New comics releases June 6, 2007

Click links to order discounted graphic novels from Amazon.

See complete lists:
DC Archives
DC Showcase
DC Trade Paperbacks
Marvel Masterworks
Marvel Essentials
Marvel Trade Paperbacks
Upcoming Trade Paperbacks - Graphic Novels


Comics shipping June 6, 2007

DARK HORSE COMICS

APR070011 FEAR AGENT LAST GOODBYE #1 $2.99
JAN070075 SOCK MONKEY THE INCHES INCIDENT #4 (OF 4) $2.99

DC COMICS

APR070185 ALL NEW ATOM #12 $2.99
MAR078365 BATMAN IN THE SIXTIES TP $19.99
OCT058015 BATMAN NO MANS LAND VOL 1 TP $17.99
MAR070175 BATMAN TURNING POINTS TP $14.99
APR070188 BIRDS OF PREY #107 $2.99
MAR070178 CATWOMAN WHEN IN ROME TP $12.99
APR070180 COUNTDOWN 47 $2.99
APR070244 DANGER GIRL BODY SHOTS #3 (OF 4) $2.99
APR070161 DETECTIVE COMICS #833 $2.99
MAR070239 EMMA VOL 4 $9.99
MAR070241 GO GO HEAVEN VOL 2 $9.99
APR070207 JONAH HEX #20 $2.99
APR070225 JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED #34 $2.25
APR070230 LOONEY TUNES #151 $2.25
APR070245 MIDNIGHTER #8 $2.99
MAR070242 MOON CHILD VOL 7 $9.99
APR070166 NIGHTWING #133 $2.99
MAR070245 PIECES OF A SPIRAL VOL 8 $9.99
MAR070261 RE-GIFTERS $9.99
APR070177 SUPERGIRL #18 $2.99
MAR070183 SUPERMAN #663 $2.99
APR060196 SUPERMAN DOOMSDAY OMNIBUS TP $19.99
APR070254 SUPERNATURAL ORIGINS #2 $2.99
MAR070246 TENJHO TENGE VOL 14 $9.99
APR070250 WELCOME TO TRANQUILITY #7 $2.99

IMAGE COMICS

APR071848 AMORY WARS #1 (OF 5) $2.99
FEB071908 INVINCIBLE #42 (NOTE PRICE) $1.99
JAN071945 STRANGE GIRL #17 $3.50
FEB078067 WALKING DEAD VOL 2 HC LTD SGN ED (PP #759) $59.99
APR071883 WARD O/T STATE #2 (OF 3) $3.50

MARVEL COMICS

APR072292 AVENGERS INITIATIVE #3 CWI $2.99
APR072371 BULLET POINTS TP $13.99
APR072369 CIVIL WAR IRON MAN TP $11.99
DEC062375 CIVIL WAR ROAD TO CIVIL WAR TP $14.99
MAR072150 CIVIL WAR X-MEN UNIVERSE TP $13.99
APR072272 DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER BORN #5 (OF 7) $3.99
APR072274 DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER BORN JAE LEE SKETCH VAR #5 (OF 7) $3.99
APR072273 DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER BORN LAND VAR #5 (OF 7) $3.99
SEP052009 ESSENTIAL SILVER SURFER VOL 1 TP $16.99
APR072379 ESSENTIAL SILVER SURFER VOL 2 TP $16.99
APR072300 GHOST RIDER TRAIL OF TEARS #5 (OF 6) $2.99
APR072299 HULK AND POWER PACK #4 (OF 4) $2.99
MAR072088 IRON MAN #18 CWI $2.99
APR072312 IRREDEEMABLE ANT-MAN #9 $2.99
APR072327 LONERS #3 (OF 6) $2.99
APR072316 MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #28 $2.99
APR072319 MARVEL ZOMBIES ARMY OF DARKNESS #4 (OF 5) $2.99
APR072320 MS MARVEL #16 CWI $2.99
MAR072096 MYSTIC ARCANA BOOK OF MARVEL MAGIC $3.99
APR072323 NEW WARRIORS #1 CWI $2.99
APR072325 OMEGA FLIGHT #3 CWI (OF 5) $2.99
APR072286 SPIDER-MAN FAMILY #3 $4.99
APR072288 SPIDER-MAN LOVES MARY JANE #19 $2.99
APR072386 ULTIMATE MARVEL FLIP MAGAZINE #26 $4.99
STAR17789 ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN VOL 5 PUBLIC SCRUTINY TP $11.99
STAR19988 ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN VOL 7 IRRESPONSIBLE TP $12.99
APR072387 ULTIMATE TALES FLIP MAGAZINE #26 $4.99
APR072341 UNCANNY X-MEN #487 $2.99

