6′+ Episode 66 is Up!

2013 Logo IconTo quote the description given at the new listing:

“We start the second half of the year with some new music from The Mugshots, The Recently Deceased and Monkeyrobotarm; some classics from The Pits and Lurking Corpses. Plus – a whole lot more. Monstermatt Patterson is still Mint On Card though it’s more likely a peppermint stuck to a credit card. And we get literary with Home Haunting: Jersey Devil Style.”

Remember to email 6′+ (contact at 6ftplus.com) or leave a comment below about the show, whether you liked it or not. Tell your friends, leave a review on iTunes, but above all – enjoy.

You can find all episodes of 6′+ over at the official site as well as on iTunes, Stitcher and Spreaker. They’re also on Facebook and Twitter.

Repertum Post Mortem

Pictured: The Evil Streaks, Back of This Guy's head (left)Over the weekend, I was able to catch The Evil Streaks (Weird Jon wrote an excellent travelogue about his trip to see them) at Otto’s Shrunken Head. Always a joy, they were an excellent sight. One of the gents in the audience was wearing a Kings Of Nuthin’ t-shirt. In fact, you can see the back of his head in the shitty picture I took with my cell phone.

The guy is behind Sailor Grave Photography, by the way. He does good work.

So, the Kings of Nuthin’ – I had no idea who these guys were until I saw In Memoriam notices for Torr Skoog, founder and frontman for band, start to pop up. I won’t say that I’m suddenly the biggest Kings Of Nuthin’ fan but it’s clear from whom I’ve talked to that 1) they were awesome live and 2) it sucks that no one is going to see them perform ever again.

A lot of good artists I’ve discovered after a member has died. Frank Zappa. The Cramps. Numerous punk bands and film makers and writers. The first time I hear about someone is usually when their death notice breaks into my everyday life because that’s usually the first and only time that some of these fringe, outsider artists ever get any mainstream recognition. Artists. Thinkers. Writers. They live away from the main stage where the bulk of the audience (call it the mainstream, the general populous) and they do their own thing for a smaller, albeit more dedicated, following. But, when they pass, the MC of the night usually cuts into the cartoon or the opening act’s set to say that those weirdos that most of the world have ignored are now gone and never will be seen again.

Most of the time, these notices are shrugged off and to no surprise. If the majority of the eyes weren’t looking over where those weird performers once were, they certainly aren’t looking now. But, occasionally, there are a few people like myself who catch sight of the negative space, of the void now left. And we often find out a lot of what we missed. It’s a sadness that is not mourning of the artist’s death but a frustration that our ignorance of this individual kept us from enjoying them while they’re alive.

However, one of the greatest aspects of art is that its power often is greater than that of its creator. Whereas the artist will die, art continues on in its place. Art has the potential to reach and affect someone centuries after a person’s death. People are still moved by Bach, Mozart, Stravinsky and more and forever will be. For those of us who discover these artists because of their deaths, we can’t ever say ‘we were there’ but we can go on and have the art be an influence. I may never see the Kings of Nuthin’ play, but I can use their music as an influence, either to write, draw, paint or create or just to keep myself going to the end of the next work day.

The reoccurring trend of discovering someone after they’re dead is one of the main reasons I’ve gotten into this small sliver of horror business. I wasn’t a monster kid but I was always hanging out with dead people, either with their music, movies or books. It’s a slight explanation of why I’m here. When the Obituary acts like your Hit Parade, you’re going to end up creepy and weird.

Still, it’s good to go out and see live music once in a while, so make sure you do so. Catch The Evil Streaks. They’re going on tour soon. And if you haven’t yet, check out Kings Of Nuthin’.

 

Super Moon

Sigh…it’s late and the article I’m working on is just not coming out the way it should. Maybe I should just put it aside and bust out some “Super Moon” pictures. Not of the most recent one that was apparently the largest and closest one this year, but the one that was hyped before that. I was going to take pictures of the new one, but it was only slightly bigger than what you’ll see below. It just didn’t seem worth the effort.

Werewolf alert!

M-O-O-N, THAT SPELLS

I forget, it's amore when what hits your eye? like a big pizza pie?

