Thursday, August 31, 2023

10 SONGS: 8/31/2023

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1196. This show is available as a podcast.

THE ANDERSON COUNCIL: This Is Where I Belong

Heh. Right before the announcement that the good folks at Underground Garage had selected the Anderson Council's cover of the Kinks' "Do You Remember Walter?" as this week's Coolest Song In The World, we'd already picked a different Anderson Council track from the same Jem Records Celebrates Ray Davies tribute album to kick off our own show. The more the mightier! Heck, our pal and colleague Rich Firestone also gave a spin to "Do You Remember Walter?" on this weekend's edition of Radio Deer Camp, so Jem Records Celebrates Ray Davies is clearly well on its way to utter and delighted world domination.

And that's where it belongs.

GRAHAM PARKER AND THE GOLDTOPS: Wicked Wit

Our friends at Big Stir Records scored a major huzZAH! when they signed a deal to put out a new album by venerable British rocker Graham Parker. Credited to Graham Parker and the Goldtops, Last Chance To Learn The Twist stands proud and tall alongside the impressive body of work Parker has created over a span of decades. 

This week, we specifically whooped up that string of excellence with a one-two then-and-now shot of primo Parker, with Graham Parker and the Rumour's 1976 classic "Pouring It All Out" clearing a righteous path for ace new number "Wicked Wit." This will not be your last chance to learn the new Graham Parker record on TIRnRR.

Oh. And in between "Pouring It All Out" and "Wicked Wit," we dropped in a new TIRnRR show ID by none other than Graham Parker himself. Graham freakin' Parker recorded an ID for our little mutant radio program. I need to commandeer a time machine and tell my younger self about that.

WENDI DUNLAP: Season Of Loss

Can one find catharsis in pop music? Yeah. Of course. Art can challenge us, but it can also comfort us when comfort is our basic need. Take a sad song and make it better. Reach out, I'll be there. Ain't no mountain high enough. Stand by me. I'm ready for my luck to turn around.

This December will mark the second anniversary of my Mom's passing. She would have been 98 years old this week, on Monday. I'm okay, really quite okay. I'm aware of her absence, especially when some milestone occurs or some cool thing happens and my first reaction is I gotta tell Mom! I'll be very aware of it when my daughter gets married in October. But while Mom's life was no stranger to sorrow, it was still a long life filled with love. I'm not sad. I'm grateful.

I didn't have any of the above in mind when I programmed Wendi Dunlap's sublime "Season Of Loss" into this playlist. The track is from Wendi's album Looking For Buildings, and I confess I was originally thinking of playing the track at the top of the show, an acknowledgement of the loss all around us. The devastation in Maui was my primary influence, as I've been unable to say anything of use or value to that awful situation. Fires. Hurricanes. Illness. Violence. It's alway a season of loss.

Upon further review, I realized that's just too much burden to place on a beguiling pop track. We let the song play in the middle of our second set instead. Freed of expectations.

A comfort nonetheless. 'Tis the season. It always is.

THE RAMONES: It's Not My Place (In The 9 To 5 World)

I've been thinking about retirement. That event is still a ways off--three years, four months, two weeks, and three days, but who's counting?--and I do indeed dig that one should be careful how one wishes. Right, Mr. Limpet?

Yeah, can't be too careful with wishes to be fishes. Meanwhile, I still work full-time in retail. I'm not unhappy; it's a job, it's a paycheck, and I'm comfortable with the circumstances. I'd like more time to write, travel, write, dance, write, read, write, play, and write, and I make use of what time I have for all of that in the here and now. For the moment, it is my place in the 9 to 5 world.

The Ramones are the subject of my first book, published earlier this year. "It's Not My Place (In The 9 To 5 World)" is from the Ramones' 1981 album Pleasant Dreams. Of the Ramones' 16 studio albums, Pleasant Dreams sounds the least like classic Ramones. The group's first four albums are always gonna be my favorites, but I've been getting into this sixth album a lot this year. It's not the equal of Ramones, Leave Home, Rocket To Russia, or Road To Ruin, but it is great, and it's way, way underrated.

And it has its place. 

BOBBY SUTLIFF: Same Way Tomorrow

I didn't know Bobby Sutliff. We were friends on Facebook, but I don't remember whether or not we ever had any substantive contact via the great and powerful interwebs.