WIZARD ENTERTAINMENT

APR073255 INQUEST GAMER SUMMER PREVIEW CVR #147 $1.99

COMICS

AUG052970 ANGEL DIARY VOL 1 GN $10.95
MAR073151 ARCHIES CAMP TALES VOL 1 TP $7.49
FEB073328 BATTLESTAR GALACTICA #10 $2.99
MAR073335 BATTLESTAR GALACTICA CYLON APOCALYPSE #4 $3.50
MAR073158 BETTY & VERONICA #227 $2.25
MAR073160 BETTY & VERONICA DIGEST #175 $2.49
MAR073085 BLACK DIAMOND #1 (OF 6) $2.95
MAY073772 BLACK GHOST APPLE FACTORY $5.00
DEC058423 CHANNEL ZERO CURR PTG $12.95
FEB052434 DAVE SIM COLLECTED LETTERS VOL 1 $30.00
MAR073054 DAVE SIM COLLECTED LETTERS VOL 2 $22.00
MAR073678 DEATH AND THE MAN WHO WOULD NOT DIE #1 (OF 4) $2.99
FEB073438 DF BUFFY SEASON 8 SGN #1 $19.99
APR073607 DRAFTED PREVIEW $0.99
FEB073714 EMPTY CHAMBER #2 (OF 2) (RES) $2.95
DEC063253 HAUNTED MANSION #6 $2.95
STAR07025 JOHNNY HOMICIDAL MANIAC DIRECTORS CUT SC $19.95
MAR073164 JUGHEADS DOUBLE DIGEST #131 $3.69
JAN045100 NINJA HIGH SCHOOL POCKET MANGA #3 $9.99
OCT053028 ONE THOUSAND AND ONE NIGHTS VOL 1 GN $10.95
MAR073401 PS238 #23 $2.99
MAR073343 RAISE THE DEAD #3 $3.50
MAR073167 SABRINA VOL 2 #85 $2.25
MAR073252 SIMPSONS SUMMER SHINDIG #1 $4.99
MAR073170 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG ARCHIVES VOL 3 TP $7.49
APR073767 TRANSFORMERS MOVIE ADAPTATION #1 (OF 4) $3.99
MAR073351 WITCHBLADE SHADES OF GRAY #4 (OF 4) $3.50

MAGAZINES

APR074098 ALTER EGO #69 $6.95
FEB073453 COMICS JOURNAL #283 $9.95

RELATED MERCHANDISE

STAR17719 BEACHBUM BERRYS INTOXICA $10.95
MAR073744 BRUSH STROKES WITH GREATNESS LIFE & ART OF JOE SINNOTT SC $17.95
SEP033739 DRAGONLANCE DRAGONS OF SPRING DAWNING HC $27.95
OCT043420 KANA DE MANGA VOL 1 $9.99
MAR073747 WORKING METHODS COMIC CREATORS STORYTELLING PROCESS SC $21.95

Pop Artifact! Jungle Girl poster



Pop Culture Roundup June 5, 2007

Action Figure Insider has pics of a whole mess 'o upcoming Justice League Unlimited three-pack sets. See Justice League Unlimited figures available from Amazon.

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Read Fred Hembeck's tribute to Sgt. Pepper and don't forget to take a look at ours too.

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Speaking of the Beatles, here's a bit of hilarity from my home state.

Vintage DC Comics House Ad



DVD new releases June 5, 2007

Seinfeld - Season 8

Rescue Me - The Complete Third Season

Mission Impossible - The Second TV Season

Hogan's Heroes - The Sixth & Final Season

Robin Hood - Season 1

The Cosby Show: Season 3

The Cosby Show: Season 4

Doctor Who - New Beginnings (The Keeper of Traken / Logopolis / Castrovalva)

Doctor Who - Keeper of Traken (Episode 115)

Doctor Who - Logopolis (Episode 116)

Doctor Who - Castrovalva (Episode 117)

The Fall Guy: The Complete Season 1

Bruce Springsteen with the Sessions Band: Live In Dublin

CHiPs - The Complete First Season

Martin & Lewis Collection - Vol. 2 (You're Never Too Young / Artists and Models / Living It up / Pardners / Hollywood or Bust)

Fantastic Four - Extended Cut (Two-Disc Special Edition)

Fantastic Voyage

World War II Collection, Vol. 2 - Heroes Fight for Freedom (36 Hours / Air Force / Command Decision / Hell to Eternity / The Hill / Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo)

The Sergio Leone Anthology (A Fistful Of Dollars / For A Few Dollars More / The Good, The Bad And The Ugly / Duck, You Sucker)

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea - Global Warming Edition

Wait Till Your Father Gets Home - The Complete First Season

Dark Angel: The Complete First Season

Dark Angel: The Complete Second Season

More DVD new releases.

