Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Month: August 2012 (Page 2 of 2)

Sunday Evening Video: In The Company Of Wolves Preview Radio Free Charleston’s Next Three Shows

In The Company of Wolves performs their song, “Holding On To You,” at St. Albans City Park Amphitheater on August 11, 2012. This was part of the Tribute To The Troops, presented by Wood Boys Music. More of this day-long concert will be seen on Radio Free Charleston starting August 27, 2012. This song won’t actually be in those shows, but you will see two more songs from In The Company Of Wolves, along with music by HarraH, Deck of Fools, Remains Unnamed, Breedlove, The Under Social, Everpulse, Johnny Compton, Point Of Jerus and Candace Weaver.

The three-episode special begins in about a week, and you can expect three weeks of great live music on RFC.

August ArtWalk Photo Essay

The PopCulteer
August 17, 2012

Thursday saw the August edition of Charleston’s ArtWalk, and it was another great evening of art and socializing. From the cool, macabre photography of Sally Wisher and art of Tyrone Scott(seen right)  at Good News Mountaineer Garage Gallery to the Charleston chapter of the National League of Pen Women at Art Emporium, It was an impressive tour of Downtown Charleston’s art galleries.

We didn’t make it to all the galleries this month, but we hit most of them.

With minimal words, we present this month’s ArtWalk photo essay… Continue reading

Monday Morning Art: Cool Birthday

Today is your PopCulteer’s birthday, a milestone one, in fact, so today’s art is completely self-indulgent. It’s a digital collage/painting of the PopCult birthday party, featuring Captain Marvel, Bettie Page, Robot B-9, The Beatles circa Yellow Submarine, The Yellow Submarine, The Batmobile, figures from the cover of “Kirby Unleashed,” a book by Jack Kirby, Steve Rude and Mike Baron’s Nexus, Popeye, Gumby and Pokey, The GI Joe Adventure Team and Helicoptor, Quisp, two Tex Avery redheads, a Tex Avery wolf, Ren and Stimpy, Finn and Jake, Benson from The Regular Show, Lenny Bruce, The Metal Men, Kate Bush, DEVO, Robby The Robot, Two Stupid Dogs and the crew from Funny Face Drink Mix. And these were just the folks who showed up early.

Images are swiped from all over the web. Acknowlegements to the work of C.C. Beck, Irving Klaw, Jack Kirby, Steve Rude, John Kricfalusi, Donovan Cook, Ross Andru and Mike Esposito, Pendleton Ward, Preston Blair, Tex Avery, Heinz Edlemann, Art Clokey, Bud Sagendorff, Jay Ward, George Barris, and many others.

Click to enlarge, and happy birthday to me.

Stuff To Do, Pizza Talk, Vintage Music Video and Dirty, Filthy Comics

The PopCulteer
August 10, 2012

Your PopCulteer is preparing for a milestone birthday this weekend, so we’re taking it a little easy with the column.  Bear with us.  We’re old.

Stuff to Do

As we told you last week, there’s big goin’s on this Saturday.  Starting at 10:00 AM, Wood Boys Music presents “Tribute to the Troops II” at St. Albans City Park Ampitheater.  Running from 10:00 AM to 9:00 PM, this fundraiser for the Wounded Warrior Project will feature several Radio Free Charleston guests like HARRAH, Godmode Broadway, Johnny Compton, Stacee Lawson, In The Company of Wolves, Remains UnNamed, and a boatload of other great local and regional acts.  Admission is free, but a minimum five dollar donation gets you a bonus gift and you’ll be helping out a great cause.

Saturday night at the Walker Theater at the Clay Center, Hooters presents the No Pants Players dirty, filthy, nasty Adult Show.  This will be an evening of West Virginia’s premiere improv troupe turning off the filters and spewing out all the nasty comedy bits that they’re actually thinking but not allowed to say when doing a family friendly show. Tickets are $12 and you may want to order them in advance at the No Pants Players website, because if you show up and the show is sold out, not only will you not get in, but they will make really nasty jokes about you behind your back.

Even later Saturday night, The Tom McGees are holding their CD release party at The Empty Glass, starting at 10:00 PM with support from Dinosaur Burps, Time and Distance, Foz Rotten, and InFormation.  Cover charge is $5.  For a great review of The Tom McGees new CD, check out what Nick Harrah said. And also check out this interview with the band by James Vernon Brown and Liquid Canvas…

Jumping back to Friday, Sasha Collette will be performing a free show at Taylor Books from 7:30 to 9:30 PM.  The Snake and The Pot bring their belly dance fusion music to the upstairs lounge at Little India starting at 9:30 PM.  The jazz electronica sounds of The Skee Tones comes to The Empty Glass at 11:00 PM with their usual sliding $7/$5 cover charge.  Also, “Good Night Grover’s Corners” wraps up its run Friday and Saturday nights at the WVSU Capitol Center Theater.

More friends of Radio Free Charleston, our local Beatles tribute band Rubber Soul, will be performing for free at the Mound in South Charleston next Wednesday at 8:30 PM to kick off SummerFest.

