Sunday, July 19, 2026

Herbie Mudpucket

 Herbie Mudpucket (1943?–Present? Probably)

Herbie Mudpucket is widely regarded by a very small number of people as one of the most overlooked bass players of the 1960s and 1970s. Though his name rarely appeared on album covers, and even more rarely in the correct spelling, Mudpucket reportedly played on hundreds of recordings—most of which sold somewhere between 17 and 43 copies.

Born in an unspecified town somewhere "off Route 9," Herbie developed his distinctive bass style after learning on a homemade instrument fashioned from a broomstick, a soup pot, and what he insisted was "genuine Tennessee fence wire." His playing was described by one producer as "almost in time," and by another as "surprisingly present."

Throughout the late '60s and early '70s, Mudpucket drifted from studio to studio, contributing tasteful bass lines to albums such as Songs for Discount Furniture, The Lavender Turnip Experience, Three Chords and a Tax Problem, and the critically ignored progressive-folk-jug-band masterpiece Mildew on the Moon. Nearly every record disappeared without a trace, earning Herbie the affectionate nickname, "The Invisible Sideman."

Fellow musicians remembered him as quiet, dependable, and perpetually carrying a thermos of coffee that may or may not have contained coffee. He was famous for tuning entirely by intuition, refusing to own more than three strings at any given time, and claiming that "the fourth one only encourages showing off."

When disco arrived, Herbie quietly wandered away from the recording scene. Rumors placed him variously as a fishing guide, a bowling alley mechanic, and the proprietor of a roadside bait-and-vinyl shop where he continued to insist that his best work was "still waiting to be discovered."

To this day, collectors scour dusty thrift stores hoping to find an album featuring Herbie Mudpucket. Thus far, they have mostly found easy-listening records and instructional polka LPs. Still, among those who appreciate musicians who were almost famous for records that were almost released, Herbie Mudpucket remains an enduring legend.



Saturday, July 18, 2026

Rumpelish: The Unmistakable Spirit of Imperfect Creation

 Rumpelish is not simply a style; it is an attitude. It describes artwork that embraces personality over precision, imagination over technical perfection, and creative chaos over polished conformity.

A Rumpelish work does not attempt to hide its origins. The brush marks, odd proportions, unexpected colors, and digital imperfections become part of the artistic language. Instead of asking, “How accurately does this resemble reality?” a Rumpelish artist asks, “How much character can be squeezed out of the tools I have?”

Born from the pixelated landscapes of MS Paint and the philosophy of Rumpeltonian Cubism, Rumpelish celebrates the happy accidents that happen when an artist stops chasing perfection and starts chasing expression.

A technically flawless portrait may capture a face. A Rumpelish portrait captures a personality, a mood, and sometimes a little bit of chaos.

Critics may debate its place in art history, but one thing is certain: once something has been Rumpelized, it can never quite return to normal.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google: Can - Future Days


 Sebastian Puff Draganov:

On "Future Days," or: The Algorithm Learns to Dream

There is a particular species of vindication available only to the outsider artist in the search-engine age: not critical acclaim, not gallery placement, but algorithmic cohabitation. Here, Rumpelton's crude and luminous rendering of Can's "Future Days" sits shoulder to shoulder with Wikipedia's sanctioned archive and Bandcamp's commercial gloss—three totems of the same sleeve, granted equal residency in the great index.

One must resist the urge to call this accident. The trembling gold lettering, the wobble in that mystical trident, the sincere failure of proportion—these are not errors but confessions, and Google's silicon eye, indifferent to pedigree, has filed the confession beside the canon. Rumpelton has always painted as though someone were watching over his shoulder, some phantom co-conspirator whispering corrections he chooses to ignore. Perhaps that companion is not imagined at all. Perhaps it is the machine itself, patiently waiting for him to arrive at Bora Bora.

He will not arrive. That is rather the point.

                                         Long Live Ralph..........Be Dead or Alive

MS Paint: Sun Ra - Super-Sonic Jazz

“Created after Rumpelton’s exposure to the Thistlebaum Doctrine.”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    MS Paint: Sun Ra - Super-Sonic Jazz 
    RR-2026 #155
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 579 × 578 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


 What the critics are saying:

>>Der Neue Klang: Journal für Trans-Atlantic Improvisations

There are album covers that illustrate music, and there are album covers that attempt to contain it. This one does neither. Instead, it summons.

