manhattan buildings and landmarks that have been woven into Marvel history and fame.  The Green Goblin threw Gwen Stacy to her death from the Brooklyn Bridge (Amazing Spider-Man #121, 1973).  Spider-Man and Mary Jane Watson were married on the steps of City Hall (Amazing Spider-Man Annual #21, 1987).  Many Marvel stories have taken place around the World Trade Center, and the destruction of the World Trade Center in real life was also depicted in Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #36 2001.  Daredevil's stomping ground (and Nick Fury's birthplace) of Hell's Kitchen is a real location, currently referred to as "Clinton" by its residents.  The Egyptian god Seth attempted to destroy the United Nations (Moon Knight vol. 4, #4, 1998), which was only one of numerous adventures set at the United Nations.  Daredevil was lured to Madison Square Garden by Bullseye and their battle was broadcast on live television (Daredevil vol 1, #131, 1976).  Howard the Duck crash-landed in Central Park (Howard the Duck vol. 1, #18, 1977).  Central Park also hosted the Beyonder's alien construct (in Sheep Meadow, to be precise) which he used to teleport heroes and villains to Battleworld for the original Secret Wars.  The Absorbing Man and Titania tried to steal a life-size golden bull from the Guggenheim Museum (Thor #447-48, 1992).  Sam Wilson (The Falcon) and Joe "Robbie" Robertson were born and raised in Harlem.  And so on and so on and so on.  

Lest we forget, the location of Marvel Comics itself, currently 417 Fifth Avenue, is also worth a visit.  They used to do tours of the 'Bullpen', and when I did it in 1996, they had the poor jerk conducting the guide dressed up as Spider-Man.  A quick google-fu informs me that they no longer do tours, but it would be still worth a visit just to say that you had been there.  I've heard stalking gets results...

And the Bullpen has appeared in Marvel Comics stories itself, most notably Fantastic Four #10 1963, featuring Doctor Doom, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.  


But all of this has been covered in a guide book.  "The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City" by Peter Sanderson is the definitive guide to stomping around New York City and visiting real and nearly real locations depicted in Marvel comics.  



But for the less enthusiastic, who may wish to add, you know, 'other things' into their New York visit, there is this map here, originally published in Wizard Magazine, issue #199, which gives you the basics.



And if you're going , you may as well do it in costume.  Don't be shy, now...


All images used without permission but with love and respect.  Please don't sue me.  Copyright by original copyright holders.  One would assume.







Friday, 15 February 2013

Pink Floyd Heavy Metal Covers

Here's the playlist for my show, which aired on the 13th of Feb, 2013.

The Music Monster that is Pink Floyd covered by heavy metal bands?  Now there's a great idea for a show. 'The Nile Song', from Pink Floyd's 'Soundtrack from the Film More' (has anyone actually seen that movie?), is probably the heaviest Floyd song recorded, and lends itself to being covered by a heavy metal band.  And both Floyd and Heavy Metal are steeped in psychedelia, even if they went off in different directions.

Regardless of similarities, Pink Floyd have a towering repertoire of songs that can stand the test of various covers, and there's no shortage of great bands out there who have risen to the challenge.

A great place to start is a compilation entitled 'Like Black Holes In The Sky: A Tribute to Syd Barrett' featuring great artists covering Syd Barratt and Pink Floyd tracks.  A number of which appeared on my show and on this list.  Enjoy!

Most of the clips feature just the music, only one or two feature any video to speak of.  But, hey, the music, right?


