Wednesday, May 31, 2006
Spanish Civil War Uniforms
Rules? Here are some for free.
Come and See
Some of the trivia at the Imdb are interesting;
Many of the uniforms seen throughout the film are originals.
Live ammunition was used in the film - in interviews, actor Aleksei Kravchenko has described actual bullets passing some 10 centimeters above his head.
Filmed in chronological sequence.
The director planned to have Aleksei Kravchenko hypnotized by a psychotherapist during the most dreadful and violent scenes so that they wouldn't affect his young mind. However Kravchenko turned out not to be susceptible to hypnosis and had to pretend all the way
IMDB facts here
Hurry Up England Sham 69
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Colour film of the Spanish Civil War
Spanish Civil War Miniatures!
This is a new company who are producing 28mm figures for the Spanish Civil War... vehicles to come soon. It looks like a really good start - it appears they're only doing the S.C.W. which is a bold move. They take Paypal which is also very good news. The sculpting looks good quality and the price £4.50 for four figures well within reason. I might buy some. Pictured left are their International Brigade figures.
They make a pictorial point on the site that they are compatible with Force of Arms SCW figs. Checking this out there seems to be a large range there with quite a few vehicles including a CV-33 for about 7 pounds. Have a look at their catalogue - again prices seem reasonable.
The only thoughts I had was that 28mm is not a scale that you can get kits in - so that means it's unlikely that there will be suitable plane models to use in wargames - not sure what 28mm is - about 1/60th? Shame not to have planes as they are pure eye candy - from the distance of time, of course.
Maybe use BUM's 1/72 aircraft.
Spanish civil war aircraft site
Well I just looked on the Anglian Miniatures Yahoo group which seeems to be going well and someone suggested using 1/72 planes on that. So what are we waiting for?
Disciplina Camarades!
Revirisco
Wind that Shakes the Barley and Jim Allen
Jim Allen archive
Incidentally The Wind was filmed in Bandon County Cork - here's a piece from Time Out on the filming.
Ghost Rider
Monday, May 29, 2006
The Wind that Shakes the Barley
Loach's historical film Land and Freedom was certainly very good so this bodes well.
Review here
IMDB here
Stills like the one on the left here
The title is an old Irish song.
The Fall 'Blindness' on Jools Holland
Primal Scream Country Girl on Jonathan Ross
Sunday, May 28, 2006
Polysics Electric Surfin Go GO
The Pretty Things
The official band site is hereThe Pretty Things played Frome in the 60s and someone got on stage and hit the singer. Too much monkey business for Frome in those days. On the band's website they are advertising a book that deals with their tour of New Zealand in 1965 which looks like more of the same kind of hostility. 'It was like being behind enemy lines' one said.
Saturday, May 27, 2006
Carey Bell 'Mellow Down Easy'
Barry Lyndon skirmish scene
In reality the British troops of the time would probably not attack with levelled bayonets as this though - if an attack was to be carried at the point of bayonet then the muskets would be held upright and ranks and files would be closer together. There are technical things wrong with it that I could go on all day about but it's still about the best version of an eighteenth century scrap you'll see.
This was the movie that got me interested in 18thc military history. It probably won't have the same impact on you but nevertheless it is an excellent clip. If you haven't seen the movie then you should - it's a very beautiful film though it has a steady pace. The soundtrack is excellent with traditional Irish music from the Chieftains and period music from the likes of Handel and Schubert (ok Schuberts a little out of period but fits in well)- also worth tracking down.
Friday, May 26, 2006
Pere Ubu live
Shirley Ellis Nitty Gritty
The Wrong Guy - Guy Goma
Thursday, May 25, 2006
Bren Gun Carrier
Anyway, like a few other British films of the war it featured the Universal Carrier a bit - usually known as the Bren Gun Carrier - so here's a few links to learn about this solid looking vehicle.
