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Comicbook-related observations, mostly random

My favourite comicbook movies of all time:

5) The Crow
4) X-Men 2
3) Sin City
2) Spiderman 2.
1) Go ahead, take a guess.

gotjanx-saar, does this answer your question?

Landmark now seems to have copies of Bone: The One Volume Edition on sale for 1800 Rs. It’s a brilliant book, so if you can spare some cash, pick it up.

The Blade of the Immortal volumes there have #1 missing. Damn.

Blossom is now selling Sandman volumes at a 20% discount – the price range of each volume is between 400 and 610 Rs.

Read the first Starman collection “Sins of the Father” last night. Quite different from what I had expected. James Robinson rocks – he effectively made his letter columns an open forum for discussing collectibles and collectors. I have a strong feeling I am going to end up buying the complete series off eBay sometime.

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Four albums that rock my world right now

Rob Dougan – Furious Angels
If you’ve ever heard the Matrix OST, tell me if you remember this track called Clubbed To Death. It starts off with gentle strings borrowed from Elgar’s Enigma Variations, and then metamorphoses into a catchy orchestral beat-fest – with a piano solo interlude worth dying for. The gentleman who composed this piece was Rob D, D for Dougan – and Furious Angels is the album on which this song appears, along with a number of other vocal and instrumental pieces. Dougan’s growling, raspy vocals, chunky beats, the swirling orchestral sounds create an ambience hard to describe – it’s completely electronica one moment, making you bop your head to the rhythm, and then forces you to stop doing whatever it is you were doing and listen to a calm solo the next instant. Rousing stuff.

Mùm – Finally We Are No One

I learnt of this Icelandic band when I was out searching for resources about my favourite Icelandic artiste. A search for articles on Salon.com brought up an interesting piece about this band, and a free mp3. Got myself an album soon after, and boy oh boy, was it good or what. Two guys, two girls – the boys with interesting hardware and a weird aural signature, and the girls with cherubic voices, Mùm makes music that gives me goosepimples. “Liquid electronica” is a phrase I’ve heard somewhere about their music, and it’s so bloody appropriate. Bursts of static, crackling loops that sound like they have been sampled from ancient vinyl albums, dreamy tunes, and the voices, my man, the voices. And it’s not like you can listen to one song in a loop – it has to be the album, from beginning to end, that has to be heard again. And again.

This is where you can download some tracks ( I really haven’t checked if they are samples or full tracks) by Mùm.

Architecture In Helsinki – Fingers Crossed

I honestly do not know how I got this album. One fine day, I notice this folder on my harddisk and enqueue the songs on Winamp, and wham! I am hooked. I asked my Finnish friend at the office about the band – obviously, any band with “Helsinki” in it has to be from Finland – and he said ( after a bit of googling) that it was an Australian band. Weird. But yeah, he was hooked too. Fingers Crossed is one album that defies description of any sort; other than the word “joyous”, I can’t think of anything at all to say what the music makes me feel. Maybe the last album that gave me this euphoric feeling was Cake’s Motorcade of Generosity, with its catchy guitars and brass sections. Yes, brass section – AiH is one of the bands that uses woodwinds to superb effect, along with the oddest instrumental accompaniments. I think I need to share one of the songs with you guys, because I am running out of words here. So here you go – you know what to do, right?

Rage Against The Machine – Renegades

I have been a fan of Rage Against The Machine ever since Neo put the phone down and flew out of the phonebooth, to the mind-smashing intro riffs of ‘Wake Up’. I bought the cassette of Renegades the day I saw it at the music store, though I was a penniless student then. It was their last studio album, because they broke up right after, with Zach de La Rocha going solo and the rest of the band teaming up with Chris Cornell to form Audioslave. What I didn’t know then was that the album featured covers of punk, hip-hop and rock songs. Four years later, I put on the album again, and discovered that I now knew the originals too, and the contrast is stunning. Songs by Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, the MC5, Afrika Bambaata, The Rolling Stones – some already angst-ridden in their original versions, others quiet and unassuming – they are all given a perspective that’s uniquely Rage Against The Machine. But some things remain unchanged – four years ago, I loved the quiet menace of the drumless, bassless Beautiful World most of all, and today, it still makes me smile.

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Of schoolboyish memories

I knew a guy about ten years ago. One year senior to me in school, good with a guitar, good in stuff like debates and extempore speeches. And major book-reader. We were pals, him and I – even though he was the guy who kicked me so hard on the seat of my pants one day that I lay down and could not move for about 3 minutes. ( it was my fault he did that, people who’ve heard the Beatzo Laugh will sympathize – and he did take me to the dispensary right after I could get up.) He was also the guy who saved my ass the day I brought a Marilyn Monroe poster to school, and some sneaky whippersnapper went off and tipped off the teachers. Took the poster from me, hid it in his bag, and after school was over, returned it safe and sound.

We never quizzed together, but we did bunk school for the occasional debate at the occasional children’s Book Fair. He led the school chapter of the Junior Red Cross in his last year of school, I took up the cross in mine. ( That last line didn’t really come out too well, did it?) On the day of the farewell, which the ninth class students have to organize for the seniors, we sat down in a deserted classroom and talked for hours. “Make sure you study hard next year”, I remember him telling me, in one of those brief “serious” moments, “And stop reading those comics in class.”

And so he passed out of school, and I did not see him again.