I don’t know about you, but this makes me want to listen to the “Full Moon Rock” episode of the podcast. As a special treat, here’s a selection of free moon-related music downloads using the same format as Free Zombie Music:

“Moonlight Sonata”Ludwig van Beethoven (via MusOpen)
“Moon Mist”Kava Kon
“I’m Your Moon”Jonathan Coulton
“Harvest Moon”Darkmood
“Moonbeam”Ray O’Bannon
“Woven in Moonlight”Ray O’Bannon

The Master Mystery

Photobombing level:  Robot.

International Patents, Inc. has a pretty good racket going: They buy up the patents from unwary inventors and suppress them. That way, any new inventions that could potentially render products patented by their client corporations obsolete never make it to the market. Naturally, thus makes for a lot of angry inventors and the empty promises of waiting until the time is right before producing their creations can only last so long. When one such inventor threatens to call in the Department of Justice, company owner Peter Brent seems willing to finally start delivering on his previously empty promises. What he doesn’t realize is that his new employee Quentin Locke is actually an undercover DoJ agent and that both he and the inventor will be stricken with “Madagascar Madness” later that night by a robot sent out by the mysterious “Q.” With his business partner Herbert Balcom now in charge and determined to keep the company’s scheme going, it’s up to Locke to both find a cure for Brent’s condition and bring Balcolm to justice. But with Q’s gang and the robot constantly interfering, this will be no easy task…

Although Harry Houdini had performed in a few short films prior to The Master Mystery, it was this 1919 serial that officially kicked off his brief career in feature films and boy does it show. Not only was it obviously written to showcase his skills as an escape artist, but the producers were clearly hellbent on reminding the viewer that it was a Houdini film. Not only do the film’s intertitles often refer to it as “The Houdini serial” rather than by the title, but so did the serial’s early publicity materials. And even when the title is given, Houdini’s name is usually placed above it in a much larger font! Getting back to my earlier comment about the serial being design to let Houdini show off his escape routines, his character is knocked unconscious and tied up a ridiculous amount of times. And while at first the villains’ motivations for doing this rather than outright kill him make sense at first (and even attempt to kill him immediately via drowning a few times), it makes less and less sense the longer it goes on. After all, why do they keep tying him up if they know he’s already escaped numerous times before? At one point late into the story, one of the henchmen actually holds a gun up to his head so they can tie him up! I kid you not. I know he’s the protagonist and needs to survive for the story to continue, but come on!

I will give The Master Mystery credit for providing some particularly amazing escapes (like when Houdini is wrapped up in barbed wire) and for allowing us to see Houdini do the stunts he was famous for. I’ll also give it credit for not lapsing into using “fake death” cliffhangers, wherein a character is clearly seen getting killed at the end of one installment but is shown to be alive (often by explaining that what we saw last time didn’t happen) in the next. It also has excellent set design and plenty of interesting locales, although it loses some points for the racist portrayal of Chinese people. Why yes, they are portrayed by white people in yellowface, however did you guess? If you’re a fan of old school robot costumes, then this is a must-see just for the robot Looking only slightly less goofy than the posters would suggest, the Automaton (as the film calls it) is the great granddaddy of the clunky robot suits that popped up in many a Republic serial. The fact that it actually marches around from location to location is only icing on the cake.

As the serial is 15 chapters and runs a grand total of 238 minutes, there is a lot of padding. There’s a love triangle between Locke, Brent’s daughter and Balcom’s son (who wants to marry her solely to secure his father’s ownership of the company). There’s also a subplot over whether or not Locke’s secretary (who is also in love with him) is a missing heir to Brent’s share of the company and it adds just as much to the story as the chapter where Locke stops his investigation in order to test out a special diving suit. It’s almost enough to make a staunch proponent of film preservation like myself feel grateful that said chapter (and other footage) is missing. Yes, I’m afraid to report that only chapters 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13, 14 and 15 exist in complete form while all the other chapters exist as a mix of newly created text screens summarizing the events of the missing material and whatever fragments of those installments that still exist. This also means that there’s some print damage and even some nitrate decomposition issues, with some segments of episode 3 suffering so bad that it looks like the middle of the frame is constantly on fire. I also noticed that some parts (including intertitles) are cropped or windowboxed at times. But for the most part, the serial is very watchable. I know I made fun of the obvious padding and plot holes, but it’s worth watching to see Houdini do this thing (along with the hilarious robot). I also found it fascinating how business-oriented it is. Not only are the villains basically patent trolls, but part of Locke’s efforts to beat them is to try to collect enough shares of the company in order to outrank Balcolm! Just don’t try watching it all in one go. I highly recommend watching it in its intended form so that it won’t be as monotonous as it is in “movie” form.