1. Interstellar Overdrive - Kylesa


2. Welcome To The Machine - Shadows Fall


3. The Nile Song - Voivod


4. Another Brick In The Wall - Stahlhammer


5. Us And Them - Misery Signals


6. Welcome To The Machine - Queensryche

7. When You're In - Tiamat



8.  Fearless - Fish (ex. Marillion)


9. Cymbaline - Hawkwind


10. Arnold Layne - Intronaut

 
11. Time - Godsmack


12. High Hopes - Aesthetic Empathy


13. Run Like Hell - Kittie


14. On The Turning Away - Vanishing Point


15. One Of The Few - Angkagram


16. Chapter 24 - Jesu (feat. Justin Broadrick)


17. Any Colour You Like - Dream Theater


18. Astronomy Domine - Dredg


19. Another Brick In The Wall - Acid Drinkers


20. Astronomy Domine - Voivod
 
21. See Emily Play - Zodiak


22. Another Brick In The Wall - Korn

Amen!


Wednesday, 6 February 2013

The 2013 Hide and Seek Champion!

And the winner of the 2013 Hide and Seek Championship goes to...
King Richard III, with a new record of 528 years!  Well Done!


Saturday, 19 January 2013

Alestorm, Melbourne 18 Jan 2013

Scottish Pirate Metal band Alestorm swashbuckled into Port O' Melbourne on the 18th of January and keelhauled every pirate cliche they could at a surging DVD shoot.  Supported by the epic Barbarion, everyone had a jolly rogering time, yarr (insert your own pirate cliches here).



























 Invisible Pineapples!


 Invisible WHAT?!?








 Wall Of Death.  Why wouldn't a Scottish band call this a Braveheart Mosh?


 Are you ready for Barbarion?  Support act of the Century!


 Francesco Gionfriddo, looking like Dionysus himself, bellows a liturgy to the joys of the Vine, and the Distillery, and the Brewery, and the Tavern.














 Ahoy!  

My images do not belong to the Public Domain. All material in this portfolio is owned and © copyrighted by Peter Pascoe (Doctor Pedro). Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from myself is prohibited by law. All rights reserved.



Friday, 21 December 2012

Playlist for the 19th, guest programmers ABREACT


Heavy Metal Radio Show
Sleeping In The Fire

Guest Stars

ABREACT

Once again, Simon and Lee from ABREACT stormed onto my heavy metal radio show and took control.  The Boys from bendigo are making big moves, and their debut album is out. 

You can check it out here!

They played some tracks from their new album, they played some tracks from some other local artists, some of their favourites from international acts as well.

Remnants - ABREACT
Wolves At My Door - Converge
Transition - S E R I E S
Words And Phrases - Raised Fist
Shura - House Of Thumbs
Weight Of Disturbance - ABREACT
Asphyxiate - Artilah
Underwater Bimbos From Outer Space - Every Time I Die
Cull - ABREACT
Deathstar - Sevendust
Hollow - Alice In Chains
The Grit That Grinds - ABREACT
Scar The Surface - Disolved
For Those...(Dead On The Way) - ABREACT

Now there's a cool way to spend a Wednesday evening.

Check out the Facebook page for the show here

You're Welcome.


Saturday, 24 November 2012

Heavy Metal Halloween 2012


Another year gone, and the 3rd Annual 'Sleeping in the Fire' Halloween Special has been and gone, with some inescapable tracks, and some fresh additions.  Enjoy my playlist which aired on Halloween itself, nicely timed. 

Intro / A Cautionary Tale - Sabbat

It had to be done (again).  It's the perfect intro for a Halloween Special.

Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath

Another must play song.  Classic!

Night Crawler - Judas Priest

Great Intro.  It didn't make it in the list for the last couple of years, it had to be done this year.


Don't Fear the Reaper - Blue Oyster Cult

I played 'The Siege and Investiture of Baron Von Frankenstein's Castle at Wesseria' last year from the under-the-radar classic BOC album 'Imaginos'.  This year, I returned to the old reliable.


Bewitched - Candlemass

A cheesy, chunky song made for spooky holidays

Halloween - King Diamond

Another must-play track.  Oh, KD, you loveable, satanic goofball, you...

Come To The Sabbath - Mercyful Fate

A KD double feature?  Hell(oween) yeah!

Halloween - Helloween

I'd have my Heavy Metal Weilding Licence revoked if I didn't play this one.  Unavoidable.