Nonetheless, I know for damned sure that our indie pop world has suffered a loss with Bobby's passing last week. His body of work, both as a solo artist and with the great rockin' pop combo the Windbreakers (fronted by Bobby and his fellow popsmith Tim Lee), is rightly revered among true rockin' pop believers, and the work will live on. We mourn the loss of the man who created that work.

I wrote the above about a year ago, shortly after we heard that Sutliff had died. Now, Jem Records is celebrating Bobby's legacy with an expanded reissue of his 1987 album Only Ghosts Remain. With its title tweaked to Only Ghosts Remain Plus, the Jem release adds eleven bonus tracks from throughout Sutliff's solo career, doubling the original album's selections. The bonus tracks effectively make this The Best Of Bobby Sutliff, and that's saying something. I already have most of the bonus tracks (which include my favorite Sutcliff gem "Griffin Bay"), but somehow I never owned a copy of Only Ghosts Remain.

I have it now, and it's just splendid. If you likewise revere all that's jangly, I recommend you get this one, too.

THE FLASHCUBES: Forget About You

Our friends at Big Stir Records scored a major huhZAH! when they signed a deal to put out a new album by Syracuse's own power pop powerhouses the Flashcubes. Dana and I may have played a tiny little part in introducing one party to the other--Rex and Christina! Gary, Paul, Arty, and Tommy! DO SOMETHING TOGETHER!!--but our preexisting bias isn't necessary to recognize that the new 'Cubes album Pop Masters is flat-out incredible. Album of the year, mates. 

And this week we introduced yet another spin of the Flashcubes' Pop Masters cover of the Motors' "Forget About You" with a brand-new TIRnRR show ID by none other than Gary Frenay of the Flashcubes. I need to commandeer a time machine and tell my younger self about that, too.

THE LOVIN' SPOONFUL: She Is Still A Mystery

My recent Greatest Record Ever Made! piece about the Lovin' Spoonful's "Summer In The City" included these comments about the group's 1967 single "She Is Still A Mystery:"

In addition to my undying allegiance to "Summer In The City," another favorite Spoonful tune was a lesser-known hit that I also heard on oldies radio: "She Is Still A Mystery." This fragile-sounding ode to love's quirks and uncertainties, its elusive nature and endless allure, took command of my equally-fragile inner romantic, which surrendered unconditionally. My inner romantic fights like a wimp.

CHUBBY CHECKER AND DEE DEE SHARP: Slow Twistin'

I wrote here about seeing Chubby Checker perform live last week. Checker is not represented in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), though his "Let's Do The Freddie" does get a mention in that book's Freddie and the Dreamers chapter. But I tell ya, Chubby's 1960 smash "The Twist" is quite possibly THE single most seismic 45 of all time, and it certainly merits its own GREM! spotlight. The task of writing that has been added to my voluminous to-do list. Come on, baby!

Greatest is its own distinct (and infinite) category. Favorite is a separate consideration. My favorite Chubby Checker record is "Slow Twistin'," his 1962 hit collaboration with Dee Dee Sharp. Listening to a Chubby Checker best-of CD (and now having seen him perform) proves that, man, there's a lot of greatness to be found in the Checker catalog. Slow Twist? Fast Twist?All the Twists, and all the Ponys, Flys, Limbos, and--what the hell--Freddies, too. Round and round and round we go.

THE BEATLES: Revolution

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

EARTH, WIND AND FIRE: September

September is upon us. And it's high time for The 12th Annual DANA'S FUNKY SOUL PIT! We figured we'd start gettin' psyched for next week's epic new Soul Pit by closing this week's show with a double-length set of soul and R & B. And that set commenced with the irresistible elemental force of Earth, Wind and Fire

I didn't even realize the accidental serendipity of opening this end-of-August Soul Pit set with "September" until after the show aired. But we'll take it. September looms. The 12th Annual Dana's Funky Soul Pit awaits on September 3.