Kino has released the film as part of a 3 disc collection called Houdini: The Movie Star, which also includes various shorts, film clips and what other feature films of his (Terror Island, The Man From Beyond, and Haldane of the Secret Service). That said, The Master Mystery will probably be the only film of interest for horror and science fiction fans. If Houdini hadn’t died before his time, I wonder if he would have been tempted to revive his short-lived movie company and film an adaptation of his “collaboration” with H.P. Lovecraft. Now that would’ve been something…

Stellar Corpses, RESPECT THE DEAD

Stellar Corpses
Official Site
Respect The Dead, HairBall8 Records 2007

You didn't even notice the flying saucer in the background, did you?

Taking their name from the astronomical term for dead stars, Stellar Corpses first appeared on the Santa Cruz music scene in 2005. Drawing from a wide range of musical inspirations including (but not limited to) Black Flag, Social Distortion, Black Sabbath, The Misfits, Sepultura and Elvis, they’ve developed a very distinctive style and large fanbase to boot. The members of Stellar Corpses are:

Dusty Sheehan: Vocals and lead guitar
Dan Lamothe: Backing vocals and upright bass
Emilio Menze: Backing vocals and guitar
Kyle Moore: Drums

The description that best defines the overall feel of Respect The Dead is a mix punk and psychobilly with a few samples sprinkled in for good measure. In fact, “Respect the Dead” kicks things off with one from Return of the Living Dead Part II before transitioning into a fast-paced rockin’ guitar intro. Likewise, the extremely catchy “Cemetery Man” pays tribute to the movie of the same name through its title, lyrics and and excerpts from the film. “Stalking After Midnight” is particularly fascinating to me. It starts off sounding like an old timey country song about a lonely cowpoke looking for love and then BAM! Suddenly the soft guitars rev up and the singer’s voice changes as he sings about his evil motivation for the search. “Dr. Plainfield” is a twisted tune devoted to Ed Gein which features fast paced guitars and excellent drum work (as always) while all my notes about “Pieces of You” are just the word “YES” over and over again.

Things close out with “Leave a Stellar Corpse”, which says “Live fast, die young, leave a Stellar Corpse!” It’s a clever reference to how the light we see from some stars in the sky has taken so long to reach Earth that the star is actually dead by the time we see it. But despite that, we can still see its brilliance in the night. This theme is clearly important to the Stellar Corpse, as it shows up in their later works. According to the lead guitarist/vocalist, “Music is everything to me. It’s my lifeblood. I need to hear it, learn it, write it, record it and perform it live, or I will surely die. I’ve had so many different jobs and I couldn’t stand any of them. Music is the one passion that has kept me completely enthralled non stop every day since I got my first guitar. Society tells you to get a job, but people on their deathbeds always say to follow your heart. We follow our hearts no matter what.” So while a superficial glance at the lyrics might make one think the group is endorsing reckless behavior, what they’re really saying is to follow your dreams.

After years of touring the West Coast, Stellar Corpses has since expanded to performing all across America (and even in Europe). In fact, the subject of today’s review was specifically chosen to help expose the band to the rest of the nation. The idea clearly worked, as they’ve released two more albums since then and are currently in the midst of a 2013 tour. Although this EP is a little over 14 minutes in length, it still packs in a lot of great music. The songs have enough in common so that you can easily determine whether or not you’ll like the band’s output, but at the same time varied enough that the songs never come off as clones of each other. All in all, it’s the perfect introduction to the Stellar Corpses.

I might not know a lot about psychobilly, but I know what I like and I LOVE this. Rest assured that you’ll definitely be seeing more of these guys here at Gravedigger’s Local 16. In the meantime, head on over to their website and join the mailing list to get a free song download!

Special thanks to Stellar Corpses for use of the image!

House of 1000 Muppets

Longtime readers know the drill: I talk about how much I love the Muppets and then showcase a Muppets-related video. This time around it’s a hilarious (but not exactly kid-friendly) mashup of the Muppets and the trailer for Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses, as uploaded by stang779:

As it turns out, Rob Zombie actually saw (and loved) this video! Speaking of Zombie, I’ve heard a rumor that the “Captain Spaulding’s Murder Ride” seen in the film is actually made up of a bunch of haunted attraction animatronics that he had purchased for his own enjoyment and then strung them all together for use in the film. Come to think of it, I wonder if they were left over from the time he designed a haunted maze for Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights…

6′+ Episode 65 is Up!

