neil gaiman this was the cover of the first

neil-gaiman:

This was the cover of the first Metal Hurlant I ever saw. I was — what — 14, and on a French Exchange to Paris and this beautiful magazine filled with comics opened my mind to what comics could be, and the art of Jean Giraud, AKA Moebius, made it so powerful and perfect. He drew different stories in different styles, and everything was beautiful. I bought a copy. I could only afford the one copy, but one was enough.

I couldn’t actually figure out what the stories were about, but I figured that was because my French wasn’t up to it.

I read the magazine over and over and envied the French because they had everything I dreamed of in comics - beautifully drawn, visionary and literate comics, for adults. I just wished my French was better, so I could understand the stories (which I knew would be amazing).

I wanted to make comics like that when I grew up.

I read them when I was in my 20s, in translation, and discovered that they weren’t actually brilliant stories. More like stream-of-consciousness art meets Ionesco absurdism. Didn’t matter. The damage had long since been done.

I met Jean Giraud on a couple of occasions. He was sweet and gentle and really… I don’t know. Spiritual is not a word I use much, mostly because it feels so very misused these days, but I’d go with it for him.

We wanted to work together. I wrote the Sandman: Endless Nights story DEATH IN VENICE for him to draw, but his health got bad, so P. Craig Russell drew it. Moebius’s health improved a little, and he asked if I could write him a very short story, perhaps 8 pages, and make them all posters, so I wrote the DESTINY story in Endless Nights for him. His health took a turn for the worse, and Frank Quitely drew it. And both Craig and Frank made magic with their stories, but somewhere inside I was sad, because I’d hoped to work with Moebius.

And now I never shall.

RIP Jean Giraud, 8 May 1938 - 10 March 2012

One of the small pleasures of...

One of the small pleasures of working backward through pop history from the Smiths is stumbling across Sandie Shaw’s “Heaven Knows I’m Missing Him Now” or Reparata and the Delrons’ “Shoes”, for instance, and thinking ohhh, now I get it.

—Douglas Wolk on The Smiths’ shoplifting trips through pop history. The Smiths: The Smiths Complete | Album Reviews | Pitchfork

I would stack Music For...

I would stack Music For Airports up against Glenn Gould and Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Colin Turnbull’s recording of those pygmies and Alan Lomax, and all of that. Music For Airports makes the world a finer place, makes the people in it more palatable, and we really should launch it out into space and prove to the people on those distant planetoids that we are not just warlike simians bent on auto-destruction

—Rick Moody on Brian Eno’s sweet spot, among other things.

I’ve come up with a perfect...

pheezy

The astronauts went into...

The astronauts went into space carrying movie cameras—16mm data acquisition cameras—which they reached for reflexively, like tourists, whenever they saw something surprising or spectacular, or merely important. They saw such things almost continually.

from an essay on the film For All Mankind, documenting the thousands of feet of film shot by astronauts during the Apollo missions.

For All Mankind - From the Current - The Criterion Collection

Patrick Bateman: Did you know...

Patrick Bateman: Did you know that Whitney Houston’s debut LP, called simply Whitney Houston had 4 number one singles on it? Did you know that, Christie?
Elizabeth: [laughing] You actually listen to Whitney Houston? You own a Whitney Houston CD? More than one?
Patrick Bateman: It’s hard to choose a favorite among so many great tracks, but “The Greatest Love of All” is one of the best, most powerful songs ever written about self-preservation, dignity. Its universal message crosses all boundaries and instills one with the hope that it’s not too late to better ourselves. Since, Elizabeth, it’s impossible in this world we live in to empathize with others, we can always empathize with ourselves. It’s an important message, crucial really. And it’s beautifully stated on the album.

—American Psycho

I have now begun building a...

looking forward to this thathid sunday

Looking forward to this.

thathid:

Sunday, February 26
doors 7:30pm
Diego González - 8pm - http://soundcloud.com/3leafs
Chuck Johnson - 8:45-ish - http://www.cirrusoxide.com/
Jozef van Wissem - 9:25-ish - http://www.jozefvanwissem.com/
Drone Church - 10:10ish - (church’s organ w/2 amplified cellos)
$8-$20 suggested donation
Episcopal Church of St John The Evangelist In San Francisco
1661 15th St., San Francisco
http://www.saintjohnsf.org/
Limited hand silk screened posters by Christine Shields & Philip Franklin of BRIGHT SPOT printing.

pheezy wwwww swirling potential tones