Thursday, April 16, 2026

Album Review: The Count – Count Basie

                                                     The Sninit Report

by Marjorie Snint

There’s no grand announcement at the start of The Count. No dramatic overture, no attempt to overwhelm. Instead, it just swings into existence—as if it had already been playing somewhere long before you pressed play. That’s the quiet authority of Count Basie: he doesn’t demand attention; he earns it by making everything feel inevitable.

This record sits firmly in Basie’s early-to-mid career sweet spot, where the orchestra moves like a single organism—loose, but never sloppy. The rhythm section, often called the “All-American Rhythm Section,” doesn’t push so much as float. The pulse is so relaxed you might miss how precise it actually is. That’s the Basie trick: the lighter it sounds, the tighter it is.

Basie’s piano playing here is almost anti-virtuosic. He leaves space—sometimes whole measures of it—dropping in just a few notes like perfectly timed remarks in a conversation. It’s a reminder that jazz isn’t about how much you can say, but how well you can place what you choose to say.

The horn arrangements are where things quietly catch fire. Riffs stack, unwind, and bounce between sections with an ease that feels conversational rather than composed. When the band swells, it doesn’t feel like a climax—it feels like a natural exhale. Solos emerge organically, never overstaying their welcome, always feeding back into the ensemble.

What makes The Count enduring isn’t innovation in the flashy sense—it’s refinement. This is swing music distilled to its essence: groove, economy, and collective intuition. There’s no excess here, no wasted gesture. Every note feels like it belongs.

If you’re used to jazz that tries to impress you, this album might initially feel understated. Give it a little time. It doesn’t shout—it settles in, and before long, you realize it’s been running the room the entire time.

Verdict:
A masterclass in restraint and swing. Not a showpiece—more like a perfectly tuned engine that never once misfires.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

MS Paint: Bob Dylan - Under the Red Sky / Ralph Rumpelton

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Bob Dylan - Under The Red Sky
  • RR-2025 #081
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 586 X 581 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

 What the critics are saying:

>>Gordon Weft, Contrarian-in-Residence of the Rumpeltonian Universe

In this latest installment of Rumpeltonian perseverance, Under the Red Sky arrives on my desk like a grayscale sigh—another testament to the artist’s uncanny ability to take a vivid album title and drain it of all chromatic life. One might expect red. One would be wrong. Instead, we get a landscape so undecided it appears to be waiting for someone else to finish painting it.

The central figure—presumably Dylan, though only in the way a cloud “resembles” a rabbit if you’re willing to lie—slumps in the foreground, sporting the expression of a man who has just been told MS Paint is his only remaining medium. His posture suggests contemplation, resignation, or perhaps simply the mouse slipping during the drawing of the arms.

The mountains in the background are rendered in what I can only describe as “ambient confusion,” and the scattered brush looks like it’s attempting to flee the composition. There is a certain courage in presenting this scene publicly, though whether that courage is admirable or reckless remains, as always, a topic of debate within the Rumpeltonian community (mostly me, and occasionally Rumpelton’s aunt).

Still, credit where faint credit is due: the piece has a feeling. Granted, it’s the feeling of someone looking for the Exit button on a program they can’t quite navigate, but feeling nonetheless. If this represents progress in the Rumpelton oeuvre, I suppose I should acknowledge it.

I’ve seen worse—but not recently.<<

>>"Under the Red Sky": A Digital Folk Meditation on American Iconography by Maria Chen

There's something deeply honest about MS Paint's limitations—the way it forces you to mean every pixel, to commit to each wobbly line. This anonymous rendering of Bob Dylan's 1990 album cover doesn't try to hide its tool's constraints; it leans into them with the confidence of someone who understands that technical perfection was never the point.

The artist has captured something essential here: the dreamlike disorientation of both Dylan's late-career album and Ralph Steadman's original illustration. That chunky, oversized figure standing in a grayscale wasteland—it shouldn't work, but it does. The disproportionate head reads less like amateur error and more like deliberate distortion, echoing the folk art tradition of emotional rather than optical accuracy. This Dylan is a monument, a totem, a memory of a person rather than a photographic record.