2013 Logo IconTo quote the description given at the new listing:

“Let’s send off the first half of the year in style, with music from bands familiar to 6′+. Hear new music from Kill, Baby…Kill, Go!Tsunami, Man…Or Astro-Man?, The Brains, Messer Chups and more. An all new edition of All This And Gore focuses less on 2013 and more on 2008, with its movie The Cottage. And a man for any season, Monstermatt Patterson talks about Richard Matheson in the latest Monstermatt Minute.”

Remember to email 6′+ (contact at 6ftplus.com) or leave a comment below about the show, whether you liked it or not. Tell your friends, leave a review on iTunes, but above all – enjoy.

You can find all episodes of 6′+ over at the official site as well as on iTunes, Stitcher and Spreaker. They’re also on Facebook and Twitter.

Kill, Baby…Kill, CORRIDOR X

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Kill, Baby…Kill
Corridor X

Buy at Deep Eddy and on Amazon / iTunes

[audio:http://www.gravediggerslocal.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Kill-Baby…Kill-Something-on-the-Wing.mp3]

I had the pleasure of catching Kill, Baby…Kill when they played on their last 2012 tour, the band having expanded on its Sometimes They Come Back! EP to incorporate music that would comprise the 2013 release, Corridor X. The show was one of the best, with some of the fiercest playing on view. They played both for the audience and at the world, almost competing against the din of existence for attention. There was a severity in the band’s performance and it made me wonder if it could ever be captured beyond the live experience. Amazingly, Kill, Baby…Kill managed to distill the intensity of their live performance into a record without losing a single heart-pounding beat.

Corridor X builds upon the bands first EP, reimagining the songs of Sometimes They Come Back! to more accurately reflect the sound of the band after both a lineup change as well as a change in attitude. The band is more focused on this outing and more comfortable in its own identity. Instead of repackaging a previous release with a few additional originals, this is a reinvention of the band. There’s a sinister edge to the music. It’s more sinister. It’s powerful, and yes, one of the few instances where a band is able to catch the lightning of their life performance in a bottle.

Corridor X is the sound of a headfirst freefall into darkness. It’s an album of high velocity. It’s an album of terminal attitude. It’s the music of a one way trip, of driving until the tank is empty with no intention of looking back. The title invokes the greatest fear, that of the unknown, placing it as a destination. One doesn’t proceed down Corridor X lightly, especially since it’s named after a dismal stretch of highway from the band’s native Alabama:

Corridor X is the begining stretch of the path from Birmingham, AL to Memphis, TN. It is a seemingly endless stretch of highway that has very little development. So if you break down, there could be an impossible distance to the next exit that has any sort of gas station.

Noah Holt, head of Kill, Baby…Kill, Surf Guitar 101

Among the songs Included in Corridor X (like the dreadful “Something On The Wing” or the panic-inspiring “Meltdown in Sector 9”) is “Ant Invasion,” a cover from Shadowy Men On A Shadowy Planet, the latter of which once famously included the song “We’re Not A Fucking Surf Band” on their last release. It’s a fitting inclusion, not just to showcase KBK’s interpretation on a classic but also to reaffirm that the band is not beholden to surf-instrumental conventions. When describing themselves as ‘apocalyptic surf punk,’ it’s clear they’re not going to be busting out your grandmother’s version of “Telstar.”

Oddly enough, it seems that there are an equal amount of bands eschewing the conventional attitudes /arrangements of classic surf music to those who adhere, to where it might appear that bands ‘deviating’ from the norm ARE the norm. There are well-established acts who balance themselves between the sounds established in the 60’s and the modern advances of today, while other bands have no qualms disregarding the balance to go off on their own tangents. Kill, Baby…Kill won’t be confused for the uniformed bands from the heyday of surf, but if anything, Corridor X confirms that’s not who KBK are.

KBK are a band of many interests and influences and Corridor X might read as a declaration of a Mission Statement for the band. I think the remaking of the prior songs in this band’s new image is meant to say that they respect who they once were and the bands whose work laid the foundation for where they currently stand, but Kill, Baby…Kill is a band focused on progressing forward. If Corridor X is indicative of what’s to come, we should all be happy to go along for the ride.

