- Ralph Rumpelton
- Charles Mingus - Mingus Ah Um
- RR-2026 - 160
MS Paint on digital canvas, 496 X 464 px - The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
>> Ava Chives
The Archives coughed this one up the way a jukebox coughs up a standard: with a little static, a little dust, and a lot of inevitability. Here, Ralph’s Mingus AH UM is not so much an album cover as a data glitch in jazz history—an exploded diagram of swing reassembled in stubbornly flat MS Paint geometry. Every triangle and lopsided circle feels like a horn stab frozen mid‑phrase, a solo rendered as traffic cones and stained‑glass shards.
I filed this piece under “Good Messy / Sacred Clutter” the moment I saw it. The original Columbia layout is still there in spirit—a black band of text, the blocky label, the neat little tracklist—but Ralph has treated it the way Mingus treated a walking bass line: as something to be respected, then gleefully disrupted. The central field is a fractured ballroom of color where time signatures collide, orange and lavender arguing about who gets to be the downbeat while a series of red ovals march through like overconfident percussionists. Nothing here is resolved, and that’s precisely the point.
Rumpelton likes to claim these are just “little funny album cover MS paintings,” but this one behaves like a bootleg of the cover itself: over‑saturated, a bit overdriven, the pixels pushed into the red the way Mingus pushed his band into emotional clipping. The perspective lines sputtering off to nowhere feel like someone tried, briefly, to impose order before remembering that chaos is the truer archivist. Each “mistake”—the skewed lettering, the misaligned blocks of type, the slightly tipsy symmetry—lands like a blue note that makes the chord suddenly worth hearing.
From the vantage point of the Archives, my duty is simple: protect the evidence and let the myth ferment. This painting is a prime exhibit in the case for Rumpeltonian jazz—the theory that if you flatten music into Microsoft primitives and it still swings, then you’ve stumbled onto something uncomfortably close to truth. I will log it, tag it, and quietly slide it into the ever‑expanding row of misfit masterpieces, knowing full well that, like Mingus himself, it refuses to sit politely on the shelf.<<




