Rudy Panucci On Pop Culture

Month: June 2023 (Page 3 of 4)

Sunday Evening Video: Wall of Voodoo

A little birdie tells me that an upcoming episode of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat will be devoted to the legendary American New Wave band, Wall of Voodoo. Since I am a big fan of both incarnations of the band, the first one fronted by Stan Ridgeway, and the revamped line-up fronted by Andy Prieboy, this week we’re going to give you a preview of sorts by bringing you two short concert videos…one from each version of the band.

Above you see the band performing at the US Fesitval in 1983, with Stan Ridgeway on vocals.

Below you see the band, fronted by Andy Prieboy, live in Munich in 1986.

The WoV episode of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat will probably debut a week from Friday.

The RFC Flashback: Episode Twenty-Nine

We continue along with our chronological run through The RFC Flashback with Radio Free Charleston episode 29, “Pirate Outfit,” from October, 2007. This was our second Halloween special,

This classic RFC features appropriately scary music from legendary Charleston band Big Money (featuring Michael Lipton) and local rapper Lil Guy from South Park Enterprise. Plus, we have scenes from the Radio Free Charleston 2007 Halloween party at the late, lamented Capitol Roasters Cafe, where we hi-jacked a Whistlepunk show.

rudypirateOur host segments were taped that night, which was chock full o’ costumed frivolity. On top of that, you’ll find our usual mind-hurting weirdness and animation, with a sinister holiday bent. The party was quite loud, and you can barely hear our host in some segments.

In this episode you will also hear a snippet of Whistlepunk during the end credits. We did hi-jack their show and turn it into the RFC Halloween party, so we couldn’t very well leave them out of the episode. You’ll hear them doing the song “Lost.”

seannchelThere’s more than just music on the show. You’ll also get to see a commercial that loudly promises “Shrunken Heads for all occasions!” A lovely Geisha (Kitty Killton) and a Japanese robot (Sean Richardson) introduce our animation, which was created by mystery men.  Also, an evil puppet turns Rudy into Jared Leto.

Right at the beginning of the show Raymond Wallace nearly destroys Rudy and RFC camera-person Melanie Larch by delivering a two-word ad lib that we had to try desperately to ignore. A Gladiator and a Ghostbuster walk into a coffee shop.  Subtitles take on a life of their own. This episode was remastered in October, 2013. Original production notes can be found HERE.

MIRRORBALL Mixes It Up With The Village People Friday

The PopCulteer
June 9, 2023

Mel Larch returns Friday with a new episode of MIRRORBALL devoted to a group of guys who made a huge mark on pop culture, The Village People.

In a bit of a nod to Pride Month, Friday at 2 PM on The AIR, Mel Larch devotes a full hour to the music of The Village People on the Disco Showcase, MIRRORBALL. The AIR is PopCult‘s sister radio station. You can hear these shows on The AIR website, or just click on the embedded player found elsewhere on this page.

Rising up from the underground Gay scene of New York’s Greenwich Village, the Village People took their music and their message into the mainstream.

Conceived by Jacques Morali and his business partner Henri Belolo, The Village People sparked to life with the discovery of lead singer, Victor Willis. Soon Willis, dressed as a cop, was joined by The Indian, The Construction Worker, The GI, The Cowboy and The Leatherman, and a pop culture legend was born. Appearances on all the top TV shows, as well as a Bob Hope USO Tour, were groundbreaking in bringing Gay awareness into the average American’s living room.

In addition, their catchy tunes had a good beat, and man could you dance to them.

Check out the playlist…

MIRRORBALL 077

The Village People
“In The Navy”
“Can’t Stop The Music”
“San Francisco (You’ve Got Me)”
“Hot Cop”
“Macho Man”
“I Am What I Am”
“Milkshake”
“Village People”
“Medley “Just A Gigalo/I Ain’t Got Nobody”
“Fire Island”
“Go West”
“YMCA”

You can hear MIRRORBALL every Friday at 2 PM, with replays throughout the following week Monday at 9 AM and Tuesday at 1 PM.

This weekend MIRRORBALL will trade places with Mel’s other show, Curtain Call, and will have a six-hour marathon, anchored with this new episode, Sunday night beginning at 6 PM.  Curtain Call will take over the Saturday 9 PM timeslot, so that it won’t be running opposite this year’s Tony Awards on CBS.