 

Author’s Note: Hours after this piece was written, news broke that famed author Richard Matheson passed away. Known for writing the novels I Am Legend, What Dreams May Come, Stir Of Echos, among with numerous episodes of The Twilight Zone, including “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet.” Kill, Baby…Kill’s song “Something on the Wing” draws from that original episode, one that has become synonymous with the series (as well as a staple of American pop culture.) We wish to extend our condolences to the family of Richard Matheson and our gratitude for his contribution to the strange, the wonderful and the weird.

6′+ Episode 64 is Up!

2013 Logo IconTo quote the description given at the new listing:

“As we close in on the end of the halfway mark for the year, it’s time once again to look back in our annual Best of the Year (So Far) episodes. Featuring new music released in 2013, this first of a two part series showcases bands never played before on 6′+. In between music from Flesh Roxon, Balzac, The Casket Creatures and more, hear the adventures of Monstermatt Patterson and the wisdom of Dr. Gangrene with the Monstermatt Minute and the Recommended Movie of the Week.”

Remember to email 6′+ (contact at 6ftplus.com) or leave a comment below about the show, whether you liked it or not. Tell your friends, leave a review on iTunes, but above all – enjoy.

You can find all episodes of 6′+ over at the official site as well as on iTunes, Stitcher and Spreaker. They’re also on Facebook and Twitter.

No Bones About It: The Boneyard (1991)

The_Boneyard ZC Rating 2 of 7: Fair

It was a late winter night for us in the cinematorium. Zimba stretched out on the Empire scroll sofa, already snoring away, while I prepared drinks for myself and Zombos.

“Make mine a double-espresso with lots of foam,” said Zombos. He stretched out his long legs and slumped in the Chesterfield club chair. “And don’t forget the popcorn.”

I loaded up the big ceramic skull o’popcorn and brought the drinks over.

I prefer to sit in the traditional theater seats that take up the first half of the cinematorium, Zombos’ home theater that’s almost as large as a real one. He rescued them from the Manhattan 44th Street theater just before its demolition in 1945 to make room for the New York Times newspaper headquarters expansion. I dimmed the lights, took a sip from my frothy mocha cappuccino, and started the film.

Our film this evening, The Boneyard, is a macabre but uneven mix from director and writer James Cummins. While there are watchable elements, the drawn-out scenes, comical monster puppets, and lackluster acting by the main character get in the way of any good scares. The idea is good: a burned-out and overweight psychic investigator, Alley (Deborah Rose), takes on child-ghouls that also eat too much. But by the time we get to the demonized, gigantic Miss Poopenplatz (Phyllis Diller) and demon-poofle puppets, it all becomes ludicrous.

It starts with a drawn-out scene when detectives, played by veteran Ed Nelson and James Eusterman (Spaced Invaders), enter the world-weary–and messy–psychic’s house. They need her help to solve a baffling case involving a mortician and what appear to be three dead children he’s been hiding. They draw their guns dramatically when she doesn’t answer, but why do that? She finally turns up after an endless search of the house we’re forced to follow.

When they fail to get her help they leave. Later that night she has a disturbing vision involving a putrescent little girl with lots of long, stringy blond hair, who wants very much to hug and thank her for her help in a previous case. This promising scene has nothing to do with the story, but it does cause Alley to change her mind about helping the detectives. Deborah Rose’s lifeless acting is flatline throughout.

At the police station, Alley and the detectives listen to the interrogation of the mortician. He explains how his family has, for three centuries, kept the three child-sized ghouls–he calls them Kyonshi–from devouring living people by feeding them body parts garnered from the funeral home’s cadavers. Kyonshi, or hopping vampires, are not flesh-eating ghouls, however, so the use of the term here may be a stretch.

Next, it’s off to the soon-to-be-closed coroner’s building where the story kicks into low gear, but not before we are subjected to a confusing flashback experienced by Alley, along with an interminable dialog between the two detectives standing in a hallway. We also meet Miss Poopinplatz. She manages the front desk along with her annoying poodle.

Alley has a vision of the three little ghouls awakening downstairs in the morgue with tasty attendants (including Norman Fell) in the next room. Little tension is generated as boy-this-weight-does-slow-me-down Alley clumsily makes her way downstairs to warn the lab attendants of their impending Happy Meal status.

