Go green!
The Incredible Hulk “Hear Four Exciting All-New Action-Adventure Stories” on Peter Pan Records.
The Incredible Hulk “Hear Four Exciting All-New Action-Adventure Stories” on Peter Pan Records.
Genuine Electric Latin Love Machine Persuasive electronics by Richard Hayman. Front and back cover. 1969. Moog synthesizer arranged by Richard Hayman, programmed by Walter Sear. Cover art and design: Stephen Maka/Henry Epstein.
Man was Candice Bergen beautiful. Here she is as a model on the cover of a corny Skitch Henderson e-z listening lp.
Candice Bergen was the daughter of ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his wife Frances, a former Chesterfield girl. When Candice was born, many news stories noted that Bergen’s dummy Charlie McCarthy now had a sister. She displayed a gift early on for comedy when as a child she was a guest on her father’s radio show. She grew up privileged and was childhood friends with Gregory Peck’s and Judy Garland’s children and often spent time amusing herself at family friend Walt Disney’s home. She briefly attended the University of Pennsylvania in the mid 1960’s. She was named homecoming queen in her freshman year, but left to begin a career as a Ford model. Her earnings allowed her to indulge in her passion for photography; later shooting photographs for Life, Esquire and Playboy.
Throughout the 1960’s, she would attend lavish parties thrown by the likes of CBS president William Paley, but also hung out with the Black Panthers and got arrested for lying down on the floor of the U.S. Senate. Candice indulged in writing (her works appeared in Playboy and she also wrote a play titled “The Freezer”), photojournalism, and acting.
Candice was asked by director Sidney Lumet to play Lakey, an icy lesbian in “The Group” Then she was cast as a missionary opposite Steve McQueen in Robert Wise’s “The Sand Pebbles”. In 1971, she starred in Mike Nichols’ “Carnal Knowledge” with Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel. She was the first woman to host “Saturday Night Live”, and also contributed news stories for NBC news. All before Murphy Brown!
Volume II of “Supersonic Guitars” by Billy Mure on MGM Records.
On the cover: “Forecast Solar Toy Designed for Aluminum Company of America’s Forecast Collection by Charles Eames.”
“The Monkey’s Uncle” (1965) Disney movie with Annette Funicello. The Beach Boys perform the title track in this bad sequel to “The Misadventures of Merlin Jones”.
“Jazz in the Space Age” (1960) on Decca Records. George Russell and his orchestra featuring Bill Evans at the piano.
George Russell’s third release as a leader combines two adventurous sessions. The first features two pianists, Bill Evans and Paul Bley, and a large ensemble including Ernie Royal, Dave Baker, Walt Levinsky, Barry Galbraith, Milt Hinton and Don Lamond, among others. The three-part suite “Chromatic Universe” is an ambitious work which mixes free improvisation with written passages that have not only stood the test of time but still sound very fresh. “The Lydiot” focuses on the soloists, while incorporating elements from “Chromatic Universe” and other Russell compositions. The second session adds trumpeter Marty Markowitz, valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, alto saxophonist, Hal McKusack and drummer Charlie Persip to the earlier group, in the slow, somewhat mysterious “Waltz From Outer Space,” which incorporates an Oriental-sounding theme, and “Dimensions,” described by its composer as “a sequence of freely associated moods indigenous to jazz.”
One of the “Music for Gracious Living” series of easy listening records on Columbia. The series focused on various scenes of home entertaining (e.g., the backyard barbeque, card games, “after the dance”)