CD new releases June 5, 2007

CD new releases June 5, 2007

Memory Almost Full by Paul McCartney

Jersey Beat: Music of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons by Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons

A Night With Lou Reed by Lou Reed

Complete Recorded Works, Vol.1 by Fats Waller

More upcoming CD releases.

Today's video: Beatles "Revolution" promo



Pop Artifact! Jungle Drums of Africa poster



Pop Culture Roundup June 4, 2007

Deal alert: You can get Dennis the Menace 1955-56 for $4.98 from Amazon now.

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Hear current acts recreate the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper album on BBC radio. Also check out our own Sgt. Pepper tribute.

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Continuing with the Pepper theme: Here's an article about the girl who reportedly inspired Julian Lennon's "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" drawing.

"When I told a couple of friends that Lucy in the sky with diamonds was about me, they said, 'No, it can't be, it's to do with LSD.' I was too embarrased to tell them that I didn't know what LSD was."

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Dial B for Burbank presents rare pictures of Shadow creator Walter Gibson, a.k.a. Maxwell Grant.

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The Ephemera blog spotlights "Lord of the Rings" collector Pieter Collier.

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The BBC has info on who'll be scripting episodes for the fourth season of "Doctor Who."

Vintage Comic Book Ad



Fresh Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer pics









Today's video: Beatles "Paperback Writer" promo



It was 40 years ago: TIP's special Sgt. Pepper edition


Hand-painted Fisher-Price Little People, found on eBay.

Forty years ago today (in Britain) and tomorrow (in the United States), the Beatles released what many consider their magnum opus: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.

As with any other milestone, the LP is subject to much debate (see the "Is Sgt. Pepper Overrated?" post below). But, whether or not you agree that it's the best album of all-time, or even the best Beatles album, there's no denying it's among the most influential pop LPs ever--and one worth talking a bit about.

So, check out the posts here this weekend and form your own opinions about where the album belongs on the "all-time best" lists. And consider giving the album a commemorative spin, trying to put yourself in the frame of mind of what it must've sounded like for the first time, all those years ago.

Is Sgt. Pepper overrated?



It's the subject of so much discussion and hyperbole, it's no wonder some people seem to hate Sgt. Pepper. Or at least hate that the album is so frequently cited as the "first" or "best" in various categories.

But does that really mean the album is overrated? Or does it just mean that some people are tired of hearing about it?

My own point of view: The LP is not overrated. It had a significant impact on our music and culture--a greater impact than any pop record before or since.

But I also think this: It's not the best Beatles album. Look at it song-by-song as a collection, and I don't feel it contains as many great songs as Rubber Soul or Revolver, or even A Hard Day's Night.

I also don't think it's the Beatles' most innovative album. I'd give that honor to Revolver, which--in terms of new recording techniques and experimentalism--was the band's real artistic breakthrough. "Tomorrow Never Knows" from that album is far more complex and experimental than anything on Pepper.

Geoff Emerick, who took over as the band's recording engineer on Revolver deserves a lot of the credit for helping the Beatles' attain innovative new sounds in the studio. And it's his and the band's technical breakthroughs on Revolver that paved the way for Sgt. Pepper. Not to mention the open mindedness and musical know-how of Beatles producer George Martin.

And, continuing on the topic of what Pepper's not, it's not a concept album. It gets the credit/blame for being the first of the sort, but consider the songs. There's no story or big idea connecting them. The only thing tying them together is the "Sgt. Pepper" theme at the start of the record and its reprise near the end--as if all the songs on the record are being performed by the mythical band in the album's title. But, really, it's a collection of separate songs, just like any other LP.