Wikipedia article Universal carrier page
Ford Universal Carrier
The Disappearing Bren Gun Carrier
Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Slacker Slacking
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
It's Gonna Work Out Fine Ike and Tina Turner
Ike Turner was one of the greats of the 50s and 60s, making some of the most influential records of the era, from one of the earliest rock and roll records like Rocket 88 to the Soul pop with wife Tina. The word genius comes to mind. It's such a shame that he will be mainly known for his role as a bad guy in the Tina Turner story, or the lamentable Spector hit 'River Deep Mountain High'. Enjoy this clip of the husband and wife duo at their peak. Ike had confidence problems when this single was recorded and got session man Mickey Guitar Baker (of another male/female duo Mickey and Sylvia) to do the 'Ikey' vocal parts. Ike Turner wiki
Boss Hog 'Get it While you Wait' video
Monday, May 22, 2006
British Museum to be site of Game Show
Samurai Commando Mission 1549
IMDB facts
Sunday, May 21, 2006
Bad Detectives at Myspace
Theyre playing the Griffin Inn on 7th July
Apparently the song Ralph The Diving Pig is not about me
Eurovision song contest - Lordi
There was a bit of a vote campaign for Lordi - see http://www.votelordi.org/ - shame it turns out they might be christians - and I am told by experts in the field a ripoff of GWAR. Watch GWAR on youtube
Wiki on Lordi
Primal Scream Country Girl lyrics
Saturday, May 20, 2006
Primal Scream 'Riot City Blues'? Ripoff City Blues
It starts out fine enough with the stomp 'Country Girl' but then it kind of goes flat. Presumably this album is aimed at the American market as nothing is that difficult to digest and no evidence of any of their unmarketable politics. The lyrics are basically song titles cut up and pasted into so-called new songs - 'Shake some Action! Get right down to the real nitty-gritty' - umm boys..? Those of us not born in the last ten years call that plagiarising. One song 'When the Bomb Drops' (the Bomb drops?) sounds like a sloppy jam around the Elevators' Rollercoaster and about 4 other 12-bars adorn this album with such hackneyed phrases as 'Boogie' and 'Allright' thrown in for good measure. Of course the Scream have been here before - with better poppier results - this time round they're saddled with super-bassman Mani which means a touch of psychedelic noodling is in order. The result is a bit like 'Satanic Majesties' or 'Exile on Main Street' played by sixth-form weeds whose parents have bought them musical instruments. Good job Primal Scream weren't around in the 60s and 70s as they basically don't have an original musical bone in their bodies and would have been ignored - they'd have made an ideal pub rock band with their fake American accents and their badly played harmonica.
However in this age of music being so afraid of originality this will no doubt be praised to high heaven for its wonderful qualities. Certainly there is some hedonistic joy to be found here and there and it's a fun game spotting the musical references - or thefts if you are old-fashioned like me.
Listen to a couple of tracks here
PS I got the comment 'a bit harsh' from the family - OK I admit to liking it a bit, but the problem for me is Mani constantly saying the Scream are this country's best rock and roll band - that's the Fall in my book - Mark E Smith and co have more ideas in one song than Primal Scream have in their entire back catalogue. Primal Scream are just a bunch of hippies - you can tell they are by their constant and obsessive recycling! Why are BG's lyrics always going on about junkies? The Jesus and Mary Chain school of writing it is - glamorising drugs, ripping off 60s Bob Dylan - you know the style - everybody did that years ago - that was what 70s British songwriting was all about. You might sound like Ziggy era Bowie or Bolan but surely that's the realm of the tribute band?
So... An allegedly anti-semitic Dylan rip-off 70s tribute band then is our country's best rock and roll act? I think not.
KILL ALL HIPPIES? - AS LONG AS PRIMAL SCREAM ARE FIRST
Friday, May 19, 2006
Italian WW2 wargames figures in 1/72 or 20mm
The Monks 'Oh How to do Now'
And then Boys are Boys and Girls are Choice or maybe Complication their most famous song. They sort of operated in a parallel world to anyone else in the 60s by being unselfconscious and totally original.