The Politics of Pizza

This week’s fast food fuss has been a controversy over comments by Papa John’s founder and CEO, John Schnatter, a big supporter of Mitt Romney who criticized Obamacare by whining loudly that it might force him to raise the price of a pizza as much as fifteen cents.  I’ll leave it to Mark Evanier to sum up the absurdity of such a complaint in his opinion piece, which you can read here.

However, I don’t think this is a situation that requires a boycott.  Papa John’s is not donating money to hate groups who advocate genocide, like Chick-Fil-A does.  So this is not “Chick-Fil-A Show Part Two.”  I don’t feel the need to boycott a business simply because their owner disagrees with me about which presidential candidate is the lesser of two evils.  But I won’t ever spend any more of my money at Papa John’s.

It’s because their pizza sucks.  Seriously, it may be the second or third worst pizza available in the valley.  I mean, sure, it might taste marginally better than Little Caesar’s, but at least Little Caesar’s has enough respect for your intelligence to only charge five bucks for their crappy pizza.  Papa John’s is not only awful pizza, but it’s also damned expensive.

We live in a area that is blessed with a plethora of locally-owned, high-quality pizza establishments, all of which have their own identity and charm.  Why the hell would anybody throw their money away on Papa John’s vile disc of compressed vomit when you could, for usually less money, get a terrific pizza from Graziano’s, Barone Brothers Pizza (as seen in RFC 165), Slyce Pizza Company, Lola’s, Pies and Pints, Piro Pizzaria, Pizza Barbarosa, Mama Rosa’s, Husson’s, or Giovanni’s.

And if you must have pizza from a national chain, why spend more money for the cardboard-like offerings of Papa John’s when you can get pretty decent pizzas from Pizza Hut and Domino’s for less money?

This isn’t a boycott.  It’s a matter of taste.

Radio Free Charleston Flashbacks

Hey, didja see the latest episode of Radio Free Charleston?  If not, take a look…

This episode is largely comprised of vintage live footage of the legendary Clownhole, shot at the legendary Charleston Playhouse.  Thanks again go out to Randy Brown for hooking me up with this archival gem.

I want to take a minute here to remind you guys that Radio Free Charleston is open to submissions.  If you have video footage of a current band or a band from long ago that you would like to share with the world, please feel free to contact me.  You can send me a message through the Radio Free Charleston Facebook page and your footage just might wind up on the show.

We would love to see some vintage footage of bands like Big Money, Three Bodies, The Swivel Rockers, Brian Diller and The Ride, The Velvet Brothers, the Putnam County Pickers, Stark Raven, or any of the giants of the Charleston music scene.  Please note that we are also open to submissions of new music videos by current bands.  Our cameras can’t be everywhere.

Our Buddy Mitch and His Sexy Comic Book Collection

We leave you this week with a link to a particularly hilarious collection of comic book panels taken out of context by our buddy Mitch O’Connell (who has a career retrospective book coming out soon, by the way).

Mitch has carefully chosen over a hundred comic book panels taken from a variety of sources which, when viewed out of context, take on unintended, hilarious, and suggestive new meanings.

That’s it for this PopCulteer.  We’ll see you next week with our ArtWalk photo essay and a couple of reviews, plus our usual Sunday and Monday features.

RFC 165 Presents Clownhole, circa 1989

Clownhole at the Playhouse

This week we present what might be my most self-indulgent episode of Radio Free Charleston. “Wild Adventure Shirt” breaks our usual format and uses a skit to set up vintage footage of a 1989 concert at the legendary and defunct Charleston Playhouse by the band Clownhole.

Clownhole was a punk trio consisting of drummer Randy Brown, bassist Chris (Flair) Canfield, and Defectors veteran John (Sham Voodoo) Estep. This concert was held during the Christmas season in 1989 and recently fell into my lap when Randy got in touch with me and put a copy of it in my hands.

A gambling parlor now stands at the site of The Charleston Playhouse

This is pure nostalgic glee for me. The Charleston Playhouse, which I’ve written about here in PopCult almost since day one, was a very important place in my life. I met many lifelong friends there and even met the love of my life, my fiance’ Melanie Larch, about two weeks after this concert took place.

Continue reading

Monday Morning Art: Turmoil Road

This week’s artistic appetizer is a digital painting, a semiabstract view of a road. Click to see it larger.

Check back later today in PopCult for the latest episode of Radio Free Charlestonm “Wild Adventure Shirt,” which contains an extended vintage concert by the band, Clownhole, at The Charleston Playhouse in 1989. A framing sequence stars me, Kity Killton and Melanie Larch. You won’t want to miss it.

Eight Items To Hold You

The PopCulteer
August 3, 2012

Your PopCulteer is wrapped up in several demanding projects this week, not the least of which is the production of what might well be the most self-indulgent episode of Radio Free Charleston ever. So this edition of our weekly blog/column is going to consist of random items thrown together at the last minute. Enjoy!

1) Good Night Grover’s Corner

The Contemporary Youth Arts Company presents a new production of what many people consider to be Dan Kehde’s most moving work, “Good Night Grover’s Corner.” It opened last night, and continues through next week. For more details we quote from the Facebook events page, “One October evening in a hillside cemetery overlooking their hometown, the spirits of 7 young people remember their friend as they try to find a meaning for his death in the Afghani War and, instead, discover the hypocrisies that led to it.

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