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RIP, George Pérez. From what I've seen online, he passed peacefully with his family around him. An all-time great, and beloved by so many.
A Few Words About George Pérez
In the last couple of days, the comics community got some grim news - that George Pérez, a titan of the field and by all accounts a wonderful person outside it, had been diagnosed with inoperable cancer. (Link here.) The vast outpouring of love that followed the awful news was a testament to the lives he's touched in his work and in person. In that spirit, I present the original art from the one time I was lucky enough to work with Mr Pérez, in all its considerable glory. (Via Tom Brevoort, on Twitter.)
And it was luck - more luck than I deserved. I was already doing a lot of pages for Marvel #1000 - but I'd been the last person to do anything with White Tiger in continuity, and George Pérez wanted to do a last page for Marvel as part of the project... featuring the original White Tiger, Hector Ayala, who he'd co-created with Bill Mantlo, as a tribute to him. George also wanted to incorporate the Sons Of The Tiger and the modern incarnation into the page as well, if only as visual cameos. So I was brought in to write a page that'd do that. Needless to say, I jumped at it... and was immediately crushed to a metaphorical powder under the weight of responsibility. You would be, too.
I got it together enough to provide the script - a five-panel affair, built around a montage of Hector's life - but I felt kind of nervous handing it in. I'd put a lot of heart into that single-pager, writing and rewriting it until it was what it needed to be, and I felt I'd hit all the bases... but I was conscious of that montage, which I'd put right in the middle of a fight with ninjas. Was it going to work? Had... had I thrown too much in there?
Fool that I was. This was George Pérez.
I got back what you see above. The timid five-panel layout is now a gorgeous excercise in storytelling that roams freely all over the page - like a tiger? Why not? A horde of ninjas is dispatched in wide-angle shot by the modern White Tiger twosome - their contrasting personalities expertly delineated from just a few lines of description from me. Interjections from off-panel become panels in their own right. The Sons of the Tiger get their cameo, the life of Hector is played out with graceful economy, and Hector's spirit blesses his successors in the final panel in an absolutely stunning use of negative space. Masterful work, from a master of the form.
When it came to the lettering draft, I trimmed the fat like never before. I was horribly conscious that every wasted word that fattened a balloon was a sin against that gorgeous page. The end result read much more efficiently and was, I hope, worthy of the art it accompanied - but I'm glad to have the original in my inbox, and I'm glad Tom made it available for all to see.
I never actually met George Pérez in the flesh, or interacted with him much on the email - shyness, to be honest - but I did take the opportunity in the script to let him know what an honor it was to work with him, and I'll repeat that here, because it really, really was, and is.
Thank you for so many great comics through the years, Mr. Pérez. Thanks for your work for the Hero Initiative. Thanks for this amazing page.
Thanks for everything, and may the time left bring you nothing but joy.
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You Finally Built It, Can We Come And Stay?
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Back into Prefab Sprout after a few years away. This one's on heavy rotation.
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I Regret How I Said To You "Honey Just Open Your Heart" When I've Got Trouble Even Opening A Honey Jar
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Moved to Tidal after Spotify laid one straw too many on the camel's back, and it threw this up at random - a song I haven't listened to or even thought about in years, but very much a favorite even so.
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I Know These People
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A couple of years ago I got into Matt Berry as a musician. This one's got a certain XTC quality I like a lot - I might post a bit more from him in the fullness of time.
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And Our Work Is Never Done
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A new discovery - a "villain song", first released way back in 2010, but with a lot of resonance both then and now.
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Can You Build An Emerald City With These Grains Of Sand?
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I was going to post something else today, but then I found out Meat Loaf died. I wouldn't call myself a major fan, but he was definitely a cultural touchstone of the times I've lived in and one of my all-purpose karaoke go-tos, and I always had a lot of time for his brand of rock-operatic deadpan. I only discovered the 12-minute version of this last year, and it takes everything I already liked in the song and delivers more of it with more gusto, so it seemed appropriate.
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If I Can, And I Can
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"These Days" is a well-used song title, apparently. There's a kind of apocalyptic, revelatory quality to this one - whose scales are being rearranged, and did William Blake ever paint him? What scattered bones form the meal?
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I Don't Do Too Much Dreaming These Days
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I count covers as new finds, so this is the first new find of 2020. I didn't know Glen Campbell had done a version of this - he obviously brings a very different energy to it, and the video suggests it's a goodbye of sorts, a meditation on leaving the business of life.
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I Want Some New Terrain
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Took a break from posting music vids for the holidays, but here's my latest repeat listen - Frank Black.
I'm trying the experiment of using my work playlists as marketing tools, with an "every track has a secret meaning" gimmick - on the one hand, the X-MEN RED playlist has a few people fascinated, which is fun, but the downside is that that playlist is now pretty much locked for at least a while. Which is a shame, because this might have gone on it.
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With A Glass Raised To Toast Your Health, And A Promise To Share The Wealth
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There's not much Christ in my Christmas - the fact that I generally call it "Yule" is a giveaway - but there is a fair amount of Dickens.
In that spirit - thank you, fifty times, for the kind thoughts and wishes you've sent my way this year, and I hope to see you all on this channel when the year turns again. And in the meantime, I wish you all a Cool Yule and the Happiest Holidays possible.
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Relax, I Can Explain: I Don't Wanna Die
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Listened to this a lot today while getting writing done. Hopefully what came out is any good. We'll see.