In order to persuade you to become Monk devotees I copied and pasted this description of their music from the Wiki on them - it's a pretty good read. I had never heard the Monks until a couple of years ago and I was quite shocked that they'd been so ignored.
The group's sound
The band abandoned many accepted musical norms of sixties rock n roll:
They have very little emphasis on melody, their songs are rhythmic, rather than melodic. The rhythms are heavy and repetitive, with the drums supplying a sound often described as 'tribal'. The drum kit was played without cymbals, leaving the beat as unembellished as possible.
Song structures are minimal and repetitive, but do not tend to follow the standard verse-chorus-bridge patterns of a pop song.
The band's lyrics are dadaist and playful, yet paranoid. They combine nursery rhyme style lyrics ("higgle-dy piggle-dy") with angry war commentary ("Why do you kill all those kids over there in Vietnam? Mad Vietcong! My brother died in Vietnam"; "People kill, people will for you. People run, aint it fun for you. People go, to their deaths for you"), incomprehensibly surreal interjections ("James Bond, who was he?") and paranoia about girls and love ("I hate you with a passion baby! And you know why I hate you? It's because you make me hate you baby!").
The vocal delivery is strangled, wailing and frantic, contrasted to deep chanting backing vocals which recall Gregorian chant.
Gary Burger utilises a great deal of guitar feedback and dissonance (According to Eddie Shaw's Black Monk Time, the group invented the use of audio feedback for musical purposes).
Dave Day replaced his guitar with a banjo upon which he played guitar chords. This sounds much more metallic, scratchy and wiry than a standard electric guitar.
Many of these musical elements are also found in sixties New York acts like The Fugs and The Godz in particular, but also The Velvet Underground. When the Monks developed their sound, the only one of these bands who had put out any records was the Fugs; it is unclear if the Monks had actually heard the Fugs or developed their sound independently.
Because of these features, they are often referenced as forerunner of the later punk movement.
'Bill is Dead' The Fall
Da Vinci Code
This era is going to be remembered for its dumbing down of everything and the recycling of ideas - the Da Vinci Code and Harry Potter will be its flagship novels.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Tanks in the Spanish Civil War
Responding to a request - I'll bore you with some of my reenactment photos
These photos are of me recreating a woodland indian of the French and Indian war and a French colonial Marine officer for the same period. This was for the society New France and Old England which I formed in the mid 90s. For the American Revolution I was involved with the 2nd Rhode Island Regiment - there are some photos of the Ulster American folkpark on that site - a great place with recreated dwellings for the Old and New World. I was lucky enough in 1999 to go to the US and take part in the Lake George tactical and meet reenacting friends in the flesh.
I'll put some pictures up of my adventures in the late 17th century soon.
Battle of El Alamein (1969)
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Camionetta 42 Sahariana
Article from Flames of War site on their use
Monochrome set Reach for your Gun
Crielmodel - Italian vehicles in 1/35
The Italians had some great trucks - this original came up on ebay recently. The Camionetta 42 Sahariana was their desert patrol truck - looks quite futuristic.
Check out Italian ww2 military history at http://www.comandosupremo.com/
Tuesday, May 16, 2006
Monday, May 15, 2006
Swords of a thousand men on top of the pops
This is a great record by Ten Pole Tudor from the 80s. This ought to be the 2006 Football song for the England team. I know it's nothing to do with football but that's the point. This song refers to the era when you had to practice your longbow skills instead of playing football.
Lyrics to sing along with.
