Hello--and thank you for responding...You may have to wait to get a question right to ask that question on this thread. Otherwise, if you ask it in another thread you will probably get an answer.
Yes, the poems in the book At Terror Street... was recorded by Thomas. Buk had lost the written poems so Thomas had to play the recording and write them down in order for Buk to get them published (if I remember correctly).fuck... no idea but I want one! Did LouJon ever release this? That would make it the earliest Buk recording, no? I know that At Terror Street was recorded in 1969 by John Thomas...
ha! more info about that later on. first you gotta tell me where did the ad appear![/IMG]
No they didn't. That broadside is as far as the project ever got. Though Jon took preorders for the record, then tried to convince people who'd paid to take some other LouJon stuff.fuck... no idea but I want one! Did LouJon ever release this?
The record, so states the ad, is to earn revenue to allow the Webb's to publish the next issue of Outsider (#4), from their new home base of Tuscon, Arizona. Unknown autograph in the center of the page states "Record postponed until [Henry] Miller book is done
How about a question I don't know the answer to?
(much easier for me :>)
It's worth noting that Black Sparrow never issued this title, so I suppose it could have been up for grabs to his other publishers.
But that's not true...
They did per usual->
Soft covered, Hard cover, a numbered and signed by Buk,
plus a #ed and signed by Buk, Schroeder, Faye Dunaway and Mickey Rourke,
Then a lettered edition.
Oops, I was confusing Paget with Capra, the publishers of Fire Station.Everything related to Paget Press/Bukowski is odd. I still don't know what their relationship was, other than they were in the same building as Black Sparrow's printer...
I cede the questionaire seat to whoever jumps on it 1st