Media Archeology .....(by The Lost Media Archive)
Media Archeology is an up and coming field of study. We have always predicted this and have been preparing for it for over the past couple decades. This is a new site for Lost Media to actually share some of it's archeological finds and projects (other blogs are more about our film events).
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Lost technicolor film: Golddiggers of Broadway 1929
Before Gold Diggers of 1933 and before Busby Berkeley arrived on the scene, there was Gold Diggers of Broadway 1929 - Now a lost film. This is one of the few surviving clips and yes that is the film's original 2-color Technicolor process :)"This film was so popular that it quickly became the top (American Color) grossing film of all time in 1929 and held this record until 1939" - Online commenter.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Happy Valentine's Day from The Lost Media Archive: Early Kodak Color (Kodachrome) Film Test 1922
Very beautiful and bewitching.
My thanks to Kim Deitch for sharing this :)
My Valentine from Meg!
See the hinge at the shoulder? I really love these old cards with puppet motion! If I can make it to the Provo archive today, I'll post another that we have :)
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Charles Band's History of Wizard Video Collection on VHS
Thursday, February 7, 2013
The Resurrection of Lost Media Archive's Joe Meek Demo Preservation Project and info about the Upcoming Meek Documentary!
Looks like my old Joe Meek Demo Preservation project and an article I wrote about him is now available at Free Music Archive.
I was impressed by the quote on the case by Andy Partridge of XTC: "“Meek spoke to the dead and heard music from other planets, making #1 hit records in his kitchen.”
I loved it! For the next couple years this CD was in constant rotation and airplay.
One night while listening to (then Otis F. Odder's) "Friendly Persuasion Radio Show", Otis played a demo of Joe Meek's "Telstar", and I was like "Where in the world did you find this?" Otis seemed shocked and said something like "Oh my gosh, you don't know?" and sent me a link to Irwin Chusid's "Song's in the Key of Z" it's book and accompanied CD.
Already being a fan of Irwin's "Incorrect Music" radio show on WFMU, I instantly devoured this book, took endless notes and made a long list of outsider artists on the last page, that I felt should be included in a sequel. Eventually I had the honor of a 3 hour phone interview with Irwin on "Oddity Rock Radio."
Otis in turn was able to get Frank Young involved (Famous for being the curator of the Dave's Record Collection segment on The Tonight Show) who had recently exposed a large collection of Meek rarities for "Cool and Strange Music Magazine" who also filled in a few of the gaps.
What makes me the happiest of all about this, is that my prediction was correct, a film has finally been made about this musical misfit, inventor and recording genius! Although, I pictured it as a dramatized movie, a documentary should suffice very nicely :)
I've always felt that actor Bill Castle looked exactly like Joe Meek, especially in the 1965 Amicus film "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors." Had a dramatized film of Meek's life been produced right after his suicide, Castle would've been my perfect choice to play the role.
I'm not sure of the current status of this film, or whether is has even screened anywhere yet, but I for one am extremely excited and am overjoyed with this new development of Meek awareness.
Visit the films homepage here: http://joemeekdoc.com/
-B.C. Sterrett
Monday, January 7, 2013
Saint-Saƫns - Danse Macabre Halloween Film Strip
Our submission to Joseph Winter's Halloween short film fest as an "exhibit" piece Oct. 2012
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