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Covered! - Classic Record Sleeves & Their Imitators (Paperback, first)
Loot Price: R510
Discovery Miles 5 100
You Save: R57
(10%)
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Covered! - Classic Record Sleeves & Their Imitators (Paperback, first)
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List price R567
Loot Price R510
Discovery Miles 5 100
You Save R57 (10%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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You're browsing through some albums or CDs and all of a sudden one
crops up which causes a moment of recognition and a "haven't I seen
this cover before somewhere?" The answer is that you might well
have done. For just as popular music of the present day seems to
rifle the albums and bands of earlier generations, so the sleeve
designers also often lean on the past for inspiration. Sometimes
this is done by way of a deliberate reference point. In other cases
the band might be wanting to pay homage to their influences, or
peers. It might simply be that they have just seen an old cover
which they like so much they want to borrow it. On other occasions
the similarities are less well intended, designed to mimic or (dare
we say it) even poke fun at classic designs and bands. Sometimes
the new covers are simply a deliberate spoof of a well-known piece
of artwork, done for subversive or mischievous reasons. So you get
Ian Gillan of Deep Purple, just kicked out of the group and
understandably angry at them, referencing one of his former band's
classic covers, but highlighting himself and blurring away the rest
of the group on purpose. Then there is comedian Barry Humphries
commissioning a very clever pastiche of the familiar Sound Of Music
album cover, only with himself in a frock dancing up the hill
instead of Julie Andrews. Paul Weller's former band The Jam did an
album called Sound Affects, and wanted a cover which recalled the
pioneering series of BBC Radio sound effects albums of the sixties,
a knowing design which only older fans would have even been aware
of. Perhaps one of the most famous examples is that of the Clash
single London Calling, which brought together a photograph of the
arch Punks trashing their guitars and lettering lifted from an
early iconic Elvis Presley sleeve. The list goes on. For this
fascinating book, Belgian based collector Jan Bellekens has scoured
the second hand stores and record fairs of Europe and assembled an
amazing collection, of which this book contains a selection of over
650 sleeves. The original covers are shown alongside their newer
cousins, with explanatory notes for music fans and designers.
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