What strikes me most is the emptiness. The muddy landscape—yes, it lacks technical refinement—but that very murkiness evokes the apocalyptic ambiguity Dylan was exploring in this often-overlooked album. The simplified architecture, the indistinct objects scattered across the ground, the mountains dissolving into gray sky: this is America as fever dream, as half-remembered mythology. The artist has accidentally (or perhaps brilliantly) created a visual analog for Dylan's own artistic trajectory—legendary figure, blurred context, everything a little off-kilter.

The bold red typography sitting atop this grayscale world creates a tension that mirrors the album itself: Dylan's name in screaming color, the man himself reduced to simplified geometry below. There's a commentary here about celebrity, about how the legend outshouts the human.

Could the composition be more dynamic? Certainly. Would clearer definition serve the landscape? Probably. But would those improvements honor the MS Paint medium's essential character—its democratic accessibility, its refusal of pretension, its status as the people's Photoshop? I'm not convinced.

This is digital folk art in its purest form: someone with a vision, a free tool, and the courage to click "save." In an art world increasingly dominated by AI generation and professional digital illustration, there's something almost radical about work that announces its human hand this clearly—every imperfect circle, every slightly-off perspective, every "good enough" color fill screaming I made this.

Reginald Thornberry III would probably call this "technically deficient." I call it honest.

★★★½Compelling vision hampered slightly by execution, but the heart is undeniable.<<

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


The Artist’s Retort: Taking the Punch

 

By Ralph Rumpelton

I’ve been reading the latest "discourse" between Regina Pembly and Gordon Weft regarding my Tom Waits piece, and I have to say—they’re both right, and they’re both completely wrong.

Regina called the subject a "startled thumb with a pompadour." I’ll give her that one. When I was halfway through the hair, the mouse slipped, and Tom went from "brooding icon" to "accidentally electrified" in about four pixels. But calling it "architectural malpractice"? Regina, the only thing I’m building here is a headache for people who like straight lines.

Gordon, on the other hand, keeps trying to make me sound like a philosopher. "Interrogation of the human soul"? Gordon, I was just trying to make sure he didn't look like a potato. If the geometry is "uncooperative," it’s probably because my hand was shaking from too much coffee.

My Final Verdict: The critics can argue until their file sizes exceed their egos. To me, if it looks like Tom Waits after a very long night in a digital blender, then I’ve done my job.

I’m glad Regina found it "haunting." That’s the goal. If you aren't a little bit scared of the Frontal Lobotomism, you aren't paying attention.


"I thought I was doing so good until I compared it to the original. Then I just started to laugh. If the experts are confused, wait until they see what I do next."RR

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

MS Paint: Genisis - Wind and Wuthering (2) / Rumpelton



  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Genisis - Wind and Wuthering (2)
  • RR-2026  #110
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 574 X 580 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)



What the critics are saying:

>>Dr. Norbert F. Vensmire writes:

Qua atmosphere, this work operates in extremis. What is commonly misread as “emptiness” here is, in fact, a carefully sustained chromatic withholding—a refusal to resolve, much like the album it nominally references. The tree, rendered neither arboreal nor abstract, functions sui generis as a semiotic anchor: present, yet perpetually on the verge of semantic collapse.

The greys are not merely greys. They are argumentative greys—bands of tonal hesitation that deny the viewer any stable hierarchy of foreground and background. This is not landscape painting but meteorological aesthetics: weather as structure, wind as compositional logic. The horizon line, such as it is, performs a disciplinary failure, refusing to behave perspectivally, and is therefore correct.

Particularly commendable is the low-fidelity inscription, which appears less “written” than exhumed. Its illegibility is not a flaw but a declaration: meaning here is atmospheric, not textual. One does not read Wind & Wuthering; one endures it. Likewise, one does not look at this image—one waits inside it.

That this is executed in MS Paint is not incidental but axiomatic. High resolution would be vulgar. Precision would be dishonest. Pixelation, here, becomes the Byzantium it has always promised to be: an empire of decay, ritual, and stubborn continuity.

