Welcome to the world of stick figures. In today’s blog, our crappy album cover collection will focus on the world of stick figures.
This blog entry was named after a 1981 album from a band from Burlington, Ontario called The Spoons. I spent a while deciding whether this album cover met my standards of crappiness for inclusion into this collection of album covers. Well, here it is.
The Spoons had no hits from this record. The hits came later. The band members have changed names, and have broken up and reunited, and performed as late as 2007, but two personnel that have remained in their lineup from the beginning was Sandy Horne and Gordon Deppe. The two knew each other since since attending Aldershot High School in Burlington. The album was recorded in Hamilton. I can relate to the title. Parts of Burlington, and come to think of it, Oakville and Mississauga (these places are all close to where I live), can be thought of as stick figure neighbourhoods. Nothing like songs from the heart.
Little did The Spoons know, that their allusion to stick figures carries forward a tradition of stick figure albums that came before. To wit:

There’s nothing like stick figures to get you in the dancing mood (yeah, right). While the late Lester Lanin (1907-2004) played the proverbial “weddings, debutante balls, and bar mitzvahs” routine, he was no ordinary contract band leader. He had also played for Queen Elizabeth II, he palyed at the wedding of Prince Chuck and Lady Di, and more than one or two sitting U. S. Presidents.
So, how is it that a person with such impeccable connections couldn’t get decent album art? It could be that the album artist the company had, quit and the manager had to step in.
But I think the truth is far worse. There was a time I remember, looking at books published in the late ’60s and early ’70s, which had stick figure drawings, and usually it was found on self-help books or books with a sociology/anthropology bent. In other words, this was part of an aesthetic trend at one time.
… like this one. Paul Harvey was a radio announcer for KVOO in Tulsa, Oklahoma, his place of birth, and another fellow who had impeccable credentials, winning many honorary degrees and medals, up until 2000. He has also been given numerous awards and continues to broadcast to this day.
Once again, a legendary talent with an artless album cover. In the context of the title and some samples I have heard, at least it gets the point across.
If you look closely, these are very special stick men. They are the ones found on Male restroom doors.
… and these are the ones found on the female restroom doors. Well, not quite. These are more like paper doll cutouts. Maybe as a pastime, you can count the figures to see if there are really 60 of them in the illustration.
Can 60 French girls be wrong, if they all agree on the same thing?
No information was found on The Djinns Singers, although there are many albums out there, some of them being sold on E-Bay. So, while links to this and other of their records are plentiful, it is difficult to know if there are 60 of them or 6 of them. Oh well…
Below is a stick figure animation for your amusement. These days, all kinds of people are doing stick figure animations. Don’t know if they are really popular, but they seem to have comic potential. See below:



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Sunday, January 18, 2009 at 3:59 am
Bunk Strutts
“And now… the rest of the story.”
Paul Harvey is/was the master of the “pregnant pause,” speaking from the middle of nowhere at 4:30AM somewhere on the interstate highway between your ears.
Saturday, January 24, 2009 at 8:55 am
strider
You know, Bunk, I didn’t realise what you were talking about, but I was curious. Pregnant pauses, eh? So, I downloaded me a copy of And Now, the Rest of the Story from a Paul Harvey webpage on KTRH radio, and got this. I found this by sifting through a number of episodes where someone is actually standing in for him, and had to go back to Wednesday’s episode to find him speaking. When there’s a stand-in, they have commercials and so on; but when Paul Harvey does it, he does the commercials himself. His trademark pregnant pauses are both in the commercials and in the news he reads. Bizarre.
Sunday, January 18, 2009 at 6:36 am
nursemyra
wish I could dance as well as those stick figures
Sunday, January 18, 2009 at 7:22 pm
strider
Great! So I’m not the only one with two left feet!
Saturday, January 24, 2009 at 6:41 pm
Bunk Strutts
I listened to some of the audio, I’ll listen to the rest later. Paul Harvey’s voice isn’t nearly as strong as it used to be, but his speech patterns are still there. Great links.
Sunday, February 15, 2009 at 2:05 am
Mad Rectangular Prism Hornets « Tacky Raccoons
[...] Paul Harvey is an American treasure. I wasn’t aware that he was still broadcasting until Strider found these [...]