At 3 PM we bring you an encore of a classic episode of Sydney’s Big Electric Cat from January, 2018.  This was special show where Sydney Fileen devoted her entire two hours to the music of Talking Heads. Sadly, the playlist for this one is not readily available, so you’ll just have to tune in and write down all the songs yourself.

Sydney’s Big Electric Cat is produced at Haversham Recording Institute in London, and can be heard every Friday at 3 PM, with replays Saturday afternoon, Monday at 7 AM, Tuesday at 8 PM, Wednesday at Noon and Thursday at 10 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Two classic episodes can also be heard every Sunday, starting at 10 AM.

And that is this week’s PopCulteer. Check back every day for fresh content.

Super Joe Unlimited, Guitarmy of One and Haunted Heaps Kickstarter Alert!

We have three cool Kickstarter projects to tell you about today.  Let’s see what happens when a comic book, a surf-guitar album and a trading card set walk into a PopCult post.

Two are from proven creators that we’ve plugged here in the past, while the third is long-awaited launch of a comic book based on a toy I’ve told you a lot about lately. That campaign just launched today, while the other two have less than two weeks left, so let’s just jump in, because these are really nifty things, indeed.

Super Joe Unlimited

Originally introduced in 1977 as “…a new team: the SUPER JOE ADVENTURE TEAM answers the call anywhere in the galaxy,” Super Joe was the amazing, but short-lived follow-up to the 12 inch G.I. Joe.

It consisted of eight different figures: Super Joe Commander (white and black); Super Joe Adventurer (white and black); The Night Fighters (Shield and Luminos); and Darkon and Gor (the enemies of the Super Joe team). Each figure came with features new to action figures at the time, the “1-2 Punch” and “light-up action.”

I’ve been telling you about the toy revival of Super Joe for months, and I’ve mentioned the comic book, back when the preview poster of the cover of the first issue was sold at ToyLanta. Now the time has come to launch the campaign to get this book into the hands of the collectors. From Power Comics, the folks who brought us The Masters, comes Super Joe Unlimited.

First, the premise:

The year is 2100, and the world has been at peace for decades due to the success of the previous generation’s superheroes. These mightiest of Earth’s mortals achieved what no other generation could; decades-long peace and harmony amongst all it’s people.

That time of peace and harmony was so successful that superheroes became obsolete; a thing of the past, resigned to the subject of bedtime stories parents tell their children at night. As the world’s greatest super heroes grew old, retired, and passed away, there were no new superheroes coming up to take their place. There was simply no need.

But nothing lasts forever. We all know that the universe abhors a vacuum, and one fateful day the peace and tranquility that humankind had grown so accustomed to was shattered.

Out of nowhere emerged Darkon, a creature of unknown origin leading an army of summoned monsters called Gors. Darkon and his Gor army attacked the peaceful people of Earth. Civilians, police and the military forces of Earth rose up in defense, but years of peace and the unprecedented power of this invasion rendered the defenders nearly powerless.

While the defenders of Earth tried to hold back Darkon’s army, the world’s greatest minds gathered in a desperate attempt to understand the attackers, and figure out how to save humanity. No consensus could be reached as to what the attackers really were; transformed humans? Demons? Aliens? Something else? Evidence for and against each explanation was produced to no final agreement.

While the nature of the attackers was unclear, what was clear was Earth was losing this battle. So desperate was the situation that one scientist was forced to speak up and reveal a deep secret that might present a solution. He revealed a secret project he ran years before, not sponsored or sanctioned by any government.

The project was a study in the nature of the superheroes of old; the genetic markers in humanity that could lead to the development of super powers, and the environmental factors that would drive such development. Using carefully-hoarded samples of superhero blood, and samples of the general population, the team was able to find the links, isolate them, and use them to create first clones of famous super heroes of the past, and with later refinements, a new generation of super heroes with even more versatile powers and intelligence. The Super Joe project, as it was code-named, had created a small army of superior clones; an entire army of Super Joes.