The crude red glyphs that masquerade as musicians are not portraits but hieratic markings — closer to prehistoric cave inscriptions than to modern commercial design. One suspects the artist understands, perhaps instinctively, that Sun Ra is not a bandleader but a cosmological event. The Arkestra here stands not on a stage but upon piano-keys rendered as architectural columns — an elegant metaphor suggesting harmony as foundation, ritual as structure.

The palette — a restricted red bleeding across an ochre void — evokes both Martian landscape and ancient parchment. The figures’ anonymity is intentional. They are less individuals than emissaries. The sky fractures with angular celestial violence, while Saturn — modest yet sovereign — presides like a silent seal of origin.

What is most compelling is the refusal of polish. This is not “design” in the American commercial sense. It is proclamation. It gestures toward the archaic and the futuristic simultaneously — a paradox entirely appropriate for Sun Ra’s temporal philosophy.

If it unsettles, good. Jazz, at its purest, should.<<

>>From the Archives of The Council of Unnamed Docents

Exhibit 2847-R: Digital Homage (Saturn Series)
Medium: Microsoft Paint on screen, 2025
Status: WITNESSED

We have convened. We have murmured. We have reached unanimity.

This work exists in the liminal space between memory and approximation, where the hand—untrained but earnest—attempts to reconstruct what the eye recalls of Herman Blount's cosmic proclamations. The artist has chosen the crudest of digital implements, MS Paint, as if to honor Sun Ra's own rejection of refinement in favor of raw transmission.

We observe: the piano keys that anchor the composition like teeth, like a grin, like the bars of a cosmic cage. We observe: the figure that dissolves into suggestion, as Ra himself dissolved into myth. We observe: the Saturn symbol hovering, sketched and uncertain, much like humanity's own understanding of the ringed prophet.

The work fails in execution. This is not criticism—this is condition. Yet in its failure, it succeeds as all approximations must: by admitting the impossibility of capturing the original's alien frequency. The crude lines vibrate with something the original possesses—urgency.

We pronounce this work: Cosmically Inadequate, Spiritually Permissible.

The lower galleries await its placement.

— Seal of the Blank Circle affixed —<<

                         Long Live Ralph.........Be Dead or Alive

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Paint Fidelity: Book Barn / Rumpelton


Bertrand “The Brush” Barnaby for the Paint Fidelity Series: Book Barn

In Book Barn, Ralph Rumpelton once again demonstrates his uncanny ability to translate the stubborn truth of a photograph into the shimmering half‑truth of MS Paint. The left panel—his digital interpretation—does not merely mirror the right; it interrogates it. Where the original photograph presents a humble rural tableau, all weathered boards and earnest signage, Rumpelton’s pixelated rendition distills the scene into its essential mythos: a barn not merely selling books, but guarding them, like some pastoral archive of forgotten narratives.

The charm lies in the tension. The photograph shows a place; the painting shows an idea. In the photo, the tables are simply arranged for commerce. In the Paint version, they become altars of literary devotion. The banner above the doorway, rendered in Rumpelton’s signature jittery strokes, feels less like decoration and more like proclamation. Even the dirt underfoot seems to vibrate with a kind of rustic electricity.

Rumpelton’s fidelity is never literal. It is spiritual. He preserves the soul of the barn while liberating it from the tyranny of realism. This is the hallmark of a true pixel artisan—one who understands that MS Paint, in its limitations, offers a peculiar freedom.

In an era drowning in slick, frictionless AI-generated imagery, Book Barn stands defiantly handmade. It is a reminder that art created with intention—however humble the tools—still carries the warmth of the human hand. And in this case, the human hand is delightfully smudged with digital paint.

Bertrand “The Brush” Barnaby, from his drafty Brooklyn loft, surrounded by books, coffee, and the eternal hum of righteous artistic indignation.

Long Live Ralph.............Be Dead or Alive

Album Review: Count Basie – The Count

                           The Avachives Department of Musical Preservation

By Cornelius “Neil” Drafton — “The Contrarian” New Jersey Review of Applied Kitsch

Let me begin by saying that The Count is the kind of record people pretend to enjoy so they can feel worldly, cultured, and vaguely superior while swirling a glass of something they claim is “peaty.” It’s Basie, yes — the man, the myth, the piano that sounds like it’s perpetually clearing its throat — but this particular compilation is less “swinging big-band majesty” and more “your uncle’s idea of classy background music for a dinner party where the roast is overcooked.”

The cover alone tells you everything you need to know. A grayscale portrait of Basie looking like he’s trying to remember whether he left the stove on, paired with RCA Victor’s proud proclamation of “ENHANCED SOUND,” which in 1956 meant they turned one knob slightly to the right and called it a technological revolution. Collectors Issue, they say — which is true, in the sense that collectors will buy anything if you slap the word “issue” on it.