When she finally does reach the morgue, dead bodies are strewn everywhere. Gobs of blood splatter the floor and the little hellions are still chewing away–especially one who gustily attacks an exposed rib-cage. This is the one good gore scene in the movie.

Bodies hang limply from shelves, carried there by the three child-ghouls. Sitting atop a battery operated forklift, the medium-sized ghoul feasts on a pathologist while another rips apart another body.   The smallest ghoul has dragged the bloody corpse of a Pathologist to the fifth level of shelves. It eats an ear off and then snacks on a finger. The creature makes a happy purring sound as it chews. Its gaping mouth continues to rip a chunk from a pathologist’s side.

All this explicit gruesomeness is a sudden and unexpected jolt in an otherwise static movie. Mayhem ensues as survivors try to escape. They trap and kill one ghoul, but he manages to stuff part of his skin–I know, it’s disgusting to watch– down Poopinplatz’s throat, turning her into a very tall and pop-eyed puppet monster that desperately needed more money and a better designer to be convincing. The comical nature of the puppet derails the momentum established by the morgue scene.

Poopinplatz’s dog, Floosoms, licks up bubbling yellow ichor oozing from one expired ghoul and quickly turns into a man-in-a-suit demon-Floosoms. A horrified girl rescued from the morgue laughs when she sees the comical poodle monster. The action is stopped cold, again, for another long and bewildering dialog as Cummins gives us the ENTIRE background story on the girl who survives the morgue attack. The action picks up again with an Alley and demon-Floosoms confrontation.

If Cummins used a lot less dialog, and Deborah Rose weighed a lot less, and the three child-ghouls were given more screen time, The Boneyard could have been a scarier treat even with Phyllis Diller. Take a look, fast forward a lot, and you’ll be fine: the morgue smorgasbord scene is worth a look.

 

This article originally appeared at Zombos’ Closet of Horrors.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License.

Free RPG Day Is Here!

Roll for initiative...

Once again, it’s Free RPG Day and we here at Gravedigger’s Local 16 are doing our own unofficial contribution to the event. What is Free RPG Day? It’s when gaming stores all over the US (and other countries) give away free RPG adventures and other useful role-playing items. You can find out what retailers in your area are joining in by visiting the official Free RPG Day website. Just like last year, we’re offering tons of free downloads for both those who don’t have any participating stores nearby and those that do and simply want more freebies. Since this year’s offerings will most likely be linked to at the official Free RPG Day Facebook page over the next few days, let’s focus on our custom collection of goodies:

Greyhawk Grognard offers numerous free resources for Dungeons and Dragons, including a custom spell and original monsters like the Restless Spirit, Pyre Wraith and Terracotta Golem. Dungeons & Dragons Classics also has its fair share of D&D freebies.

Speaking of D&D, Spoony and Bennett the Sage have one hell of a (mildly NSFW) video for you. If you want monsters that’ll really bewilder your characters, then look no further than the White Rabbit and Manure Golem. I’ve directly linked to the parts in the video where the stats (which are in serious need of balancing) are included but you really need to watch from the beginning to get the complete effect. Spoony also offers tons of great gaming advice in his Counter Monkey video series.

Come to think of it, I’ve focused on older editions of Dungeons & Dragons in previous installments of this series. It’s about time I focused on the most current (as of this writing) edition. You can download the 4th Edition Quick Start Rules here and you can find an unofficial explanation of the game and the changes made in this edition over at Head Injury Theater. That site not only has a free (humorous) 4th edition adventure called Twas the Wright Before Xmas, but it might have also inspired the creation of Fool’s Grove. Those who prefer more serious fare should enjoy Keep on the Shadowfell.

Oddly enough, Hackmaster originally started out as a humorous D&D parody and eventually mutated into a regular fantasy RPG. You can download the Basic version for free at DriveThruRPG.com or read it in full for free on Google Books.

In addition to the Quick Start rules for Castles & Crusades, Troll Lord Games is also offering free downloads of the abridged Tunnels & Trolls 5th Edition rules and a solo adventure for it called Soul Survivor.

Tunnels and Trolls claims to be one of the easiest RPG to learn and play, but I think the 3rd Edition of the free homebrew RPG Zombiepocalypse easily gives it some competition.

