Lingua: Inglese
Editore: DC, 1952
Da: Clarkean Books, Stoney Creek, ON, Canada
Fumetto Prima edizione
EUR 222,46
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSoft cover. Condizione: See Description. Murphy Anderson (cover); Oksner, Infantino, Giunta, Sherman (art) (illustratore). 1st Edition. DC Comic Mystery in Space #9 1952 6.5 GA Pre Code Fine Plus 6.5 condition - some wear at upper staple on spine. [Unofficial Grading - see pics] Bagged and boarded. Story - Gardner Fox, Jack Miller, Robert Starr, Manny Rubin Cover - Murphy Anderson Art - Oksner, Infantino, Giunta, Sherman Golden Age Pre-Code.
Editore: Manny Rubin Productions, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1969
Da: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Unbound. Condizione: Very Good. Press kit. Five sheets (two on Manny Rubin Productions letterhead), printed rectos only with black and white group photograph. Sheets measure approximately 8.5" x 11", photo measures approximately 10" x 8". Hole punched sheets with two holes along the top and one at the left, margins slightly toned with an ink notation on one page (possibly in the manager's hand). Photo has faint creases with two paperclip impressions and partial hole punch along the top edge, stamp on verso ("The Mandrake Memorial 1920 Sansom Street Philadelphia, PA 19103"), very good. The Mandrake Memorial (J. Kevin Lally, Randy Monaco, and Craig Anderton) was an American psychedelic/progressive rock band from 1967-1970 who started out as a house band for Manny Rubin's Philadelphia club, The Trauma. The press kit contains a cover sheet, band biography, and promotional material. The cover sheet, signed by their manager Manny Rubin, offers the bands availability for performances during their stay in London while recording their third album with Shel Talmy on six dates in June, 1969. The result of those recording sessions was a live acoustic album that their record label, Poppy Records, chose not to release at the time fearing that it was too uncommercial. Decades later, after the rise in popularity of "unplugged" recordings, the album was released in 2016 under the title *3 Part Inventions.* Later Craig Anderton along with John Simonton went on to release the PAiA Programmable Drum Set, the first programmable drum machine in 1975. An interesting artifact surrounding an album that was seemingly ahead of its time.