10

Raise The Alarm by Big Dog

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cool dog beds for summerRaise The Alarm by Big Dog

Copyright: Zomba Records Ltd 2001 // Permissions: Mark Jones 2008 // Produced by: Zomba Records Ltd // Directed by: Zomba Records Ltd

Album: Big Dog Solid Nourishment (Jive)
Reviewed by Andy Gill Thursday, 5 July 2001

When Shaun Ryder emerged from the rubble of Happy Mondays with Black Grape in the mid-Nineties, it seemed like the most miraculous of pop comebacks, evidence of not just his creative regeneration but his ox-like constitution too. Others have been less lucky: apart from Keith Richards, it’s hard to think of many musicians who share Ryder’s cockroach-like imperviousness to the ravages of excessive drug indulgence certainly not Paul “Kermit” Leveridge, his rapping partner in Black Grape and also, for that group’s lifespan, his flatmate and drug buddy. It was like a modern-day version of the Icarus fable: for several years, Kermit accompanied Ryder deeper and deeper down the dark tunnel of smack and crack addiction, becoming by his own admission a “Grade A animal” open to any narcotic offer, until one day Leveridge found himself close to death with a drug-related bout of blood poisoning, lying in a hospital bed under the devastated gaze of his parents as his internal organs began shutting down.

By rights, he shouldn’t have made it through, but somehow Kermit survived, and was chastened enough to make the life-changes necessary to ensure his future survival. Two years of detox and counselling later, he bumped into his old friend Ged Lynch, drummer in his pre-Grape hip-hop crew The Ruthless Rap Assassins, and tagged along to the studio to hear what Lynch was working on with guitarist Mark Jones and former Black Grape bassist Danny Williams. The next thing anybody knew, Kermit was fronting the band adding the bark to Big Dog’s bite and they were all ensconced in a Welsh mountain cottage recording Solid Nourishment, an album that represents, in its own way, a comeback every bit as miraculous as Ryder’s six years earlier.

The Big Dog sound is understandably close to Black Grape’s, a rollicking, good-time blend of funk, rock, house and rap rooted in Sly Stone’s original crossover blueprint, but with its hedonist celebrations tempered by Kermit’s brush with mortality. Tracks such as “Boom” and “Natural Disaster” are salutary street-life warnings. The siren lure of fun and frolics is still present in the G-Funk synth whines, clipped guitar riffs, horn stabs, cool flutes, congas and chanted choruses, but beneath the tempting surface is a sense of dark foreboding.

It’s this apprehension of danger that gives laddish cuts like “Genuinely Insincere” and “The Right Thing” their edge, though Kermit’s natural cheekiness bubbles irrepressibly through tracks such as “Raise The Alarm” and the masturbation anthem “I Turn Me On” the latter an infectious pastiche of the classic Giorgio Moroder/Donna Summer techno-disco sound. With Geno Washington duetting on one song, and the last track boasting a predatory heavy-metal menace, there’s enough diversity here to suggest Big Dog might develop more promisingly than Black Grape did; but whatever route they take, it’ll never be less than entertaining, and always true to Kermit’s new hold on life: as he says, “I gotta be myself around myself”.

Duration : 0:4:27

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25

The Snow Man (1932) [PG] Warning: This ain’t Frosty The Snowman, kids!

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The Snow Man (1932) A cute little Eskimo and his animal friends build a snowman. But this is no friendly Frosty. The snowman attacks them and wreaks havoc until it’s destroyed by the Northern Lights.

Directed and Animated By Ted Eshbaugh
(February 5, 1906 – July 4, 1969)

NOTE: This controversial animated short was originally produced for Van Beuren Studios and released by RKO Radio Pictures on July 05, 1932. It was then edited and reproduced by Film Laboratories of Canada, Invincible in 1933. You are watching the original and unedited 1932 version.

The story takes place in the frozen north. Our hero the Eskimo is bedding down for the winter. His pet, a seal that barks like a dog, beds down too. In the spring, everybody gets up. We find that the seal/dog has had pups! All is well and happy. All the cute little animals frolic and play in the snow, building a snowman. Suddenly, the mood changes. The snowman comes to life and starts attacking everybody! He eats a fish in a rather gruesome display, gains a big deep voice, and wrecks a church. It looks like there is no stopping him, but our hero the Eskimo knows what to do. Even the eaten fish has the final laugh.

In the early thirties, the success of James Whales Frankenstein made the film a point of reference. New films, even plain mysteries, were advertised or critiqued as being Frankenstein-like, or in the vein of Frankenstein. It even applied to cartoon shorts, as in this curious review by James Francis Crow in a Hollywood Citizen News entertainment column dated August 24, 1933:

Ted Eshbaugh, touted as the first worthy competitor to Walt Disney, has completed the first color cartoon of The Wizard of Oz series, and it will be released soon by a major studio, this column hears.

Another of Eshbaugh’s creations, called The Snow Man, in an Arctic locale, applies the Frankenstein theme to cartoon comics. The snow man builded by the little Eskimo hero and his animal pals comes to life and spreads havoc in the north country. But our hero runs to the North Pole Power Plant, turns on the Aurora Borealis, and melts Mr. Snow Man.

A fish the icy Frankenstein has swallowed is found swimming in the placid lake formed at his demise.

As far as being a worthy competitor, Ted Eshbaugh was indeed the first of Disneys would-be rivals to produce color cartoons, but he was never a true contender. He would produce or direct a handful of titles, the most significant being a 1933 adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, with music by Carl Stalling. Promoted as the first of a series, the short was embroiled in legal problems and never reached theaters. The record is unclear, it was either a case of Walt Disney having an exclusive agreement with Technicolor, or Samuel Goldwyn owning the film rights to the property.

The Snow Man, produced in 1932, features a nasty North Pole bogeyman with scary claws and a literal stovepipe hat. The Frankenstein theme suggested by reporter Crow is incidental, the snowman being a creature assembled, brought to life and going on a rampage. A year later, the film might have been compared to King Kong instead. The 8-minute film survives today in black and white. Too bad, the aura borealis finale must have been stunning in color.

The theater mentioned in the article, Tallys Criterion, was called The first truly deluxe movie theatre in Los Angeles when it opened, as The Kinema, in 1917, boating 1800 seats and a spectacular organ. It was one of the first theaters to install the Vitaphone sound system in 1927 and Al Jolson himself traveled cross-country to attend a showing there of The Jazz Singer. The theater cycled through several names until it was damaged in a fire, abandoned, and demolished in 1941.

Other shorts directed by Ted Eshbaugh
Cap’n Cub (1945)
Japanese Lanterns (1935)
The Sunshine Makers (1935)
Pastry Town Wedding (1934)
Goofy Goat Antics (1933)
The Wizard of Oz (1933)

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The Snow Man (1932)
Warning: This ain’t Frosty The Snowman, kids!

Copyright Disclaimer:
Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Duration : 0:8:6

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0

All Dogs Dream

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cool dog beds for summerA dog is stuck in the heat of Summer and dreams of something better.

Duration : 0:7:8

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