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Somehow We're Going Somewhere
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New discovery that's been on repeat the past day or two. This feels very much like a certain kind of Xmas song - you could lay some jingle bells over it and tweak the lyrics to be slightly less of a vague stab at the unknowable higher truths of the ancients and slightly more of yer meat n' potatoes baby-in-a-manger he's-the-reason-for-the-season flannel and it would absolutely slide in there. But I'm glad it is what it is - it fits in my Yule playlist just fine.
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I Wish You A Hopeful Christmas, I Wish You A Brave New Year
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This was my favorite Yuletide song for a very long time, because it's a connection to the mystery of the season - it treats Father Christmas as a strange and unknowable pagan deity, closer to the bare-chested, green-cloaked Lord Of Dance that Dickens wrote of. Though even the red-suited corporate mascot we know today might, if caught at just the right moment, turn upon you with his twinking, terrible eyes of tinsel and fire...
That said - I should register a disagreement with the late Mr. Lake on the topic of the Christmas we get being the one we deserve. That smacks a little of the "just world" fallacy. On that note - here's the Trussell Trust, a UK Food Bank charity that provides emergency support for those who need it.
https://www.trusselltrust.org/
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The Box Of Delights
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We finally put up the tree! And very handsome it looks too. So here's another Yuletide tune, the third movement of the Carol Symphony - eagle-eared followers might know this as the theme from Xmas TV classic The Box Of Delights, featuring the late, great Patrick Troughton. This isn't the full thing, but it does jump in right at the moment of greatest mystery, and I like the picture this particular YouTuber accompanied it with.
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A Few Words About George Pérez
In the last couple of days, the comics community got some grim news - that George Pérez, a titan of the field and by all accounts a wonderful person outside it, had been diagnosed with inoperable cancer. (Link here.) The vast outpouring of love that followed the awful news was a testament to the lives he's touched in his work and in person. In that spirit, I present the original art from the one time I was lucky enough to work with Mr Pérez, in all its considerable glory. (Via Tom Brevoort, on Twitter.)
And it was luck - more luck than I deserved. I was already doing a lot of pages for Marvel #1000 - but I'd been the last person to do anything with White Tiger in continuity, and George Pérez wanted to do a last page for Marvel as part of the project... featuring the original White Tiger, Hector Ayala, who he'd co-created with Bill Mantlo, as a tribute to him. George also wanted to incorporate the Sons Of The Tiger and the modern incarnation into the page as well, if only as visual cameos. So I was brought in to write a page that'd do that. Needless to say, I jumped at it... and was immediately crushed to a metaphorical powder under the weight of responsibility. You would be, too.
I got it together enough to provide the script - a five-panel affair, built around a montage of Hector's life - but I felt kind of nervous handing it in. I'd put a lot of heart into that single-pager, writing and rewriting it until it was what it needed to be, and I felt I'd hit all the bases... but I was conscious of that montage, which I'd put right in the middle of a fight with ninjas. Was it going to work? Had... had I thrown too much in there?
Fool that I was. This was George Pérez.
I got back what you see above. The timid five-panel layout is now a gorgeous excercise in storytelling that roams freely all over the page - like a tiger? Why not? A horde of ninjas is dispatched in wide-angle shot by the modern White Tiger twosome - their contrasting personalities expertly delineated from just a few lines of description from me. Interjections from off-panel become panels in their own right. The Sons of the Tiger get their cameo, the life of Hector is played out with graceful economy, and Hector's spirit blesses his successors in the final panel in an absolutely stunning use of negative space. Masterful work, from a master of the form.
When it came to the lettering draft, I trimmed the fat like never before. I was horribly conscious that every wasted word that fattened a balloon was a sin against that gorgeous page. The end result read much more efficiently and was, I hope, worthy of the art it accompanied - but I'm glad to have the original in my inbox, and I'm glad Tom made it available for all to see.
I never actually met George Pérez in the flesh, or interacted with him much on the email - shyness, to be honest - but I did take the opportunity in the script to let him know what an honor it was to work with him, and I'll repeat that here, because it really, really was, and is.
Thank you for so many great comics through the years, Mr. Pérez. Thanks for your work for the Hero Initiative. Thanks for this amazing page.
Thanks for everything, and may the time left bring you nothing but joy.
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Can We Climb This Mountain? I Don't Know
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I've got a minor thing for Almighty covers - for me, a cover version needs to add something, and so many of them are just self-important, po-faced attempts to "redeem" a song or "find the inner sadness" or whatever - slowed down and made a little melancholy for the next Transformers trailer. That's a hard game to play, and frankly it rarely works - I'm happier with the Almighty ethos of just dialling things up for the dancefloor.
(I like the Killers' version of this a lot too.)
#belle lawrence#almighty#I first got into Hi-NRG through an album with a naked sailor on the cover - very clearly marketed at a certain crowd#Needless to say I had all kinds of feelings about that and feelings about those feelings and feelings about THOSE feelings#I'm glad to be out for a lot of reasons but one is to have a final answer to all those questions#Youtube
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"I Didn't Have Any Idea What To Do But I Knew I Needed A Click."
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This has become a meme of some kind apparently, because young people or something. Anyway, I was watching the excellent Adult Swim short Lords Of Synth and that reminded me of this song.
(Here's Lords Of Synth - probably my favorite of these short Adult Swim pieces. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXgNo5Smino)
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