Real concept albums had been around for a long time before Pepper. Consider Frank Sinatra's series of albums built around thematic concepts (In the Wee Small Hours, Come Fly with Me, Songs for Swinging Lovers) or even the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds from 1966, a huge influence on Revolver. The songs on Pet Sounds share an overarching theme: It's a record about alienation, loneliness, growing up and loss of innocence. And, although not a full concept album, The Kinks included three thematically related songs ("A House in the Country," "Most Exclusive Residence for Sale," and "Sunny Afternoon") on their 1966 Face to Face album.

What Pepper succeeded in doing, however, was to create its own sound world. The Beatles' imaginative use of lyrics, orchestration, recording wizardry and sound effects brings the listener into a rich and eclectic audio scape that's at turns whimsical ("Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite"), surreal ("Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"), poignant ("She's Leaving Home"), philosophical ("Within You Without You") nostalgic ("When I'm 64") and abstract ("A Day in the Life"). Using an abundance of musical styles--from straight-out guitar-based rock to chamber music, Indian classical, 30s jazz and avant garde symphonic music--along with studio trickery such as multi-tracking, vari-speeding, "flanging," the band created something captivating and uniquely their own.

And the whole world seemed to notice.

It can be argued that earlier recordings should've been hailed as the first LP to transform pop into "art" (the fact that both critics and U.S. listeners pretty much ignored Pet Sounds when it was first released is criminal), but the fact is that Sgt. Pepper was special, and it was immediately hailed as such.

The album led mainstream publications to publish serious pieces about pop music and cemented the Beatles' position as cultural leaders.

Time magazine, for example, carried a piece praising "Strawberry Fields"/"Penny Lane"--the double A-side single the preceded Pepper--saying:

From the first mewings of "I Want to Hold Your Hand," the Beatles have developed into the single most creative force in pop music. And where they have gone in recent months, not even the ardent supporters would have dreamed of. They have bridged the heretofore impassable gap between rock and classical, mixing elements of Bach, Oriental and electronic music with vintage twang to achieve the most compellingly original sounds ever heard in pop music.

And, in its Sept. 22, 1967, issue Time used Pepper as a springboard for a five-page cover story about the Beatles--describing the group as "messengers from beyond rock'n'roll."

They are creating the most original, expressive and musically interesting sounds being heard in pop music. They are leading an evolution in which the best of current post-rock sounds are becoming something that pop music has never been before: an art form.

The magazine even called in experts to vouch for the music's importance:

Ned Rorem, composer of some of the best of today's art songs, says: "They are colleagues of mine, speaking the same language with different accents." In fact, he adds, the Beatles' haunting composition, "She's Leaving Home"--of 12 songs in the Sgt. Pepper album--is "equal to any song that Schubert ever wrote." Conductor Leonard Bernstein's appreciation is just as high; he cites Schumann. As musicologist Henry Pleasants says: "The Beatles are where music is right now."

Meanwhile, a review in Newsweek on June 26, 1967, said "A Day in the Life":

...is the Beatles' "Waste Land," a superb achievement of their brilliant and startlingly effective popular art."

And writing in The Saturday Review on Aug. 18, 1967, critic Peter Schrag said:

Sgt. Pepper, undoubtedly, is music; but surely it is also literature and criticism, a kind of selective filtering back from one generation to another. The comments that the record offers were grown in contemporary social thought and literature. Certainly the Beatles did not come upon them on their own. But in England and America they have now become the folklore of a generation.

And writing in The Village Voice on June 22, 1967, critic Tom Phillips said:

I must say that I think the Beatles have scored a genuine breakthrough with Sgt. Pepper. Specifically I think they've turned the record-album itself into an art form, and a form that works.

The album earned these accolades--they weren't the result of record company hype but were the genuine reactions of critics. And the record was a popular success, as well, topping the U.S. album charts for 15 weeks and the U.K. album charts for 27 weeks.

You (and I) may prefer other recordings, but it's hard to deny--or overstate--Pepper's impact.

Have you heard the "real" Sgt. Pepper?



I've got a few different Sgt. Pepper albums around here:

* An old Capitol pressing from the 70s and another, more recent Capitol pressing to replace that one because it wore out.

* A "half-speed mastered" high-fidelity version from Mobile Fidelity Soundlab.

* And, of course, the CD that came out 20 years ago.

But none of those is the real Pepper. That I have on vinyl, too, in 1967 Capitol pressing. Why is it more real than the others? Because it's in mono.

That the mono version of Sgt. Pepper is any more genuine or even more desireable than the stero version may seem odd. Afterall, don't all the way-out sounds of this record sound groovier in stereo?