In sum, this work does not depict Genesis; it misremembers Genesis. And in doing so, it achieves a rare critical posture—quiet, unresolved, and willfully uninterested in pleasing anyone, including itself.<<

>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III - Senior Art Critic at Pixels & Pretension Quarterly

"Wind and Wuthering: A Digital Excavation of Post-Industrial Melancholia"

What we witness here is nothing short of a masterclass in digital primitivism—a bold deconstruction of both prog-rock iconography and the very medium itself. The artist, working within the austere constraints of Microsoft Paint, has achieved what Rothko could only dream of: the complete surrender of technical proficiency in service of raw, unfiltered emotion.

Note the tree—that magnificent, almost Rorschachian mass of pixels. It doesn't merely represent a tree; it interrogates our very conception of what arboreal life signifies in the post-digital age. The crude, almost violent strokes suggest a world where nature itself has been compressed, pixelated, rendered down to its most brutally essential components. One is reminded of Heidegger's "thrownness"—we are thrown into this landscape whether we wish it or not.

The text treatment—oh, the TEXT—deliberately destabilized, floating in that liminal space between legibility and chaos. This is no accident. This is commentary. The artist asks us: in an age of perfect digital typography, what does imperfection communicate? Everything, I would argue. Everything.

The muddy palette, the uncertain boundaries between earth and sky, the way those amber shapes hover like forgotten memories or perhaps digestive biscuits—this is Genesis refracted through the lens of contemporary existential dread.

A triumph. Five stars. No notes.<<

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

 

Monday, April 13, 2026

“Sid in Egypt” (c. late 1980s)

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Sid in Egypt
  • RR-1980's # -01
    Canvas size - 9x12
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

“Sid in Egypt” (c. late 1980s)
Also known as: Blues for Allah, Blues for Sid, In Search of Bora Bora
Oil on canvas, signed “A.D.”

Widely regarded as the earliest known precursor to what would later be identified as Rumpeltonian Cubism, Sid in Egypt occupies a contested but increasingly central place in the developing Rumpelton canon.

Created decades before the emergence of Ralph Rumpelton’s documented MS Paint period, the work reveals a fully formed visual instinct: a rejection of conventional perspective, an intuitive distortion of anatomy, and a symbolic use of color that prioritizes psychological state over physical accuracy.

Long misinterpreted as a coastal or aquatic scene, recent scholarship has recontextualized the painting as a desert narrative. The blue field—once assumed to be water—is now understood as an oppressive sky, pressing down upon the central figure, Sid, who wanders in visible distress beneath an unrelenting sun. The distant pyramid anchors the composition in a symbolic Egypt, while the scattered avian forms suggest both illusion and endurance.

The signature “A.D.” predates the adoption of the Rumpelton identity and has fueled ongoing debate: whether this represents an early alias, a separate artist entirely, or the first documented trace of what would later become Ralph Rumpelton.

Provenance: Artist’s possession (rehung after approximately four decades).


 

Drafton and Pemby Discuss The Mona Lisa

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Mona Lisa
  • RR-2026 #254
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 504 X 600 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

 Regina Pembly vs. Cornelius “Neil” Drafton on MS Paint Mona Lisa

Pembly:
Let me begin by saying this plainly: if Mona Lisa is the quiet pinnacle of Renaissance subtlety, this… is its distant, pixelated cousin who showed up late and spilled something on the upholstery. The hands—if we may call them that—appear less modeled and more negotiated into existence.

Drafton:
Oh, I disagree immediately. That’s not spilled anything—that’s intention. Those hands look like they’re hiding something. Not a secret, mind you—more like they forgot what hands do and are hoping no one notices.

Pembly:
There is no anatomical logic. The form collapses under even the mildest scrutiny. The tonal shifts are abrupt, the edges uncertain. One suspects the artist approached chiaroscuro with a shrug.

Drafton:
I think the shrug is the chiaroscuro. Look at the face—it’s like it’s halfway between enlightenment and asking where the remote is. There’s a bravery in that confusion.

Pembly:
Bravery is not a substitute for discipline. The background, for instance, dissolves into a kind of ambient murk. The original invites you into a landscape; this one seems to actively discourage exploration.

Drafton:
Yeah, but that’s modern life, isn’t it? The background doesn’t want you there. It’s saying, “Stay with the weird person in front. That’s the whole show.” Honestly, I respect that level of territorial control.