While the scientist and others on the Super Joe project team felt they had achieved success, they also had strong ethical concerns about what they had done, as well as concerns about potential safety risks to the non-enhanced populace. This caused the team to place the Super Joes into cryogenic suspension, where they remained until now, held in reserve in case of an insurmountable threat to the people of Earth.

Now, with the armies of Darkon threatening the remaining free nations of Earth, the scientist revealed the secret Super Joe army, realizing that only they could turn the tide of this war. The Super Joes would now be awoken and called upon to save the world. Their time had arrived!

The creative team includes some classic Bronze Age artists, alongside some talented newcomers:  Bob Hall, Steven Butler, Geoff Isherwood, Netho Diaz, James Brown, Austin Hough and more have all contributed to this title.

There are loads of add-on rewards, in addition to the comic book. You can get limited edition figures, new Super Joe Unlimited figures, vintage figures and accessories, reduced-price admissions to JoeLanta (in August), collector coins, Randall Wall-designed ArtLab playsets, original art from the comic book and more. Kick in early, some of the higher tiers are limited.

Guitarmy of One  The Wave Files

Next up we have the second album from Scott Helland’s Guitarmy of One project, The Wave Files.  Scott is also known as “The Punk” of “Frenchy and” fame, and his first Guitarmy of One album kicked at least three dozen distinct and impressive kinds of ass.  Here’s what Scott says about the new album:

This new record will feature 10 brand new original songs that have more of a surf guitar influence than my 2021 ‘The Spy Detective Collective’ record. The Wave Files theme is espionage on the open sea and the song titles reference 60s and 70s spy and detective shows like Kolchak the Nightstalker in the song ‘Kolchak meets the Sea Mobster’, Hawaii 50 in ‘Jack Lord of the Sea’, Soylent Green in “Soylent Seafoam Green’ and The Saint in ‘Seance for the Saint’, as well as real life mobsters like Legs Diamond in ‘Sea Legs Diamond’.

I want this record to be your new favorite instrumental Surf Spy guitar album!

There are 12 days left in this campaign, and it’s well past the halfway point in terms of funding.  Scott’s offering a variety of reward tiers, from getting a single tune to racking up the whole album on CD, USB Flashdrive, or just the files. At higher tiers you can get t-shirts, hoodies, patches, beach towels, tote bags, Notebooks and even UNDERWEARS!

Check out the video below, then go pledge. We all want to hear this album!

Fearsome Weirdos Haunted Heaps

Robert Jimenez is back with the latest entry in his Fearsome Weirdos trading card series, Haunted Heaps.

For the last few years Jimenez has been producing his own really cool trading card sets and successfully funding them on Kickstarter. He’s built up a huge fanbase for his Fearsome Weirdos, Ghouls of Yule, Startling Lineup and other cool sets. Now he’s turned his focus on hot rods.  Fearsome Weirdos Haunted Heaps is a 24 card set, with an additional 8 card product parody subset. This is Jimenez taking on the world of Weird-Ohs and Nutty Mads, only with his own macabre twist.

Haunted Heaps is the 5th Fearsome Weirdos set. It’s a collection of Macabre Motorists and their Vile Vehicles.

The base set is made up of a Wrapper/Checklist15 Character Cards8 Devilish Delivery Vehicles and an 8 card subset, Gruesome Groceries, which highlights those products being delivered. The set also includes a lenticular card, a holographic sticker and a promo card, all packaged in a tuck box! Also available as rewards and add-ons are sketch cards, past Fearsome Weirdos sets, original art, a coloring book and more!

The set is written and illustrated by Jimenez with some writing assists by Paul Harris and Peter Zeis.

With eleven days left to go in the campaign, this project is already hella-funded, exceeding its goal by a factor of five, so you know you’ll get your rewards.  Aside from pointing you to the campaign page and posting the video below, I can’t write much more here because I’ve got a short piece on this set coming up in the next Non Sport Update magazine.  So go support it. You know what to do.

 

 

STUFF TO DO The First Weekend of FestivALL

We are squeezing out the last few days of Spring, and there’s a Canadian-supplied weird haze in the air, but it’s time once again for your guide to things you can do in and around Charleston and maybe further afield.

In Charleston, FestivALL kicks off this weekend, and rather than repeat the many, many things I’ve written about this cool arts festival in Charleston over the years, I’m just going to point you to their website, and let them do all the heavy lifting.