Say that you'll remember.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!! https://rarebirdlit.com/gabba-gabba-hey-a-conversation-with-the-ramones-by-carl-cafarelli/

If it's true that one book leads to another, my next book will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Stay tuned. Your turn is coming.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE: Summer In The City

Adapted from a previous piece, this was tuned 'n' tweaked to be a potential chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), but it's not included in my presumably final draft of the book. I did recycle its K-Tel Records joke and its Gilligan's Island reference elsewhere in the book. I'm all about efficiency, man. If I ever revisit this piece, I really oughta talk about  Zal Yanovsky, Steve Boone, and Joe Butler--maybe even Jerry Yester--and not just that John Sebastian guy.

An infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Today, this is THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE!


THE LOVIN' SPOONFUL: Summer In The City

Written by John Sebastian, Mark Sebastian, and Steve Boone
Produced by Erik Jacobsen
Single, Kama Sutra, 1966

In retrospect, it seems a little odd that I don't really remember the Lovin' Spoonful from when I was a kid in the '60s. It's likely that I did hear the Lovin' Spoonful on the radio in '65 and '66, even if I don't remember them. But if I didn't know the Spoonful at the time, I was at least exposed to their image, albeit second hand. The goofy, colorfully flamboyant good-time vibe of the group was frequently appropriated without apology in TV sitcoms; whenever a TV show wanted to feign hipness and include a faux rock 'n' roll group, the resulting fabrication was sometimes clearly derived visually from the Lovin' Spoonful, with a bit of the Byrds tossed in. Neither the Lovin' Spoonful nor the Byrds ever appeared on Gilligan's Island or F Troop, but their doppelgangers did.

Gilligan's Island's newest hitmakers THE MOSQUITOS!

And, in 1966, TV presented a made-for-the-medium combo called the Monkees. The Monkees didn't take much from the Spoonful, though there has been a persistent (if likely apocryphal) story that the show's producers, Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider, had considered the idea of doing a series actually starring the Lovin' Spoonful, before deciding to create the Monkees instead. 

But it wasn't until the 1970s that I really discovered the Lovin' Spoonful. "Summer In The City" was the track that got my attention, an amazing slice of sweaty urban verisimilitude turned into shiny pop music, its glossy sheen accentuating its desire rather than sublimating it. These city boys was out to get some. But at night it's a different world. Go out and find a girl. This suburban kid approved of the idea.


My mid '70s embrace of all things '60s included the Spoonful. My brother Rob had a copy of the group's debut album, Do You Believe In Magic, which I borrowed (along with Rubber SoulJefferson Airplane's Surrealistic PillowBig Brother and the Holding Company's Cheap Thrills, and Dylan's Greatest Hits and Self Portrait). I was disappointed that the Spoonful LP didn't include "Summer In The City," but I dug the title track and included it on one of my lo-fi cassette tape compilations. (How lo-fi? We didn't own a tape deck, so I put my little portable cassette player next to the speaker and pressed RECORD while the LP track played. You can laugh, but I'm pretty sure that's how Ronco and K-Tel did it, too.)

I also borrowed a whole bunch of LPs and 45s from my cousin Maryann. This killer stash of vinyl included Beatles For SaleMeet The BeatlesThe Beatles' Second AlbumSomething NewGlad All OverThe Dave Clark Five Return!The Beach Boys PartySummer Days (And Summer Nights!)Meet The Searchers, "Get Off Of My Cloud" by the Rolling Stones, and "Summer In The City" by the Lovin' Spoonful. SCORE!


The first Spoonful track I owned was my beloved "Summer In The City," contained on the soundtrack album for the David Essex film Stardust; my copy came out of the dusty budget basement at Record Revolution in Cleveland Heights, where my sister Denise lived. This would be circa '76 or '77. By then, I'd read a bit about the Spoonful, and I knew that the John Sebastian who sang the theme song from TV's Welcome Back, Kotter was the same guy who'd previously sang "Summer In The City" and "Do You Believe In Magic." I'd heard more Spoonful on oldies radio--"Nashville Cats," "Rain On The Roof," "You Didn't Have To Be So Nice," "Daydream," "Did You Ever Have To Make Up Your Mind," and "Darling Be Home Soon"--and liked 'em all. The Lovin' Spoonful was one of the many fine acts included in Rock Of The '60s, the fabulous video program I attended at Syracuse University one evening in 1977.