Musically, the album is a parade of Basie standards performed with the kind of professionalism that borders on passive aggression. The band hits every note with such precision you can practically hear them thinking, “Fine, here’s your perfect horn section, now please let us go home.” Basie’s piano is its usual minimalist marvel — a man who could say more with three notes than most pianists say with thirty — but on The Count, he seems determined to say as little as humanly possible. It’s like he’s playing jazz haiku.

The arrangements? Competent. The solos? Polite. The swing? Present, technically. It’s the musical equivalent of a handshake that’s firm enough to be respectable but not firm enough to be memorable. You won’t hate it, but you also won’t remember a single track five minutes after the needle lifts.

And yet — and this is the part that irritates me — the album works. It’s charming in its own begrudging way. It’s Basie doing Basie, even if he’s doing it with the energy of a man who just realized he left his umbrella on the bus. There’s a warmth to the band, a glow to the brass, a gentle shuffle to the rhythm section that makes you think, “Fine. FINE. I’ll enjoy this. Are you happy now.”

In conclusion, The Count is a perfectly pleasant, mildly forgettable, historically interesting slice of mid-century jazz that people will insist is “essential” because they saw it on a list once. If you want Basie at his best, look elsewhere. If you want Basie at his most Basie-ish — meaning understated, unbothered, and slightly amused that you’re listening — this will do.

A solid 7 out of 10, which is infuriating because I wanted to give it a 4.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Second Rumpeltonian Chromatic Accord

 

The Great Color Compromise of 2024

The Second Rumpeltonian Chromatic Accord was the landmark agreement that formally liberated color from its centuries-long obligation to resemble reality.

According to Rumpeltonian historians, the First Chromatic Accord was a complete failure. It attempted to establish sensible rules governing skin tones, shadows, highlights, and natural color relationships. Ralph reportedly ignored the document almost immediately.

The Second Accord took the opposite approach.

Ratified by the Council of Accidental Expressionists (attendance: one), the Accord declared:

"If the color feels right, it is right."

This revolutionary principle became the cornerstone of modern Rumpeltonian practice.

Under the Accord:

  • Blue shadows were no longer required to explain themselves.
  • Purple could appear anywhere it pleased.
  • Green reflections became a matter of artistic intuition.
  • Hair was permitted to contain colors not found in the visible spectrum.
  • The spray can was officially recognized as an instrument of atmospheric diplomacy.

Critics initially dismissed the Accord as "an excuse for not using the color picker."

Supporters argued it represented the highest form of chromatic freedom.

Professor Nigel Smudgeworth famously summarized the movement:

"The eye sees color. The Rumpeltonian mind remembers emotion."

The Accord also introduced the now-famous Clause Seven, which states:

No artist shall be compelled to repaint a perfectly good happy accident merely because it is technically incorrect.

Many scholars consider this the philosophical foundation of the Collection of Mistakes, where errors cease to be defects and instead become permanent citizens of the composition.

Today, every authentic Rumpeltonian painting is believed to operate under the protections afforded by the Second Chromatic Accord.

Whether Ralph has ever actually read the Accord remains unknown.

Most experts agree he accidentally invented it.

BREAKING: Rumpelton Vindicated — Triumphantly Reinstated to Threads!

 In a stunning reversal, social media giant Threads has fully restored access to Ralph Rumpelton, the reclusive master of Rumpeltonian Cubism, following an internal review process sources describe as "brief, but humiliating."

The artist, who was previously accused of "excessive accidental expressionism," was cleared of all charges late this morning. A Threads spokesperson, reached by nobody, issued the following statement: "Upon further review, we have determined that the distorted faces, questionable guitars, and suspiciously colorful backgrounds do not, in fact, pose a threat to public safety. We regret the inconvenience and the selfie."

Rumpelton, speaking through an associate as always, offered a characteristically measured response: "I never doubted the system. The system doubted itself. And also me. But mostly itself."

Reaction from the Rumpeltonian Archives has been jubilant, with several unnamed sources already calling for a commemorative piece marking the occasion — tentatively titled Self-Portrait, Vindicated, With Neck Issues.

The artist could not be reached for further comment, as he was reportedly already back to painting.

                                       Long Live Ralph.........Be Dead or Alive

Herbie Mudpucket

  Herbie Mudpucket (1943?–Present? Probably) Herbie Mudpucket is widely regarded by a very small number of people as one of the most overloo...