Over the summer there are many festivals all over the state, and your humble blogger will strive to tell you about them even though stuff that happens out of doors is not exactly in his wheelhouse and he has to dig to find info and graphics for such things.

Live Music is back at Taylor Books. There is no cover charge, and shows start at 7:30 PM. Friday it’s Andrew Pauley. Saturday Ken Kruger and Anne McConnell entertain the crowd at Charleston’s beloved Bookstore/Coffee Shop/Art Gallery.

The World Famous Empty Glass Cafe has some great stuff through the week to tell you about.  Thursday from 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM, Swingstein and Robin play fiddle and piano and sing swing and early jazz standards. Each week they donate their tips to a local nonprofit or worthy cause.  Friday Tim Courts plays during happy hour.  Saturday BRRO will be hitting the stage and delivering folkie rock and blues elements featuring sweet electric viola solos and smooth bass licks.  Next week The Empty Glass has an open mic hosted by Eric Robbins on Monday  and Tuesday sees Songwriter Showcase with Chet Lowther. Check the graphics below for cool shows at the Glass Thursday and Friday.

Please remember that the pandemic is not over yet. It’s still a going concern. And now there are seasonal allergies, the flu, raging wildfires, global climate castrophes and other damned good reasons to be careful. Many people who have very good reasons are still wearing masks, and many of us, understandably, are still nervous about being in crowds, masked or not. Be kind and understanding  while you’re out.

If you’re up for going out, here are a few suggestions for the rest of this week, roughly in order.

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

Continue reading

Women Sing The Beatles, Curtain Call Salutes Tina Turner

Wednesday afternoon, The AIR brings you new episodes of Curtain Call and Beatles Blast.  You can tune in at the website, or you could just stay right here and  listen to the convenient embedded radio player lurking elsewhere on this page.

At 2 PM (EDT) Beatles Blast brings you a mixtape with female vocalists tackling Beatles classics. Some are faithful covers, while others are drastic reinterpretations.

The idea for this show came to me after I discovered the incredible rendition of “Eleanor Rigby” that opens our show. Erin Hill is an acclaimed harpist/vocalist/actor who has a resume as long as your arm, on stage, screen (big and small) and with music. Plus she’s also a regular at DragonCon and is firmly enmeshed in the type of pop culture we cover in this blog.

She also has created a great music video that mimics some of the classic elements of the song that you see in The Yellow Submarine feature film.

It’s so good that I’m embedding it here…

Thus inspired, and realizing that I hadn’t put together a show with all female vocals before, I assembled the following playlist, featuring some incredible female voices singing some of the best Beatles tunes.  I include a couple of tracks sung by Tina Turner, since we’re paying tribute to her this week on Curtain Call, too.

This is a topic that I’m sure I’ll revisit in the future…

Beatles Blast 095

Erin Hill “Eleanor Rigby”
Tina Turner “Come Together”
My Brightest Diamond “Everybody’s Got Something To Hide”
Gwen Guthrie “Ticket To Ride”
Pretenders “Not A Second Time”
Lucy Kapalansky “I’ve Just Seen A Face”
Heather Nova “We Can Work It Out”
Sheryl Crow “Mother Nature’s Son”
Low “Nowhere Man”
Barbara Casini “Do You Want To Know A Secret”
The Carpenters “Can’t Buy Me Love”
The Runaways “Eight Days A Week”
Rita Lee “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”
Michelle Shocked “Lovely Rita”
Martha & The Vandellas “Something”
Fancy “All My Loving”
Dawn Penn “Here Comes The Sun”
Tina Turner “Help”

Beatles Blast can be heard every Wednesday at 2 PM, with replays Thursday at 11 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday afternoon.

At 3 PM (EDT) on Curtain Call, Mel Larch devotes her entire show to highlights of the London Cast Recording of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical.

Anna Mae Bullock passed away last month, but you may know her by her stage name, Tina Turner.

So legendary was her career and so remarkable her life that she inspired a musical. Tina: The Tina Turner Musical opened in London in 2018 and on Broadway the following year. This week, to pay tribute to one of the most powerful singers to ever walk the Earth, Curtain Call brings you highlights of the Original London Cast Recording of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical.