(In addition to my undying allegiance to "Summer In The City," another favorite Spoonful tune was a lesser-known hit that I also heard on oldies radio: "She Is Still A Mystery." This fragile-sounding ode to love's quirks and uncertainties, its elusive nature and endless allure, took command of my equally-fragile inner romantic, which surrendered unconditionally. My inner romantic fights like a wimp. I bought my first Spoonful LP, a used copy of The Very Best Of The Lovin' Spoonful, off a table set up at the Student Union in the Fall of 1977, my freshman year at Brockport; I also bought a copy of the Rolling Stones' Aftermath at the same time. The so-called "best-of" set didn't include "She Is Still A Mystery," but I snagged that 45 at the flea market in Syracuse.)

I can't quite say that the Lovin' Spoonful ever became one of my very favorite groups, but I never stopped liking them. I had an interesting opportunity to see John Sebastian in the '90s, when he appeared at the Borders bookstore in Syracuse. Sebastian mostly told stories, but also sang a couple of songs, and the good-time vibe of the Lovin' Spoonful was alive and well. I bought a copy of his children's book J.B.'s Harmonicahe autographed that for us, and he also autographed two LPs: his solo Welcome Back and the Spoonful's soundtrack to the Woody Allen movie What's Up, Tiger Lilly? I'm not one hundred per cent positive, but I think that was the last time I ever asked any celebrity for an autograph.


"Summer In The City" was always my go-to Lovin' Spoonful track (rivaled briefly by the lesser-known "She Is Still A Mystery"), but it's not my only tuneful Spoonful something-that-rhymes-with-oonful. Balloonful. Macaroonful. Spitoonful? No, that doesn't work. Anyway. I also love "Rain On The Roof," "You Didn't Have To Be So Nice," "Day Dream," "Darling Be Home Soon," "Pow [Theme From What's Up, Tiger Lily?]," and especially "Do You Believe In Magic," which is also The Greatest Record Ever Made. This infinite number gimmick comes in handy.

I don't remember the Lovin' Spoonful from when I was a kid, from the time when they were briefly thought of as America's potential answer to the Beatles. But I came to know them later. And, belatedly, I understood the simple, magic appeal of being caught up in a summer shower, lost in a daydream, of running up the stairs to meet her on the rooftop, and praying "Darling, be home soon." Her mystery remains. I will try to tell you about the magic that can free your soul. After all, why can't we tell a stranger about rock 'n' roll anyway? The magic endures. It inspires belief. Hot town. Just like the days, it'll be all right.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!! https://rarebirdlit.com/gabba-gabba-hey-a-conversation-with-the-ramones-by-carl-cafarelli/

If it's true that one book leads to another, my next book will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Stay tuned. Your turn is coming.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

COMIC BOOK RETROVIEW: The Comics I Owned In The '60s and '70s

I was six years old in 1966. That's when the Batman TV series made me a dyed-in-the-wool fan of superheroes and an absolutely voracious reader of comic books. Batman wasn't my first superhero--TV had already hooked me on Superman, Flash Gordon, and Popeye--and I'd read (and had read to me) a few comic books prior to the mighty Adam West demonstrating the addictive power of the BIFF, BANG, and POW! 

Nonetheless, it was my sudden pervasive and prevailing fascination with TV's Caped Crusaders that kickstarted my lifelong obsession with comic books. I'm still buying them, still reading them, and still digging them. Except for a brief pause when I was in college, I've never stopped getting comics on a regular basis.

Grow up? No. Not happening. Loud music and superheroes. I'm not giving up either of those interests any time soon.

The earliest comic book I remember is a 1965 80 Page Giant starring Superman's girlfriend Lois Lane. Recently, I started trying to remember every comic book series I ever owned, even if it was just a single issue. I decided to limit the recollection to comic books I owned in the '60s and '70s, taking me through my college years (when I gradually ceased buying funnybooks) and stopping before I resumed regular comics purchases in the '80s.

The list below represents my best recollection of comic book series that found their way into my possession in the '60s and '70s. It includes Silver Age books given to me by my sister's boyfriend when he finished high school in 1970. Thanks, George! It includes back issues I picked up in the '70s, books in varying condition, stretching back to the '50s and even the '40s.

And the list is, inevitably, inaccurate. I used Overstreet to help jog the ol' memory, but apparently I didn't take any notes of what comics I was reading when I was a kid. Short-sighted child! Consequently, I just went with whatever titles felt like they were maybe probably possibly part of my ever-growing stack of comic books in the '60s or '70s.