Deep in the castle and back from the war
Back with milady and the fires burnt tall
Hurrah went the men down below
All outside was the rain and snow
Hear their shouts, hear their roars
They've probably had a barrel, and much, much more
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Over the hills came the swords of a thousand men
We had to meet the enemy a mile away
Thunder in the air and the sky turned grey
Assembling the knights and their swords were sharp
There was hope in our English hearts
Hear our roar, hear our sound
We're gonna fight until we have won this town
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Over the hills came the swords of a thousand men
When the knights come along at the end of the day
Some are half-alive and some have run away
Hear our triumph, hear our roar
We're gonna drink a barrel, and much, much more
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Over the hills came the swords of a thousand men
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea - yea
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea - yea
Hurrah, Hurrah, Hurrah, Yea
Over the hills came the swords of a thousand men
Lion of the Desert review
Production values are high - the vehicles and uniforms of the Italian are stupendous - seeing the columns of fiat tanks and armoured cars will make your jaw drop - makes Hollywood epics set in the desert look a bit stingy by comparison. Of course it's not Hollywood so you get a take on the whole subject of colonialism that you won't see by watching anything similar - this film makes no question of the fact that colonialism is bad and resistance to it is noble.
So invest in this movie and give your eyes a treat. Such a shame that there will be no more Akkad movies - this one is a classic.
IMDB facts
BA-3 Soviet armoured car
More photos here Wiki here
Haysi Fantayzee 'Shiny Shiny'
You can listen to them and see pictures here at the wonderful Kate Garner's site. Wiki here
Sunday, May 14, 2006
Football German Helmet
The stahlhelm was introduced in 1916 replacing the picklehaube and was intended to lessen the effects of shrapnel. More at http://www.german-helmets.com/. The first helmet to be introduced was by the French in 1915.
The stahlhelm is a symbol of German militarism and has been popular with Hell's Angels and moped riders in Indonesia apparently... Leroy Gorman of Bow wow wow wore one covered in Native American symbols.
Saturday, May 13, 2006
The Great War in a different light
I highly recommend this site. 'Accounts and Galleries from Great War Books and Magazines
with more than 7500 Authentic Period Photos, Illustrations and Newsarticles.'
It takes a look at books written at the time or shortly after, things like children's books, magazines etc on the Great War. The result is fascinating - some really excellent artwork and a look at the way our ancestors were encouraged to look at the war. A lot of it in colour. This picture left of German Uhlans comes from a French children's book Joffre-Foch which depicts action in a picturesque and comic-book style. Uhlans were featured a lot in the books of the time - they were to the popular press THE German cavalry.
Anyway visit this site - check out the Uniforms section or the section on Minerva armoured cars, tanks in action to give you a flavour of what's on offer.
I started this search wanting to see some colour pics of the 1914 Belgian army.
Soixante-quinze - 75mm gun of 1914-18
Italian WW2 reenacting in the UK
Primal Scream When the Bomb Drops
Hannibal
This feature-length dramatisation of Hannibal's audacious military campaign to beat the Romans by marching his army 1,500 miles over the Alps is definitely one for viewers who like their history bloody. Every five minutes someone gets stabbed or decapitated, while the battle scenes are bathed in so much gore, they must have had a Hollywood movie-sized budget for fake blood. So beware: it may be educational but some younger viewers may find it too violent. Alexander Siddig plays the young Carthaginian warrior with the necessary zeal, while Kenneth Cranham gives the voiceover suitable gravitas. Overall, it's a well-executed if lengthy drama that reveals a bit more about the man behind the myth and gives us some impressive set pieces. However, there are a few clunking moments. notably when the dialogue spells out the obvious. I wouldn't want to be in those mountains when the snows come," a soldier tells Hannibal. And guess what happens next? While the snow and wind machines are used extensively, Hannibal's elephants, sadly, don't get much of a look-in. RT reviewer: Jane Rackham
The Impressionists - BBC at its best
Friday, May 12, 2006
Gene Vincent Blue Jean Bop
Before the Fall
1848 for free!
Saving Private Ivan
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Lord Haw-Haw's last broadcast
Ferret babies
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Tamiya 1/35 French Char B1 Bis
Wiki on the B1 Bis
Specs
http://www.tarrif.net/ has an excellent film clip in their movie section - seee these monsters move...