You’ll hear all her hits, performed in a loving tribute which Miss Turner whole-heartedly approved of.

Curtain Call can be heard on The AIR Wednesday at 3 PM, with replays Thursday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM, Saturday at 8 PM and Monday at 9 AM. A six-hour marathon of classic episodes can be heard Sunday evening starting at 6 PM, and an all-night marathon of Curtain Call episodes can be heard Wednesday nights, beginning at Midnight.

Also on The AIR, Wednesday at 11 PM,  The Comedy Vault once again presents a new episode that I  haven’t produced yet, so there’s no telling what it’ll have in it.  It’s the fun of discovery!

RFC Returns With An All-Local Extravaganza

After our week-long marathon, Radio Free Charleston is back this week on The AIR  as we premiere an all-local and partly-new episode of Radio Free Charleston! You simply have to point your cursor over and tune in at the website, or you could just stay here and  listen to the cool embedded player elsewhere on this page.

We’ve created another new/old hybrid for you this week that you can hear at 10 AM and 10 PM Tuesday. The first hour is filled with new, local music. Hours two and three bring you one of our two-hour all-local episodes of RFC Volume Four, from 2016. Yours truly had his production time truncated by a routine doctor’s appointment, so I was only able to do one new hour this week, and had to schedule encore episodes for The Swing Shift. 

We open with just-released music from William Matheny, the title track from his upcoming album. That’s followed by new tunes from Matt Mullins & The Bringdowns, Buni Muni, Jim Lange, Abandon The Ship, Golden and more.

For our second and third hours I went back and dug up an episode of Radio Free Charleston from 2016, back when The AIR was “Appalachian Independent Radio.” This show hasn’t been heard for over seven years, and I didn’t want to let it languish any longer. It’s loaded with some primo local and regional tracks from years ago. While RFC was supposed to be all-local back then, I stretched the rules to include anybody who had any ties to the Appalachian region, so just go with it.

Check out the playlist below to see all the goodies we have in store (live links will take you to the artist’s pages for the first hour of the show)…

RFC V5 133

hour one
William Matheny “Grand Old Feeling”
Matt Mullins & The Bringdowns “Homesick”
Jim Lange “Easter Sunday Affirmation”
Buni Muni “Heart So Cold”
The Heavy Hitters Band “Liquid Crunchy”
Overvue “Space Race”
Golden “Courtesy”
Abandon The Ship “Goodbye”
Verdeant “Don’t Tell Him”
Massing “Lemon Jose”
The MFB “Star 69”
Corduroy Brown “Survivor’s Guilt”
Law Biting Citizens “I Like You”
The Switch “Speak of the Devil”

hour two
The Laser Beams “The Ballad of Patrick Morrissey”
Under Surveillance “Modern World”
Strawfyssh “Netted Fish”
Trielement “Accidental Chaos”
Hybrid Soul Project “Stay”
Cherry Poppin’ Daddies “Ain’t That A Kick In the Head”
The Science Fair Explosion “Cosmic Girls”
69 Fingers “Average Joe”
The Renfields “Transylvania Fight Song”
Time and Distance “War”
Mother Nang “Peel”
Farnsworth “I’ll Tell You When I’ve Had Enough”
Joe Vallina “On TV”
Boulevard Avenue “Mary Mary”
Billie Vacation “Get Paid”

hour three
Go Van Gogh “Shut Up, I Love You”
Wolfgang Parker “The Father The Son”
Crack The Sky “Invaders From Mars”
Jeff Ellis “Capitol City”
Andy Park and the True Lovers “I Got Some Swag”
Crystal Bright and the Silver Hands “Adungo”
Government Cheese “Camping On Acid”
Snakebox “Dead Planet”
Blue Million “Down To A Groove”
Scooter Scudieri “Ancient Ritual”
Michael Cerveris “Atlas”
Super Heavy Duty “Here I Be”
Three Bodies “Gardens of Hope”

You can hear this episode of Radio Free Charleston Tuesday at 10 AM and 10 PM on The AIR, with replays Wednesday at 9 AM, Thursday at 2 PM, Friday at 9 AM, Saturday at Noon and Midnight,  and  Monday at 11 AM, exclusively on The AIR. Now you can also hear a different episode of RFC every weekday at 5 PM, and we bring you a marathon all night long Saturday night/Sunday morning.

