Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Though the album has been known by the sobriquet "Skull & Roses", the original vertical gatefold cover unfolds to reveal the entire skeleton. The graphic became one of the images most associated with the band. Opening track "Bertha" fades in on the original version of the album, in semblance of entering the performance space.
The pair are credited with creating the skeleton and roses image that became the Grateful Dead's archetypal iconography, and Journey's wings and beetles that appeared on their album covers from 1977 to 1980. In 1977, Mouse, with Kelley, created the Styx album cover for The Grand Illusion, featuring a pastiche of René Magritte. Mouse and Kelley ...
Along with fellow artist Stanley Mouse, Kelley is credited with creating the wings and beetles on all Journey album covers as well as the skull and roses image for the Grateful Dead. Kelley's artwork on the 1971 self-titled live album, Grateful Dead , incorporated a black and white illustration of a skeleton by Edmund Sullivan , which ...
This page was last edited on 4 May 2011, at 05:23 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply ...
Image source: Getty Images. Block. Block (NYSE: SQ) is a financial technology company offering a variety of payment processing services to ease its customers' pain points. Some of its products ...
The body of a Michigan father who went missing while attending a family gathering over the holidays has reportedly been found. On Saturday, Jan. 4 at approximately 2 p.m. local time, 52-year-old ...
But sales at Macy’s First 50 locations, where the company is focusing its revitalization efforts, rose 1.9%, marking a third consecutive quarter of sales growth, the company said. Sales at ...
Steal Your Face is a live double album by the Grateful Dead, released in June 1976.It is the band's fifth live album and thirteenth overall. The album was recorded October 17–20, 1974, at San Francisco's Winterland Ballroom, during a "farewell run" that preceded a then-indefinite hiatus.