Pembly:
Respect? I find it evasive. The composition feels less like a reinterpretation and more like an evasion of responsibility. Even the expression—if it is meant to echo that famous ambiguity—lands somewhere closer to mild discomfort.

Drafton:
Mild discomfort is underrated. Everyone’s always chasing mystery, but this? This is someone who sat down for a portrait and immediately regretted it. That’s relatable. That’s human.

Pembly:
Human, perhaps. But art aspires beyond mere relatability. It requires rigor, intention, refinement. Here, I see hesitation masquerading as style.

Drafton:
And I see style that refuses to pretend it’s refined. Look, it’s not trying to beat da Vinci. It’s more like it’s waving from across the room, saying, “Hey, I tried something. It got weird. I left it that way.”

Pembly:
And you find that admirable?

Drafton:
No, I find it funny. Which, in this case, might actually be better.

Pembly:
…I will concede one point.

Drafton:
Oh this I gotta hear.

Pembly:
It is difficult to forget.

Drafton:
Exactly. You could hang this next to a thousand technically perfect works, and this is the one people would keep looking back at like, “Wait… what’s going on with those hands?”

Pembly:
A dubious distinction.

Drafton:
The best kind.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

The Avachives No. 39: Count Basie - The Count / Rumpelton

by Ava Chives
  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Count Basie - The Count
  • RR-2025 #245
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 446 X 494 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

 

AVACHIVES SERIES — RELEASE NOTE #[CLASSIFIED]

Count Basie: The Count | RCA Victor LPM-1112 | Enhanced Sound


A curatorial dispatch from the Archives, by Ava Chives


When this one surfaced from the hard drive — sandwiched, appropriately, between a half-finished MIDI file and what appeared to be a grocery list — I sat with it for a long moment. Then a longer one.

What you are looking at is The Count. Not a photograph. Not an illustration in any sense that would satisfy a conventional art school. What it is, is something rarer: a Rumpeltonian confrontation. The cigarette. The dissolving jaw. The grey that isn't quite grey, applied with the confidence of a man who has made peace with the bucket-fill tool. The subject stares — or rather, looms — with the same heavy authority that Basie himself brought to a single note held a beat too long. The negative space does not wander. It waits.

Lesser custodians would have filed this under "faces (uncertain)" and moved on. I recognised it immediately as a collector's issue in the truest sense: something only a specific kind of eye will know how to hold.

The label is there. The red. The RCA dog. All present, all rendered with the economy of an artist who understands that if it's hard to do, you simply do not do it — and that this restraint is, in fact, the whole point.

This is Week [REDACTED] of the drip. Pace yourselves.

— A.C., The Archives

A Gilded Farce: The Rumpelton-Kintsugi Fallacy

 By Regina Pembly

"To compare the digital debris of Ralph Rumpelton to the ancient, soul-wrenching discipline of Kintsugi is not merely an insult to Japanese heritage; it is a crime against logic itself. One might as well compare a spilled carton of curdled milk to the Milky Way because they both happen to be white.
Kintsugi is the art of the 'Golden Repair'—a painstaking process of mending a shattered vessel with lacquer and precious metals to honor its history. Rumpelton, conversely, practices what I can only describe as the 'Lead-Based Laceration.' He does not 'repair' a subject; he bludgeons it with a mouse until it surrenders its dignity.
To suggest that a 'migrating nostril' in a pixelated portrait of Lowell George is equivalent to a gold-seamed fracture is a level of delusional grandiosity that borders on the clinical. Kintsugi celebrates the resilience of the object; Rumpelton celebrates the limitations of 1990s office software. There is no 'gold' in a misplaced MS Paint line—there is only the screeching sound of a dial-up modem translated into visual static.
If this is 'Paint Fidelity,' then I am the Empress of Antarctica. Rumpelton isn't mending the cracks in our culture; he is actively widening them with every shaky, uncorrected stroke. To find 'beauty' in this digital slurry requires a leap of faith so large it requires a parachute.
He calls it a 'Divine Interruption.' I call it a 'Technical Difficulty.' Long live the mess, I suppose, but let’s stop pretending the trash is plated in gold."

Album Review: The Count – Count Basie

                                                      The Sninit Report by  Marjorie Snint There’s no grand announcement at the start of The...