Those looking for some giant robot combat action will surely appreciate the Quick Start rules for Battletech, the free basic edition of Mekton Zeta and the Quick Start rules for Cthulhutech. You can find more Cthulhutech goodies at its official website.

Some of the freebies from last year’s Fee RPG Day that I missed out on posting include the Quick Start rules (and adventure) for Cosmic Patrol, the Quick Start rules for Call of Cthulhu (complete with adventure and pregenerated characters) and the Quick Start rules for Shadowrun (with adventure and pregenerated characters). You can find more Shadowrun adventures here. As for Call of Cthulhu, here’s another free adventure called Murder in the Footlights.

Continue reading

Music to Game By III

With Free RPG Day just around the corner, I have decided to once again delve into the world of gaming music. More specifically, I’m going to look at how the albums I reviewed for the 2012 version of my annual “Music to Haunt By” series can be used with role-playing games. As was the case with the last two installments of this series, I managed to dig up some more example of early experiments with “gaming soundtracks.” And, as always, the reviews will be presented strictly in terms of the order I originally reviewed them and not by any sort of ranking of which is “Better” than the other. However, that’s not to say that things won’t be different this time around. In addition to the majority of the albums listed below having streaming sample tracks available in the linked reviews, I’m returning to my original vision for this series. While I had initially planned for “Music to Game By” to shorten my original reviews that would both inform gamers and entice them to check out the original full length reviews, I eventually lapsed into lengthy reedits of my old reviews. Thankfully, that’s not the case this time around:

Shadow’s Symphony – To quote my original review, The House In The Mist is “an amazing musical trip through a long-ruined place of former elegance, with wordless female vocals appearing in most of the tracks. I’m overwhelmed by both the sheer excellence of this album and the limitless potential it has.” The titular opening track, “The House in the Mist,” immediately sets the tone for things to come (especially if you use it when your players first enter a haunted house). Tracks like “Dust Covered Opulence,” “Legend of the Ruins” and “The Hands of Time” imply age and lost luxury. For those seeking to unnerve adventurers as they enter a new area, “Restless Spirits” will work wonders. “Tragedy” goes well with funeral parlors while “A Sinister Feeling” can work in a dungeon or sewer encounter thanks to its dripping tones. The heavy touches and harpsichord work of “The Haunting of the Crowley House” let it work in a fantasy setting, as does the ethereal “The Dead Will Rise Again.” And those, dear reader, are only a small portion of the tracks available on this album!

Grave Tone Productions – Given its heavy rock nature and use of numerous samples, Music To Be Buried By is something of an odd duck in terms of role-playing music (unless you’re specifically running an adventure with rock music in mind). That said, it can still be useful. The opening soundscape of “Sinister Foreshadowing,” which takes the listener on a spooky walk through the woods and into an old cabin, could be used to start off a horror adventure. Also helping matters is the creepy narrator who warns of the horrors to come. The music box-like segments of “6 Degrees of Suffering” and “Room 324” do allow use with a haunted nursery, especially in games like Little Fears or KidWorld. That said, both also offer lost of nontraditional moments as well, like rock segments and the sounds of screeching metal. “Nightmares and Lullabies” and “Creatures in the Closet” also fit into this category. Although the creepy piano work of “Ghost Note Funeral Hymn” would seemingly make it usable in a variety of scenarios, the Spanish funeral speech at the start and finish of the track does complicate matters somewhat. “The Murder Game” similarly uses eerie, soft tones with loud bursts of samples in order to create a creeping feel. While some might be tempted to use the catchy mix of rock and Night of the Living Dead samples during a zombie encounter, I recommend using it while players design their characters for a zombie apocalypse RPG. Those seeking something that sounds like a selection from a modern horror movie will enjoy “Deathmarch” and “Violent Midnight” (which starts out with an 80’s horror feel) while “Raining Fear” fits just about any horror scenario thanks to its combination of the sounds of thunder and rain with spooky music.

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6′+ Episode 63 is Up!

2013 Logo IconTo quote the description given at the new listing:

“Oooh, it’s a mystery! Who’s it going to be for your mystery date killer at the end of the episode? Get the Doctor – Dr. Gangrene! Or the prom king/queen with All This And Gore’s JR and Tammy. Just don’t get the dud with Monstermatt Patterson (actually, ladies, he’s quite a catch. Almost like the Black Plague.) Music by Astrocasket, Dirty Dead, The Brothel Corpse Trio and more.”