And, yeah, I've got to agree the stereo mix sounds pretty darn good. But, the thing is, the mono version is the album as the Beatles intended. And it sounds quite different. It's punchier throughout. The bass comes through stronger. The "Sgt. Pepper Reprise," especially, comes through more aggressively--it rocks more. And the songs that use sound effects, such as "Good Morning, Good Morning," are mixed quite differently. In short, it's a much different listening experience and one that should be enjoyed. If you can snag a vintage mono LP, or find a homemade CD copy of the mono mix, I heartily recommend it.

And, since Apple Corps/EMI so badly dropped the ball on giving us a 40th anniversary edition of the album, let's hope they're working right now on such a project--one that will include both the stereo and mono mixes of the album.

A little more Pepper?

Learn more about the Beatles and Sgt. Pepper from these TIP!-recommended books:


The Complete Beatles Chronicle By Mark Lewisohn

With a Little Help from My Friends By George Martin with William Pearson


It Was Twenty Years Ago Today By Derek Taylor


The Beatles Anthology DVD set


The Beatles Anthology Book


Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band CD

The Pepper package



Along with it's sound, Sgt. Pepper also made a visual impact. The stunning cover by pop artist Peter Blake depicted the Beatles--decked out in brightly colored band uniforms--standing in a crowd of political, religious and pop culture icons (including their earlier selves in the form of wax dummies from Madame Tussuad's). To see who all was included, check out this annotated chart. There's also more information on each of the figures featured here.

The album cover also featured a gatefold photo of the band and, inside the sleeve, a cardboard sheet with cutouts of military shoulder stripes, a mustache, Sgt. Pepper badges and a portrait of Sgt. Pepper himself. The record came in a pop-artish LP sleeve with pink "blobs" on it created by Dutch designers the Fool and a cardboard sheet of cut-outs.



Perhaps most notably, the lyrics for every song appeared on the back cover--a rarity for the time period.

Here's a video of designers talking about Blake's cover design:

Wouldn't you like to be a Pepper too?

Lots of records--some good, some ok, some wretched--have been cited as the next Sgt. Pepper, but here are some of the most significant LPs that followed in the Beatles' wake:

The Rolling Stones' ill-advised flirtation with psychedelia, Their Satanic Majestie's Request, is likely the most frequently mentioned Pepper wannabe. Though it yielded an ok song or two and is better than most people give it credit for, this type of music wasn't the Stones strong suit and they soon returned to bluesy, rocking form, releasing a series of albums between 1968 and the early 1970s that turned out to be the best of their career.

An album recorded at Abbey Road soon after Pepper and engineered by Geoff Emerick to boot, the Zombies' Odessey and Oracle is a very strong LP featuring some excellent songs, including the gorgeous "Brief Candles" and the hit "Time of the Season." It's not a concept album and it doesn't sound much like Pepper but, like the Beatles, this was a band working at the top of its game.

Pink Floyd were an innovative, experimental singles band before Pepper came out, but their first LPs A Piper at the Gates of Dawn and Saucerful of Secrets (as well as those that followed later in the 1960s and in the 1970s) shared Pepper's same spirit of adventure

Love's Forever Changes is another example of a LP that holds together extremely well as a long-form statement, blending lovely horn and string arrangements with traditional rock instrumentation.

Pepper likely had a big impact on the Who, which went on to record their Who Sell Out and Tommy concept albums afterwards and the Kinks, who went to work on Village Green Preservation Society and Arthur.

The Moody Blues put out Days of Future Passed, which blended classical and rock, and the Small Faces released Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake, which featured a side-long fairy tale set to music.

The Pretty Things did a concept album, S.F. Sorrow, in 1968 that's Pepper-inspired, and the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson was in the midst of working on his super-ambitious Smile album when Pepper was released and took the wind out of his sails. He was so overwhelmed by the Beatles' masterstroke that he lost confidence in himself. Smile songs creeped out here and there (most notably on the Smiley Smile album, Surf's Up and the 1990s Good Vibrations) box set, but it took until 2003 for Wilson to finally put out Smile in complete, newly recorded form.

Pepper pics











Today's videos: "Penny Lane" and "Strawberry Fields"

While not on the Sgt. Pepper album, these two groundbreaking songs were recorded during the same sessions and released on a double A-side single in advance of the Pepper LP. These promotional films are pretty groundbreaking, too, paving the way for the music videos of the 1980s and 1990s.