Splendid and Rathergood

On a rainy day in Brighton, what better pick-me-up than a new video from Rathergood and my dear friend, the witty and imaginative Professor Elemental.

I’ve been lucky enough to know the Professor (aka Paul Alborough) for a couple of years now – we met when we were both performing at one of Brighton’s first Steampunk nights and neither of us were entirely sure what Steampunk was (I didn’t have the foggiest idea). Paul was appearing as Professor Elemental with his trusty badgermingo; I was playing a Spacedog set with my sister Jenny. Paul subsequently took to Steampunk like a badgermingo to water, unlike Spacedog (who do nevertheless enjoy the odd performance at a live Steampunk night).

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Beat boxing, break dancing, music television and karaoke, 1930s style

I was delighted to stumble on this wonderful video, from the early 1930s, showing the Mills Brothers, an African American singing outfit whose performance was way ahead of its time. Here, you can see the Mills Brothers and some dancers give a stunning rendition of the Count Basie classic Caravan. It’s a performance that transcends the unfortunate setting and costumes:

The performance features  The Mills Brothers’ mouth music, which can be thought of as an early forerunner of hip hop beat boxing. Mouth music was the art of impersonating fashionable musical instruments, just with your voice and body. The dancers, whose performance is a nod to Josephine Baker and the Charleston, also show off their break dancing skills, fifty years before this dancing style became high fashion in New York and beyond.

Thanks to Terri Affleck for sending me this other Mills Brothers delight, a beautiful Fleischer cartoon featuring the brothers on a very early depiction of television (1932). This wonderful early music video also features a beautifully animated karaoke section:

How to leave Twitter – a message from the Queen

This made me smile today – anyone who read my angsty diatribe against Twitter last week will know why. I hope it’s making some of the same points but with higher precision and more laughs.

Grace Dent and I are clearly at the vanguard. Well, Dent is at the vanguard – I’m just too angsty for friendships delivered in disembodied dollops of 140 characters. Thanks to my Twitter informant @prof_elemental for sending it in – and for telling me not to get hung up about a silly old website. I think the book is due for publication in a week or two – it should be an interesting read.

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Faces of authority

An occasional series of photographs, depicting authoritative and trustworthy types.

Browsers may also enjoy Mode Maven (photographs of thespians and other fashionable types, c1900)


N0 2: Anonymous gent – into rubber research

Photo

Anonymous gent - into rubber research

Close-up

Anonymous gent - into rubber research (close-up)

No 1: Raymond Glendenning in How to choose a binocular

Booklet cover

Raymond Glendenning in How to Choose a Binocular

Close-up

Raymond Glendenning (close-up)

Stooky Bill

With jet black eyes and hair singed by the lights of John Logie Baird’s early televisor, Stooky Bill was the inventor’s ventriloquial sidekick. Stooky’s face appeared as a streaky blob on the second ever televisor image, around 1925. A ‘stooky’ is a plaster cast. Made of plaster himself, Stooky had sufficient contrast to be just about discernible on Baird’s earliest televisor images. And he stayed still, like the most patient human sitter, while Baird adjusted his televisor equipment.

Two Stooky BillsJohn Logie-Baird in Frith Street, Soho, London, c1925. This photo shows there were at least two Stookies.
Source: Here’s Looking at You, B Norman 1984

Spacedog’s own Stooky-like Hugo makes three:

Mode Maven

An occasional series of photographs, depicting London thespians and other fashionable types, c1900.

Browsers may also enjoy Faces of Authority


No 11: Miss Jessie Preston as Robinson Crusoe at the Grand Theatre, Islington

Miss Jessie Preston as Robinson Crusoe

No 10: Mr Chas Lauri as the Masher Poodle

Mr Chas Lauri as The Masher Poodle

No 9: Miss Katie James as a doll

Miss Katie James as a doll

No 8: Miss Violet Evelyn as Sinbad

Miss Violet Evelyn as Sinbad

No 7: Miss Rosie Dearing in “The Man in the Moon”

Miss Rosie Dearing in "The Man in the Moon"

No 6: Miss Syliva Gerrish, Madison Square, New York

Miss Syliva Gerrish, New York

No 5: Mr Charles Danby as Roberts in “The Lady Slavey”

Mr Charles Danby as Roberts

No 4: Mr Scott Russell as Berbicao in “Mirette”

Mr Scott Russell as Berbicao in "Mirette"

No 3: Miss Lily Harold; The Prince in “Dick Whittington”, Drury Lane

Miss Lily Harold in "Dick Whittington", Drury Lane

No 2: Mr Lewis Waller “The Wife’s Secret”

Mr Lewis Waller in "The Wife's Secret"

No 1: Arthur Playfair as Corporal Harold in “His Excellency”

Arthur Playfair as Corporal Harold in “His Excellency”

Yuri Gagarin – first human cosmonaut

An extract from Time Magazine, 8 May 1961, showing how journalists living in one superpower eyed up revellers in another, shortly after Yuri Gagarin made his triumphant return to Earth. Gagarin, the first human cosmonaut, made his historic orbital flight around the Earth in Vostok 1, 12 April 1961.

Click on any image to see a full-sized version.

Gagarin1

This short extract is included here for non-commercial research purposes only.