I tried to, really. His mother was a teacher in our school, and she left a couple of months after him, and they moved to Shillong. Over the years, I would hear vague things about him – he’s started a band, gotten into drugs, dropped out of college, he’s sobered up, he’s come back to Guwahati. But yeah, I could never get something important, like an address, or a phone number, or an email ID. Life went on, I went to college, away from Assam and a bunch of old friends who were turning into memories. Passed out, joined a job, changed cities temporarily, and yeah, you get the picture.

So last Monday I am having lunch at this joint near my workplace, a place I like a lot for it’s cheap chicken and non-veg thalis. Conversing with a colleague, when someone comes up to the table and says – “Beatzo Phreniac?” ( Well, not this name, he used my real one)

I look up, and there he is, looking exactly the same as he did eleven years ago, just a wee bit plumper. Fuck, I actually had to slap myself just to make sure this wasn’t some kind of weird hallucination or something. But yeah, there he was, and turns out that he has been in Bangalore the past two years. Understatement of the day – it was good catching up, really. He said he recognised me from quite afar, because I hadn’t changed at all. Which happens to be true, as everyone else keeps telling me.

But yeah, there is a good reason why I remember him to this day, and it does have to do with books. Now while Guwahati wasn’t a good place to get books, apart from the Bishnu-Nirmala Children’s Library, which had (duh) children’s stuff and the District Library, which was terrible – there used to be quite a few private circulating libraries – the ones with the good stuff you don’t get anywhere else, like Michael Crichton and Louis L’Amour and (drool) James Hadley Chase, but they were overpriced, at least for us penniless, school-going folk. So it was a happy time when one of these private libraries announced that it was essentially selling off all its books. We went there the first day of the sale, and spent a happy forty-five minutes browsing through and picking up books. ( I remember that was where I found my first James Bond novel “Goldfinger”, and part of the reason I bought it was the cover which had a still from the movie, and it was not Bond, if you get my drift.)

So we are looking through the titles, and suddenly I notice a book in the children’s section, one with a funny, children’s-booky title that didn’t really make sense, mostly because I had never heard of it before – neither had I heard about the writer, some chap with a lot of initials. I mean, what kind of a name is Tolkien anyway? I point it out, this guy goes “Ah!” – and shambles over slowly and picks it up. I paid it no more heed, there were other things to look at. The evening’s shopping done, we leave, and I ask him what kind of a book “The Hobbit” was. “A very good book.”, he says, “Tolkien is a writer you should look out for, he’s written this massive volume called The Lord of the Rings. I read that sometime ago, and I was looking for this book for quite sometime.” “So how much did you get it for?”, I asked. Very innocently, he says- “Oh, not much. Just ten rupees.”

Later on in life, I was to think much of the nonchalant “Ah!” and the ten-rupees price tag. Ah well, you live and learn.

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A weird thing happened last Thursday night.

Actually, it happened on Friday morning, but I didn’t know then because it was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents–except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by….ah, well, got carried away again. Anyways, I fell asleep at my usual bedtime on Thursday night, at about one AM or thereabouts, and suddenly, I awoke to a strange whishing sound. It was dark in the room, and the first thought that came to my mind was – my Creative speakers had blown. This odd reaction was because I generally leave my computer on at night – with some music playing, and once the playlist is done, it pipes down and goes into standby. A couple of nights ago, there was some kind of a power fluctuation at night, and I had woken up to the sound of my speakers blipping rather irritatingly because the computer was rebooting at about 2 boots per second. That had scared me a lot, and I actually shut my computer down before falling asleep for the next two days.

So with this scary speaker-blowy situation paramount in my sleep-addled mind, I jumped to the wall and switched off the power. And crawled back to bed.

Except the sound was still there, and it was definitely from outside my window. There were also people whispering, quite a few of them. None of these looked too good – it’s never good when your sleepiness disappears at an unholy time of the night.

There were six men outside the window. My apartment is on the ground floor, with a slight elevation, and I could see two of them busy sawing a tree that grew directly opposite apartment, and the rest looking hassled and obviously keeping a lookout. The tree happened to be a Sandalwood tree, and two months ago, a gang of men, armed with guns and knives, had driven inside the apartment complex, cut the telephone wires, held the guard ( an old guy who looks more harmless than my grandpa ) at knife-point and tried to saw off that very tree. Since that time, the gate to the complex would be properly locked at 11 in the night and reopened at 6 the next morning. Obviously, that hadn’t worked. The guard was nowhere to be seen.

Note the point about guns and knives. While I couldn’t really see anything being carried by these guys, it was obviously a bad idea for me to shout out and say – “What on earth is going on?” At the same time, someone on the top floor was yelling something in Kannada – these guys obviously paid no attention, and the sawing continued. I did the logical thing, switched on my light, banged the bedroom door open and went to the living room, which ALSO faced the same tree. The idea was to go and wake my roomies up, and create a ruckus and scare the guys off.

Well, by the time I am in the living room, I look outside, the guys have vanished! Criminals are indeed a cowardly and superstitious lot, it seems, because the lit-up room scared them so much that they dropped everything, including the saw and ran off. Couple of minutes later, the folks from upstairs came down with a torch, I joined them – sadly enough, the tree had been chopped off all the way through. The police came in after about twenty minutes, made a fuss, and were around until at about 10 in the morning, some folks from the Forest Department came and carted the tree away. The guard had been held down by two men, or so he claims. Seems he was asking around for money from the owner for the past few days, and the buzz is that he might be involved in this.

So – my superpower of choice? I drive criminals away by lighting up rooms. Beat that!

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