Eating and reading independent food magazines with a dear friend.
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I CANNOT believe I haven’t posted this yet…anyways for a bit of context:
I have a lot of ideas from the Galaxy 5000 Movie and I thought it would be cool to have the Moonrockers join in!! :3 💜(Also I just wanted to draw O-Zone in a racing jumpsuit because he looks SO COOL IN ONE!!/pos)
I made him the pilot because in my mind, he’s the only one who would willingly, and consistently speed./hj/lh
I would love to hear some of your Moonrocker hcs!! Use my post as an excuse, I want to know what other people think about them/g
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Today In History
Chuck Berry was born in St Louis, Missouri, on this date October 18, 1926.
Songwriter and guitarist the ‘Father of Rock and Roll’, Chuck Berry refined and developed rhythm and blues into the major elements that made rock and roll distinctive, with songs such as “Maybellene” (1955), “Roll Over Beethoven” (1956), “Rock and Roll Music” (1957) and “Johnny B. Goode” (1958).
Berry became one of the most influential figures in the history of rock music.
CARTER™️ Magazine
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Drummer Magazine: Issue 5 March 1976 Drawing by Chuck Arnett
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HELP! LOOKING FOR CONCEPT ART FOR A LOST MOTORCITY MAD SKIT!
So a convo with another person made me realize that allegedly there was a scrapped skit for Cartoon Network’s MAD based on Motorcity.
For those not in the know, it was this show full of skits parodying whatever was popular from 2010-2012 regardless of it was going to last long or not ala Seltzer and Friedberg.
Anyway I was informed that concept art for a Motorcity skit was on Tumblr and if anyone can find it, be my guest.
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Today We Honor Chuck Stewart
Chuck Stewart, one of the most prolific and admired photographers in jazz — an intimate chronicler of many of its icons and milestones, including the historic recording session for John Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” — over a distinguished career that spanned more than 70 years.
“Chuck was born in Henrietta, Texas and raised in Tucson, AZ where his family moved to seek more opportunities. On his 13th birthday, his mother gave him a 616 Box-Brownie camera to try his hand at photography. The next day, the famed mezzo-soprano Marian Anderson visited his school in Tucson. He took pictures of the event and sold them to students and teachers and earned $2.00. This was a great financial leap from a 25-cents a week allowance. His career was born.
Chuck worked the New York City music scene in the early fifties capturing notable jazz luminaries representing Latin jazz, big band, bebop, cool jazz, and more, as well as bands and vocalists representing rock n’ roll, rhythm and blues, pop, country, Broadway, film and television. Chucks archives contain 800,000 negatives with a large inventory being jazz musicians from the 50’s to late 90’s.
Chuck was the only photographer at the historic recording session of John Coltrane’s album “A Love Supreme.” Oddly, his photos weren’t used for the album cover. However rare and unseen photos from that session now reside in the jazz archives of the Smithsonian Institution for anyone to see. Majority of the images used in the John Coltrane’s “Chasing Trane” Documentary and James Brown HBO Documentary are Chucks.
When the Beatles first toured America, Chuck toured with them but asked to be reassigned after being pinched and poked too many times by fans. “There are no black Beatles. Why are you grabbing me?” I protested. ‘You’re with them and that’s good enough for us,’ fans retorted.” - via chuckstewartphotograhy.com
CARTER™️ Magazine
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