Did I ever own a copy of DC's Weird Western or Weird War Tales? I read about Marvel's Ghost Rider and Werewolf By Night in the pages of Marvel Spotlight, but did I follow their adventures into their own subsequent titles? What Gold Key Comics books did I own (Doctor Solar, The Green HornetSuper Goof, a lot of Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge, and Magnus, Robot Fighter) versus what Gold Keys did I only read at the barber shop or the dentist's office (Woody Woodpecker, Bugs Bunny, and--damn it, was Daffy Duck mine or Dr. Arthur's?!)? I remember buying an issue of Charlton's Judomaster at Sweethearts Corner in North Syracuse, and I recall owning the first issue of Harvey ComicsSpyman and the final issue of Dell Comics' Super Heroes...but what else?

But the comics were large enough in my world for me to retain some details in memory, even all these decades later. For this list, I skipped any attempt to figure out which permutations of Archie, Dennis The Menace, Sad Sack, and other multi-title properties I had or didn't have, unless I was positive of a specific book (like Archie in Pep Comics). I'm not under oath here, but I think this list provides a sufficiently reflective picture of my comic books--MY comic books!--in the '60s and the '70s.

Twelve cents. Fifteen cents. Twenty-five cents. Down to twenty cents, and back up and beyond. Coverless contraband at cut rates. Gifts. Trades. Back issues at varying prices. Bring 'em. Stack 'em high. This obsession won't feed itself. Avengers assemble. I love to dive around in them like a porpoise, and burrow through them like a gopher, and toss them up and let them hit me on the head. Draggin'? Complainin'? You need entertainin'!

Hey, kids! COMICS!!


1st Issue Special [DC]
3D Batman [DC]
80 Page Giant [DC]
Action Comics [DC]
Adventure Comics [DC]
The Adventures Of Jerry Lewis [DC]


All-New Collectors' Edition [DC]
All Star Comics ['50s, and '70s revival] [DC]
Amazing Adventures [Marvel]
The Amazing Spider-Man [Marvel]
Angel And The Ape [DC]
Anthro [DC]
Aquaman [DC]
Archie [and related titles] [Archie]
Astonishing Tales [Marvel]
The Atom [DC]
The Atom And Hawkman [DC]
The Avengers [Marvel]
Avengers King-Size Special [Marvel]


Baby Huey [Harvey]
Bat Lash [DC]
Batman [DC]
Batman Family [DC]
The Beagle Boys [Gold Key]
Beowulf [DC]
Beware The Creeper [DC]
Big Shot Comics [Columbia]
Big Town [DC]
The Bionic Woman [Charlton]
Black Lightning [DC]
Blackhawk [DC]
Blondie [King]
Blue Beetle [Fox]


Blue Beetle [Charlton]
Boris Karloff Tales Of Mystery [Gold Key]
Boy Commandos [1970s] [DC]
The Brave And The Bold [DC]
Captain Action [DC]


Captain America [Marvel]
Captain Atom [Charlton]
Captain Canuck [Comely]
Captain Marvel [M.F. Enterprises]
Captain Marvel [Marvel]
Captain Marvel Adventures [Fawcett]
Captain Nice [Gold Key]
CARtoons [Peterson]
Casper The Friendly Ghost [and related titles] [Harvey]
The Cat [Marvel]
Challengers Of The Unknown [DC]
Champion Sports [DC]
The Champions [Marvel]
Christmas Parade [Gold Key]


Conan The Barbarian [Marvel]
Classics Illustrated [Gilberton]
Claw The Unconquered [DC]
Daffy Duck [Gold Key]
Daredevil [Marvel]
The Dark Mansion Of Forbidden Love [DC]


DC 100-Page Super Spectacular [DC]
DC Special [DC]
DC Special Series [DC]
DC Super-Stars [DC]
The Defenders [Marvel]
The Demon [DC]
Dennis The Menace [and related titles] [Fawcett]
The Destructor [Atlas/Seaboard]
Detective Comics [DC]


