Sunday, March 31, 2024
Pants as water wings
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Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Victory Garden for a Family of Five
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Friday, March 22, 2024
Roadkill Chunnies
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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
Today's Wordle Answer
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Monday, March 18, 2024
Saturday, March 16, 2024
Reaping What's Been Sown
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Sunday, March 10, 2024
Court Storming Leg Healed Up
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Thursday, March 07, 2024
Skippyhaha Studihoho
Just thought I'd share a few skippyhaha studihoho paintings ("hohos") I've made this year.
When I was thinking of t-shirt ideas and graphics professionally for a few years with Vintage Vantage, I would be happy if the idea made people laugh or made people think.
That is still the goal!
"Scrolling Genocide" - acrylic on paper, 7x10
"I Like Fried Chicken!" - acrylic on paper, 8x10
"Elk and Clouds" - acrylic on paper, 8x10
"Kentucky Fried Chicken Right Here" - acrylic on paper, 8x10
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Wednesday, February 28, 2024
How the Columbo Dog Head Greeting Cards Came to Be
I said, "no I do not."
I said "okay, I will paint."
He kindly got an art kit and set up a small easel in a room downstairs.
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Sunday, February 18, 2024
The Most Orange Conference
Friday, June 23, 2023
Sonar the Funk Robot Band from Boulder/Aquatari
Sonar invades the Wolf Den Tavern
News |
Kelly SilvaSteamboat Springs — They claim they’re from an underwater planet called Aquatari. They claim they’re colorful vibrations of energy that slipped into human bodies when they came to Earth.
They wear alienesque masks on stage and claim their sound is something like an old-school funk like a New Orleans-style blend of blues and jazz.
They are Sonar five vibrations that slipped into five male human bodies and began playing music and Atari to communicate with their home planet Aquatari.
Members of Sonar have names such as Captain Star 69, Commodore 64, Commander Colt 44, Doctor NC 17 and Admiral RX-7. They also produce waves of audio energy from instruments such as impact-induced vibration cylinders, an organi-magnetallic resonating chamber, a low-frequency modulator and multi-chromatic variable wave inverters and don’t forget the Atari 2600 Game Machine.
Their story may seem odd to the humans on Earth, but it won’t be long before they head out of Colorado and into California to tour and keep communication with Aquatari.
“We do a lot of off-the-wall songs; we do spoofs on songs,” Captain Star 69 said. “We really are from another planet.”
The story begins when the vibrations lived on Aquatari under the rule of the super-fine sea goddess.
“We were just vibrations without bodies and we played a sort of music there,” Captain Star 69 said.
Sea goddess Shanaqua controlled Aquatari, but when Manta tried to overthrow the planet, the vibrations with musical talent were sent through a porthole. The members leapt out of the Boulder Reservoir and stumbled upon some men changing a tire on the side of the road.
After the vibrations snuck into the human bodies, they found musical instruments and 8-track tapes in the van.
In order for members of Sonar to communicate with Aquatari, they must play music and Atari. Sonar has decided to give Earthlings a glimpse into what they’re really all about.
“For the time being, we’re just linking up with our home planet,” Captain Star 69 said. “People either love us or hate us. That’s a great thing.”
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Band Sonar is out of this world
By Deseret NewsDec 30, 2001, 12:00am MDTScott Iwasaki music editor
The funk, jam-rock band Sonar was formed earlier this year in Boulder, Colo., but not in typical garage-band fashion.
According to its biography, the band came together when "four shimmering clouds" of spirits from the planet Aquatari found themselves stranded on Earth after being exiled through an inter-dimensional vortex. That same instant four Boulder musicians, whose names weren't given to protect their innocence, saw these clouds racing toward them. And while they gaped, the clouds shot down their throats and took over their bodies.
Sound like a low-budget B-horror movie?
Perhaps, but the resulting band Sonar is ready to take on Salt Lake City during First Night celebrations Monday night.
Sonar — drummer Captain Star 69, guitarist Commodore 64, bassist Commander Colt 44 and keyboardist Doctor NC17— will hit the Gallivan Center Stage at 10:30 p.m.
During a telephone interview, Captain Star 69 talked with the Deseret News about his band and its mission:
Deseret News: When did the band officially form here on Earth?
Captain Star 69: In Earth years it was 2001, but on Aquatari we measure years by multiples of 9.667. So we actually formed around the Aquatari year 19,000.
Deseret News: What are your goals as a band?
CS69: We want to play music to as many people as possible, hopefully creating another inter-dimensional vortex that will transport us back to our home planet. Once we return to where we were born, we want to cast out the evil Black Manta who overtook our beautiful Sea Goddess and our world. Right now our music can be transmitted through the positive vibrations from our shows to our home planet, and that vibe sustains the Sea Goddess in this rough time.
Deseret News: ???
CS69: In other words, we want to play our music and create a huge following who, we hope, will buy our music and continue to come to our shows. In other words, we want to start a chain reaction that will make us famous.
Deseret News: Are there any plans to release a full-length album of your "positive vibrations"?
CS69: (After citing Glen Campbell and George Clinton's P-Funk as his main musical influences): We have been listening to what you Earth beings call music. And we have been writing our own music that emulates what is being heard around the world. We hope our creation, called "Pop Song," will help kick-start the vortex.
Deseret News: What is the biggest challenge so far in reaching your goal to return to Aquatari?
CS69: I don't think this is as much a challenge as it is an honor, but some Earth beings have been coming to our live shows dressed up in robot garb. In fact there have been so many who attend our concerts in this fashion that it is getting difficult to decipher which of the audience members are human and which of them are Aquatarians.
Deseret News: What has been the most offensive thing you've experienced on Earth?
CS69: Nothing.
Deseret News: What has been the most interesting?
CS69: The positive reactions to our positive vibrations, and Red Bull vodka.
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