Trick Or Treat - Fastway

Getting all the classics out of the way...


Ghostbusters - Vomitron

Ah Ha!  A recently-discovered track that fits in perfectly with the Heavy Metal Holiday.

The Big Bad Wolf - Macabre

Such Big Eyes!  Macabre are a great choice again.

Zombie Attack - Tankard

For the intro alone.  And it's a great song as well.  Also goes well with the Easter Zombie Special.

Vlad The Impaler - GWAR

All the classic scary characters get a song.  And performed by a bunch of guys who are arguably even scarier.

Jack The Ripper - Hobbs Angel Of Death

Melbourne's own with their ode to the original slasher.

Horrorshow - Hallow's Eve

The name says it all.


It's not a Halloween without a Cannibal Corpse song, preferrably about zombies.  No shortage to choose from...

The Exorcist - Possessed

Another atmospheric addition to the list.

Lost Reflection - Crimson Glory

Not exactly in line thematically, but a major atmospheric addition, this haunting (no pun intended) (well, maybe a little) track deserves a spot nonetheless.


Hatework - Morbid Angel

Pure evil in a song.  No-one does evil music quite like Morbid Angel, fast or slow.


Under Bergets Rot - Finntroll

Infectious song from Finntroll, with just the right mix of carnival, spooky and trolls.

Draculea - Necrodeath

Another great intro, and another star of Halloween

A Day Of Night - Battle Of Mice

I love this track all the way through.  It's a great finisher for a show, and the outro is just a little too real for a Halloween Special, but keep 'em on the edge of their seats, I reckon.



Eclipse Australia Port Douglas 2012

Total Solar Eclipse

 14 November 2012

Port Douglas

Far North Queensland

Australia 

Eclipse travelling can be frustrating.  I have heard somewhere, that if you stay in the one location, a total solar eclipse will happen once every 400 years.  So, if you really want to see one, you will most probably have to travel to see one.  You, and lots of other people.  So organising a trip to a location lucky enough to have a solar eclipse has a little more aggravation than a regular trip will entail.  Hotels will raise their prices for the occasion, everything else becomes more expensive, as locations cash in, and at the end of the day, the entire event can be utterly ruined by the weather.

This happened for my first Solar Eclipse trip to Tanegashima, Japan on the 22nd of July 2009.  This was the 'Eclipse of the Century' with 6 minutes of totality.  I was living in Japan at the time, in Tokyo, and the effort involved in organising a trip there, and back (which had to be organised separately), was arduous enough to earn me a brief interview on Bloomberg News at the time.  And, for all that, on the day, it was completely overcast and raining.

On the morning of the 14th of November, on 4 mile beach, Port Douglas, for the morning of the eclipse, it was cloudy all along the horizon.  There were breaks in the clouds, but it looked as if a large band of cloud was going to obscure the eclipse, and I was resigned to having travelled only to miss another eclipse. 

And then, there was a miracle break in the clouds for exactly 2 minutes, for the 2 minutes of totality.  It was a beautiful sight to behold, an impossible object hanging in the sky with weird light.  Words fail, and pictures, honestly, do no justice.  But I tried.

The following shots are of the same eclipse, but I played with the colour balance of each for effect, with the exception of the first shot, which is an unaltered crop.
















Port Douglas is gateway to the Daintree Forest, one of the oldest rainforest in the world.  It would have been rude not to visit...




World Heritage Mossman Gorge is nestled in the Daintree Forest




Cape Tribulation is about as far north as you can travel along the coast without a 4WD



Along the Captain Cook Highway, coming into Cairns...



And a day out on Agincourt Reef, on the edge of the Great Barrier Reef was also on the cards.  Agincourt Reef is on the edge of the Continental Shelf, where you can see the reef drop off into the depths of the Pacific Ocean.



























 My images do not belong to the Public Domain. All images in this portfolio are owned and © copyrighted by Peter Pascoe. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from myself is prohibited by law. All rights reserved.