I’m also going to  embed a low-fi, mono version of this show right in this post, right here so you can listen on demand.

 

Then at 1 PM we have MIRRORBALL, followed at 2 PM by Curtain Call. At 3 PM two great recent episodes of The Swing Shift arrive.

You can hear The Swing Shift Tuesday at 3 PM, with replays Wednesday at 8 AM, Thursday at 9 AM, Friday at 8 PM and Saturday afternoon, only on The AIR . You can also hear all-night marathons, seven hours each, starting at Midnight Thursday and Sunday evenings.

Monday Morning Art: Down On The Roof

I warned you all last Friday. A week ago your PopCulteer spent a few hours in Manhattan. I was in a hotel room with an amazing view, and I took tons of photos which will inspire the works you’ll see in this space for the next several weeks.

Today’s art is a study for larger painting sometime later. It’s a detailed look at some of the roofops we could see looking down from the 44th flour.  I used two different photos for reference (one taken in the afternoon, the other the next morning) and tried to employ some of the techniques I’ve learned by swiping from Edward Hopper.  Rather than imitate his composition, I veered more in the direction of the 1960s Batman TV show.

This was done in acrylics on heavy duty watercolor paper.  I’m very happy with the high-detail look, since I’m currently battling a heat-induced flare-up of Myasthenia Gravis. Some of the later works in this series are sure to be less realistic and perhaps more impressionistic.  My fingers weren’t happy trying to maintain this style. Luckily it’s a smaller piece. When I blow it up later for a big canvas, I’m gonna have to rest up and probably work on it in the Winter.

I was trying to capture a bit of the feel of the heat in the city, combined with the kind of rooftop landscape that you found a lot in Marvel Comics in the 1970s.

To see it bigger try clicking HERE.

Over in radioland, Monday at 2 PM on The AIR, we bring you a classic episode of Psychedelic Shack, and then at 3 PM a classic edition of Herman Linte’s weekly showcase of the Progressive Rock of the past half-century, Prognosis.  You can listen to The AIR at the website, or on the embedded radio player elsewhere on this page.

Psychedelic Shack can be heard every Monday at 2 PM, with replays Tuesday at 9 AM, Wednesday at 10 PM, Friday at 1 PM,  and Saturday at 9 AM. You can hear Prognosis on The AIR Monday at 3 PM, with replays Tuesday at 7 AM, Wednesday at 8 PM, Thursday at Noon, and Saturday at 10 AM. You can hear two classic episodes of the show Sunday at 2 PM.

At 8 PM you can hear an hour of Polka-heavy musical funniness from Weird Al Yankovic on The Comedy Vault.

Tonight at 9 PM the Monday Marathon presents ten hours of mind-expanding joy, with a marathon of Nigel Pye’s Psychedelic Shack.

Sunday Evening Video: Commercial Time Capsule-August, 1975

This week we bring you a bit more than 27 minutes of commercials broadcast on WCBS (in New York) in August, 1975. These are random and rather mundane. There are no cool toy commercials here, just stuff like insurance, deodorant, food and headache medicine. Some are funny. Some are quaint.

Many of these will punch big nostalgia buttons for people over the age of 50.

Mainly, they’re random…and they’re commercials.

From 1975.

So at least they may seem weird.

The RFC Flashback: Episode Twenty-Eight

Radio Free Charleston‘s 28th video episode was “John Lennon Shirt,” our first attempt at a Beatles tribute, despite the fact that we could not then use cover songs on the show. It debuted on October 11, 2007 and hadn’t been widely available for a few years until I restored it last year.

Our music included “Hey John, I Did Imagine,” by Seven Minutes Til Mdnight and “Requiem For Pepperland” by Go Van Gogh. We also have Sir Paul speaking about cannibas, and the end credit audio is an excerpt from the original Radio Free Charleston radio show, with Rudy Panucci talking Beatles with Clownhole’s John Estep and Go Van Gogh’s Johnny Rock.

“Requiem for Pepperland” is an animated video that yours truly cranked out in four days. I know, it looks like I spent a whole week on it, but I was just learning how to use the computer at this point, so I get points for trying.

You can read the original production notes HERE.

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