Doc Savage [Marvel]
Doc Savage [Marvel/Curtis]
Doctor Solar, Man Of The Atom [Gold Key]
Doctor Strange [Marvel]
Donald Duck [Gold Key]
The Doom Patrol [DC]
Doomsday + 1 [Charlton]
Double-Dare Adventures [Harvey]
Dracula [Dell]
E. C. Classic Reprints [East Coast Comix]
E-Man [Charlton]


Emergency! [Charlton]
Famous First Edition [DC]
Fantastic Four [Marvel]


Fantasy Masterpieces [Marvel]
Fatman, The Human Flying Saucer [Lightning]
The Flash [DC]
Flash Comics [DC/All-American]
Flash Gordon [King]
Flash Gordon [Charlton]
Flashback [DynaPubs]
The Flintstones [Gold Key]
Forever People [DC]


Freedom Fighters [DC]
From Beyond The Unknown [DC]
Fruitman Special [Harvey]
Funnyman [Magazine Enterprises]
Giant-Size Avengers [Marvel]
Giant-Size Invaders [Marvel]
Giant-Size Man-Thing [Marvel]
Green Hornet Comics [Harvey]
The Green Hornet [Gold Key]


Green Lantern [DC]
The Grim Ghost [Atlas/Seaboard]
Guardians Of The Galaxy [Marvel]
Hanna-Barbera Super TV Heroes [Gold Key]
The Hawk And The Dove [DC]
Hawkman [DC]
Hercules Unbound [DC]
Hero For Hire [Marvel]
Hot Stuff [Harvey]
Hot Wheels [DC]


The House Of Mystery [DC]
The House Of Secrets [DC]
Howard The Duck [Marvel]
Howard The Duck [Curtis/Marvel]
The Human Torch [1970s, Marvel]
The Incredible Hulk [Marvel]
The Inferior Five [DC]
The Invaders [Marvel]
Iron Man [Marvel]
Isis [DC]
The Joker [DC]
Journey Into Mystery [Marvel]
Judomaster [Charlton]


Justice League Of America [DC]
Justice, Inc. [DC]
Ka-Zar [DC]
Kamandi, The Last Boy On Earth [DC]
Karate Kid DC]
Kid Colt Outlaw [Marvel]
Kobra [DC]
Kong The Untamed [DC]
Korak, Son Of Tarzan [DC]
Larry Harmon's Laurel And Hardy [DC]
Laugh [Archie]
Legion Of Super-Heroes [DC]
Limited Collectors' Edition [DC]


Little Dot [Harvey]
Little Lotta [Harvey]
Little Lulu [Gold Key]
Logan's Run [Marvel]
The Lone Ranger [Gold Key]


Mad [EC]
Madhouse Glads [Archie]
Magnus, Robot Fighter [Gold Key]
Man-Bat [DC]
Mandrake The Magician [King]
Marvel Collectors Item Classics [Marvel]
Marvel Comics Super Special [Marvel]
The Marvel Family [Fawcett]


Marvel Feature [Marvel]
Marvel Mystery Comics [Timely]
Marvel Premiere [Marvel]
Marvel Spotlight [Marvel]
Marvel Super Heroes [Marvel]
Marvel Super-Heroes [Marvel]


Marvel Tales [Marvel]
Marvel Team-Up [Marvel]
Marvel Triple Action [Marvel]
Marvel Two-In-One [Marvel]
Marvel's Greatest Comics [Marvel]
Master Of Kung Fu [Marvel]
Metal Men [DC]
Metamorpho [DC]
MGM's Marvelous Wizard Of Oz [DC and Marvel]
Mighty Comics [Radio/Archie]


The Mighty Crusaders [Radio/Archie]
The Mighty Heroes [Dell]
The Mighty Marvel Western [Marvel]
Mister Miracle [DC]
Modeling With Millie [Marvel]
Morlock 2001 [Atlas/Seaboard]
Mr. Natural [San Francisco Comic Book Company]
Ms. Marvel [Marvel]
Mystery In Space [DC]
The New Gods [DC]
Nick Fury, Agent Of S.H.I.E.L.D. [Marvel]
Not Brand Ecch [Marvel]


Nova [Marvel]
The Occult Files Of Dr. Spektor [Gold Key]
Omac [DC]
Omega The Unknown [Marvel]
Orb [Orb]
Our Army At War [DC]
The Owl [Gold Key]