Tuesday, May 09, 2006
Lion of the Desert (1980)
Biography of producer Moustapha Akkad who was tragically killed in 2005. He was working on a big budget movie on Saladin with Sean Connery which was going to be filmed in Jordan.
Eugene Jacques Bullard - America's first black fighter pilot
Rare records and things Monochrome Set
A propos the Monochrome Set - did you know Morrissey was a fan - maybe an Mset plagiarist? We sussed it out thanks to our son who is a fan of both. The songs are from a similar perspective - poetic outsider writing about taboo subjects in a world weary louche way - over twangy guitars. Anyway I think the fact that he doesn't often mention he is a fan is a good indication of the fact that he might feel some guilt over this - the only mention I've found of it is a quote from Mozzer on the wikipedia entry "How can anyone go through life without the dear, cuddly Monochrome Set?" So come on Morrissey - time to come out of the closet - stop going on about the New York Dolls - it's a red herring - you owe a creative debt to the Set!
Monday, May 08, 2006
Brothers in Arms Road to Hill 30
Sonny Boy Williamson on video
Sunday, May 07, 2006
40mm scale heaven - Drabant Miniatures
From what I know of this period the French figures are more for the later Marlborough period having the belly-box and side bayonet carriage rather than 1701 as marked in the catalogue, but that's a minor thing.
I am so impressed by these if anyone wants one and he sends it to me I will paint it for free.
The website has some idiosyncratic English and it would be nice to see some bulk deals.
Also available from Old Glory in the UK
Wargaming in 40mm
Other companies mentioned elsewhere are Sash and Saber and HLBS - who have just released a modern horror range.
Saturday, May 06, 2006
Great War items of interest
Channel 4 have a page reviewing most of cinema's Great War movies.
The site firstworldwar.com has some interesting items. One piece on Hitler's experience of the Great War is illuminating - in particular an episode with a British soldier.
American tanks in the Great War
Modelling - RPM of Poland does a good selection of early vehicles, and HAT do the FT-17. The Reenactment group Pershing's Doughboys has a great website - their section Motors is well worth a look at.
The Lost Battalion
Link to historical site with all manner of background information.
A reasonable book on the Doughboys is 'Retreat Hell We Just got Here'
Wargames
This year saw American WW1 1/72 figures released by two manufacturers - check them out here and here. Free wargames rules for the period here. (I know we're supposed to spend a fortune on printed rules but I can't see the point since the invention of the internet. )
Call of Duty Finest Hour
Teaser trailer for Call of Duty 3 - out this autumn
Urban legends quiz
Thursday, May 04, 2006
Conquest Miniatures
Hot Chip new single/video
Ramones 'Spider-man'
Slither
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
Scarlet's Well
New live album w/ Monochrome Set songs
Siesta Records have just released "Unreal" by Bid's band Scarlet's Well. There are 3 (previously unreleased) live versions of Monochrome Set songs included on this album.
You can listen to song samples or purchase the album here:
http://www.siesta.es/pags/novedades.asp
Bid (ex-Monochrome Set) started Scarlet's Well as a studio project in 1998, and has since released four albums with Siesta Records (Spain): "Strange Letters" (1999), "The Isle Of The Blue Flowers" (2000), "Alice In The Underworld" (2002), and "The Dream Spider Of The Laughing Horse" (2004).
In January 2004, Bid conceived of a bizarre concept- the raising of two Live bands, Scarlet's Well and The Unreal Scarlet's Well. The former would consists of UK musicians, to play concerts and record together in the long term, and the latter would consist of any foreign group of musicians who were willing to learn the music and play one or more concerts with Bid. The way this worked was that, after first contact was made, Bid sent the music sheets to the various musicians for them to rehearse without him, a gig was booked, and Bid flew in to rehearse twice beforehand- indeed, this was the first time he met any of them.
From Spring 2004 to Spring 2005, there had been four different US, one Swedish, and one Irish Unreal Scarlet's Wells.
Most of these Unreal performances were recorded, and have been compiled into a live album, Unreal, which includes versions of both Scarlet's Well and Monochrome Set songs.
It is a unique and fascinating collection of performances, some live on stage, some live-in-the-studio, and one, a not-so-straightforward string quartet cover version (the only song not featuring Bid). Many of the musicians involved are themselves heroes/heroines in their own countries, though the performance with the legendary Belfast band, St. Vitus Dance, is sadly not included on this album, as the recording was corrupted.
During this time, the "real" Scarlet's Well also played around Europe and are presently recording their 5th album.
You can download booklet artwork here:
http://www.bid.clara.net/unrealbooklet/booklet.zip
Tracks:
how the cypress made apollo
eine symphonie des grauens
the return of the hesperus
street of a thousand fools
pirate
jacob's ladder
the isle of the blue flowers
walking with the beast
willy whispers
miss twinkle's been on holiday again
sweetmeat
how the cypress made apollo (suite)
****
And two live Monochrome Set songs (Sugar Plum & Straits of Malacca) which didn't make this album can be heard here:
http://www.myspace.com/lazerlove5
Monochrome set 'He's Frank'
I remember when this was screened on tv - about 2.30 am - I was working nights at the time and rang Sue up for a detailed description. 'Bid has shoulder-length hair and leather trousers' 'What??!' 'Andy isn't using the rickenbacker anymore...'
If you are wondering what Andy Warren, bass player supreme is up to - he's in the Would-Be Goods who look pretty stylish by their website and of course the Monochrome Set's official site is here
What I'd next like to see on Youtube is the Set on the Old Grey Whistle Test. We used to have it but stupidly taped over it - tapes used to be really expensive! - they did 405 lines, B-I-D spells Bid and The Lighter Side of Dating
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Italian armoured units of ww2
Some Velvet Morning
It seemed to have made to No 1 in the Telegraph's great duets here it says
1 Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra
Some Velvet Morning, 1968
Most pop music is quickly forgotten. All too rare are the songs that endure, whose sheer otherness takes your breath away, even 30-odd years after they were conceived. Some Velvet Morning belongs in that company. Around the time that Frank Sinatra sang Somethin' Stupid with his daughter Nancy, she was making other duets which brought a hipper, bolder edge to the format, and which would influence countless subsequent pairings. Nancy conducted these with Lee Hazlewood, a laconic Oklahoman who had masterminded her kitsch anthem of women's liberation, These Boots Are Made for Walkin'.
In 1967, he recorded songs with her for possible inclusion in her first TV Special, Movin' With Nancy. One, incredibly, was Some Velvet Morning – one of the strangest, druggiest, most darkly sexual songs ever written. Somehow, perhaps as a sop to the new demographic opening up during the Summer of Love, it made it on to the show. There are "flowers" and "daffodils", but it's hardly Sonny and Cher. Hazlewood's sonorous, old-manly tones tell of "Phaedra, and how she gave me life, and how she made it end", the reverberating bass sounds surrounding his echoey voice like storm clouds.
The music changes to a skipping, childish rhythm, and Nancy chimes in as Phaedra, innocent but ever more menacing as the verses are intercut more regularly. It's a song whose mysteries have occasioned numerous covers, most recently by Primal Scream, with Kate Moss "doing" Nancy. None, though, can rival the macabre atmosphere of the original – ambitious, beautiful and unforgettable.
Worst duets
Toy Soldier online gallery
Monday, May 01, 2006
Sash and Saber 40mm figs
First world war computer games
If you enjoyed the movie Blue Max you might enjoy Aces High a 1976 film taken from a British perspective, starring Malcolm Mcdowell. Try the Aerodrome for information on aces and aircraft of the Great War