Remember to email 6′+ (contact at 6ftplus.com) or leave a comment below about the show, whether you liked it or not. Tell your friends, leave a review on iTunes, but above all – enjoy.

You can find all episodes of 6′+ over at the official site as well as on iTunes, Stitcher and Spreaker. They’re also on Facebook and Twitter.

Free RPG Day Is Coming!

The 7th annual Free RPG Day is scheduled for June 15th, so make sure to keep that date in mind when you make your plans for the weekend. In addition to some nifty steampunk dice, the other freebies scheduled for this year that might be of interest to readers of this blog include:

NeoExodus: Temple of the Forbidden God
Deluxe Tunnels & Trolls Preview Pack
Vampire: Reap the Whirlwind
Pathfinder: We Be Goblins Too!
Castles & Crusades: A Pot of Broken Bones (& Halfing Broth)

Battletech: A Time of War
Shadowrun

Cosmic Patrol: The Eiger Agenda
Star Wars: Edge of the Empire
Savage Worlds: Tunse’al
Dungeon Crawl Classics/Xcrawl
Swords & Wizardry: Hall of Bones

For more information (and a list of participating stores), please visit the official Free RPG Day website. No game stores in your area? Don’t fret, as we’ll be posting our own collection of free gaming downloads on the big day as well!

6′+ Episode 62 is Up!

2013 Logo IconTo quote the description given at the new listing:

“I rolled my stats and came up with all 6s. It’s a RPG music episode of 6′+, celebrating the upcoming FREE RPG DAY. Our party consists of pair of warriors (All This And Gore), a wizard (Home Haunting: Jersey Devil Style) and one jester (The Monstermatt Minute.) Along with new music by Dronolan’s Tower, Nox Arcana, Michael Otterlei and more.”

Remember to email 6′+ (contact at 6ftplus.com) or leave a comment below about the show, whether you liked it or not. Tell your friends, leave a review on iTunes, but above all – enjoy.

You can find all episodes of 6′+ over at the official site as well as on iTunes, Stitcher and Spreaker. They’re also on Facebook and Twitter.

Free (Legal) Download: Swamp Foetus

I want a real version of this poster.  YESTERDAY.

Like any Halloween enthusiast, I’m a huge fan of Pumpkinrot. I love the creepy, distinctive look of his props and keen eye for setting up (and photographing) great scenes. So when I found out the man behind that website had made a short film, I was ecstatic. Even moreso when I learned it had won the 2013 CineMayhem short film competition and was available for free download.

Swamp Foetus has no dialogue whatsoever and instead opts to use only its music and beautiful cinematography to tell its story. This is an extremely effective choice, which builds a sense of mystery and unease about the doings of its protagonist. The theme offers many chills and yet also brought to mind many memories of long walks home during a cool October evening. The costume and props in the film definitely stand out on their own while at the same time stay true to the spirit of his older work. In fact, I could see touches of his 2009 “Field Witch” display in it.

According to an email I received from the man behind Pumpkinrot, the film originally went into production in 2010 as “Swamp Fetus” but he changed the spelling to “Foetus” after hearing about Poppy Z. Brite’s short story collection Swamp Foetus (also known as Wormwood) as both a tribute to the author and because it added an extra touch of class to the title.

The Pumpkinrot blog also has a wealth of information about the making of Swamp Foetus. In addition to recounting the filming experience with his wife, he also reveals there how the excellent poster was created by Guy Miller from House Bloodthorn and his history of collaborating with the film’s composer.

But enough of my going on and on about the film. You can find the download link here, along with an awesome photo galleries from Swamp Foetus and his 2011 home haunt utilizing some material from the film.

Since the movie is a little over seven minutes in length, I’m going to do what I did the last time this series featured a non-feature length film: share a bunch of other short films! Thankfully, Pumpkinrot has several other Halloween videos available. Fans of Swamp Foetus will be especially interested in Halloween 2008 Burning Smile Remix and 2009’s The Corn Witch, which had original scores prepared for them by John Glassett.

Speaking of Mr. Glassett, you can download the theme to the film for free here. You can also read his comments about creating it at his official website.

Special thanks to Rot for use of the image!

As always, Gravedigger’s Local 16 is not to be held responsible for anything that may occur (be it good or bad) as a result of downloading from any links given here. Attempt at your own discretion. Blah blah blah…

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