The Partridge Family [Charlton]
The Peacemaker [Charlton]
Peanuts [Dell]
Pep Comics [Archie]
The Phantom [Gold Key]
The Phantom [King]
The Phantom [Charlton]


The Phantom Stranger [DC]
Phoenix [Atlas/Seaboard]
Planet Of Vampires [Atlas/Seaboard]
Plastic Man [DC]
Plop! [DC]


Prez [DC]
Quack! [Star Reach]
Ragman [DC]
Rawhide Kid [Marvel]
Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter [DC]
Richie Rich [and related titles] [Harvey]
Rima The Jungle Girl [DC]


Ripley's Believe It Or Not! [Gold Key]
Sad Sack [and related titles] [Harvey]
The Sandman [DC]
The Scorpion [Atlas/Seaboard]


Sea Devils [DC]
Secret Origins [DC]
Secret Six [DC]
Secret Society Of Super-Villains [DC]
Sgt. Fury And His Howling Commandos [Marvel]


S.H.I.E.L.D. [Marvel]
Shade The Changing Man [DC]
The Shadow [DC]
Shanna The She-Devil [Marvel]
Shazam! [DC]
Sherlock Holmes [DC]
Showcase [DC]


The Silver Surfer [Marvel]
The Six Million Dollar Man [Charlton]
The Six Million Dollar Man [magazine] [Charlton]
Space Family Robinson [Gold Key]
Space: 1999 [Charlton]
Space Man [Dell]
The Spectacular Spider-Man [Marvel]
The Spectre [DC]
Spider-Woman [Marvel]
Spidey Super Stories [Marvel]
The Spirit [Kitchen Sink]


The Spirit [Warren]
Spoof [Marvel]
Spyman [Harvey]


Stalker [DC]
Star Hunters [DC]
Star Trek [Gold Key]
Star Wars [Marvel]
Star*Reach [Star Reach]
Star-Spangled War Stories [DC]


Starfire [DC]
Strange Adventures [DC]
Strange Sports Stories [DC]
Strange Tales [Marvel]
The Sub-Mariner [Marvel]


Sugar & Spike [DC]
The Super Cops [Red Circle]
Super DC Giant [DC]
Super Friends [DC]
Super Goof [Gold Key]
Super Heroes [Dell]
Super-Team Family [DC]
Super-Villain Team-Up [Marvel]
Superboy [DC]


Supergirl [DC] 
Superman [DC]
Superman Family [DC]
Superman Vs. The Amazing Spider-Man [DC and Marvel]


Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane [DC]
Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen [DC]
Swamp Thing [DC]
Swing With Scooter [DC]
T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents [Tower]
Tales Of Suspense [Marvel]
Tales To Astonish [Marvel]
Tarzan Family [DC]
Tarzan Of The Apes [DC]


Teen Titans [DC]
That Wilkin Boy [Archie]
Thor [Marvel]
Thrill-O-Rama [Harvey]
Thunderbolt [Charlton]
Tigerman [Atlas/Seaboard]
The Tomb Of Dracula [Marvel]


Tor [DC]
Tower Of Shadows [Marvel]
Treasure Chest [Catholic Guild]
The Twilight Zone [Gold Key]
Two-Gun Kid [Marvel]
Uncle Scrooge [Gold Key]
Unknown Worlds Of Science Fiction [Marvel/Curtis]
Vampirella [Warren]


Vengeance Squad [Charlton]
Walt Disney's Comics And Stories [DC]
Wanted,The World's Most Dangerous Villains [DC]
Warlock [Marvel]
Warlord [DC]
Welcome Back, Kotter [DC]
Wendy The Good Little Witch [and related titles] [Harvey]
What If? [Marvel]


Where Monsters Dwell [Marvel]
Whiz Comics [Fawcett]
Wonder Woman [DC]
World's Finest Comics [DC]
The X-Men [Marvel]
Yang [Charlton]
Young Love [DC]
Young Men [Atlas]
Zip Comics [MLJ]

Awright! We got some stuff to read, and some adventures to imagine. Action heroes? We got 'em. Why would I ever want to grow up out of that?

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!! https://rarebirdlit.com/gabba-gabba-hey-a-conversation-with-the-ramones-by-carl-cafarelli/

If it's true that one book leads to another, my next book will be The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1). Stay tuned. Your turn is coming.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl