Source: adski-kafeteri.livejournal.com
(via PEPLUM TV: HD Alert!)
Margaret Lee and Reg Lewis in COLOSSUS OF THE STONE AGE (1962)
Source: peplumtv.com
Gil Brewer’s Ein Mädchen Schrie, better known as And the Girl Screamed, originally published in 1956 in the U.S., with this Panther-Buch edition appearing in West Germany in 1957.
Source: mudwerks
Peter Sinfield, King Crimson’s lyricist, live technical wizard, and roadie, died Thursday, Nov. 14. He was 80.
Sinfield’s death was confirmed by Discipline Global Mobile, the record label founded by King Crimson’s Robert Fripp. No cause of death was given, though the statement did mention that Sinfield “had been suffering form declining health for several years.” A rep for DGM did not immediately return Rolling Stone’s request for comment.
Sinfield played a significant role in the formation and early success of King Crimson, serving as lyricist and artistic director, while also providing all sorts of practical help. He found the band’s first practice space in a cafe basement in London and even came up with their name.
Source: Rolling Stone
Benjamin Rabier - Mopje van Boevenburg en ziin streken, pm 1910
Source: mudwerks
(via Arizona Daily Star)
Pictured here in 1965, two days before Christmas, is Ken Newman standing at his "Snowing! Tucson" sign at Old Spanish Trail and Golf Links.
Source: tucson.com
Roy Haynes, among the greatest and most influential drummers in the history of jazz, died on Tuesday in Nassau County, N.Y., on the South Shore of Long Island. He was 99.
Source: The New York Times
English postcard by Cinema. Image: Pathé Nathan / Roger Cartier / Paris Consortium Cinéma. Poster for Mickey Mouse in Mickey Laboureur/The Plowboy (Walt Disney, 1929).
Source: mudwerks