Rock 'N' Roll Comics Explained

Schedule:Monthly
Ongoing:y
Genre:Underground
Publisher:Revolutionary Comics
Date:June 1989 – November 1993
Issues:63
Writers:Todd Loren, Dean Hsieh, Jay Allen Sanford, Robert V. Conte, Michael K. Willis
Artists:Lyndal Ferguson, Greg Fox, Stuart Immonen, Scott Jackson, Ken Landgraf, Larry Nadolsky, Blackwell, Johnny, Joe Paradise, Childish, Scott E. Pentzer
Editors:Todd Loren (issues #1–51)
Jay Allen Sanford (issues #52–65)
Sort:Rock 'N' Roll Comics

Rock 'N' Roll Comics was a comic book series published by Revolutionary Comics from 1989 to 1993. Revolutionary's flagship title, the series was notable for its unauthorized and unlicensed biographies of rock stars, told in comic book form but well-researched and geared to adults, often with adult situations (nudity, drug use, violence, etc.).[1]

Some musicians featured in the comics, like Frank Zappa[2] and KISS, were supportive; while others, like the New Kids on the Block, considered the comic akin to a bootleg recording and sued the publisher. Publisher Todd Loren's legal victory in the U.S. District Court established that unauthorized comic book biographies were entitled to the same protections as other unauthorized biographies.

Rock 'N' Roll Comics originally contained straight biographies in comics form and Mad magazine-style parodies (all written by Loren). The parodies were dropped after about 18 issues. Early issues also featured the Loren/Larry Nadolsky character Stan Back in a series of humorous one-page strips. Loren wrote many of the early lead stories; Jay Allen Sanford took over as lead writer with issue #22. The stories were illustrated by a grab-bag of artists without many other credits in the industry.[3]

The series sported cover slogans reading "Unauthorized and Proud of It" or "100% Unauthorized Material". Rock 'N' Roll Comics was published in a typical 6½" × 9¾" comic book format. Issues were typically 32 pages in length, printed mostly in black-and-white with a color cover. Many covers were painted by Scott Jackson. The letters page — which often featured spirited editorials by Loren — was known as "Revolutionary Comments." Although the series is numbered through 65 issues, a total of 63 issues were released due to two issues, numbers 8 and 61, never being published due to legal challenges.

Publication history

Revolutionary Comics publisher Todd Loren was inspired to launch Rock 'N' Roll Comics in part by the success of an unauthorized Bruce Springsteen parody one-shot comic called Hey Boss (Visionary Graphics, 1986).

Hey Boss artist Larry Nadolsky was hired to draw the first issue of Rock 'N' Roll Comics, profiling Guns N' Roses. Upon the comic's release, cover-dated June 1989, Guns N' Roses lawyer Peter Paterno sent Revolutionary a cease and desist order. This was reported in a Rolling Stone story[4] that directly resulted in the entire 10,000-copy print run selling out in two weeks, thanks to buyers who thought Guns N' Roses would sue Revolutionary Comics out of existence. In actuality, no lawsuits were ever filed, and the comic went into multiple new printings, eventually totaling over 150,000 copies.

Rock 'N' Roll Comics #3 and #4, on Bon Jovi and Mötley Crüe, respectively (cover-dated Sept. 1989 and Oct. 1989), did result in legal challenges. Both bands had exclusive merchandising deals with Great Southern Productions/[5] Winterland Productions, which threatened comics distributors over carrying the issues and got a court injunction prohibiting Revolutionary from distributing them.[6] This forced Revolutionary to build its own distribution network outside traditional comic shops, eventually getting them into music and gift retail outlets which had never carried comics before. This independence from the comic book marketplace served the company well, as sales continued to rise from issue to issue, with their Metallica comic going into multiple print runs totaling over 75,000 copies.[7]

Issue #8 (cover-dated Feb. 1990), featuring Skid Row, was never published, due to an injunction prompted by Great Southern. It was skipped in number sequencing; issue #9 (Kiss) was cover-dated Mar. 1990.

Issue #12 (cover-dated June 1990), featuring New Kids on the Block, resulted in a number of legal battles. (see: Litigation, below) Ironically, this and the other lawsuits garnered Revolutionary worldwide press, eventually resulting in record-breaking sales for an indie comic publisher.[8]

Beginning with issue #19 (Public Enemy / 2 Live Crew), Rock 'N' Roll Comics was released on a biweekly basis[9] from Jan. 1991–Mar. 1992, comprising 25 total issues.

Issue #61 (cover-dated July 1993), scheduled to be about the band Yes, was never published, and ultimately was skipped in number sequencing.

The series' final issue, #65, on "Sci-Fi Space Rockers" (Pink Floyd, Genesis, Marillion, Hawkwind, and others) was cover-dated Nov. 1993.

Spin-off titles

The popularity of Rock 'N' Roll Comics led Revolutionary to publish other music titles, most notably Rock 'N' Roll Comics Magazine (a reprint title featuring stories from past issues of Rock 'N' Roll Comics), Hard Rock Comics (a title dedicated to hard rock, heavy metal, and punk bands), and Star Jam Comics (a title dedicated to pop acts as well as actors from the television show Beverly Hills, 90210). Additionally, Revolutionary published a line of Experience limited series focusing entirely on one band or musical artist. The titles were The Beatles Experience, The Elvis Presley Experience, The Led Zeppelin Experience, and The Pink Floyd Experience.

Bluewater Productions collections

In September 2009, 15 years after the demise of Revolutionary Comics, publisher Bluewater Productions announced it would be reprinting Revolutionary's line of music comics (including stories from Rock 'N' Roll Comics) in ten monthly volumes, averaging 250 pages each.[10] The first collections were The Beatles Experience and Hard Rock Heroes, released in early 2010.

Many of Revolutionary's original creators participated in updating and modernizing the contents of the musical comic bios. The reprints and updates were supervised by long-time Rock 'N' Roll Comics writer/editor Jay Allen Sanford. Ultimately, Bluewater released seven titles from 2010 to 2012:[11]

Two other projected volumes, Rock 'N' Roll Cartoon History: The Sixties; and Rock 'N' Roll Cartoon History: The Seventies, remain unpublished.

Litigation

Rock 'N' Roll Comics #12 (cover-date June 1990), an unauthorized biography of New Kids on the Block, resulted in Revolutionary being sued again. Publisher Loren claimed the First Amendment protected the journalistic rights of his "illustrated articles" and he took the matter to the United States District Court for the Southern District of California.

Loren set up a 900 number, "Nuke the New Kids," to raise money for the company's defense ($10.00 per call, billed by phone company). In April 1990, U.S. District Judge John S. Rhoades declared that Rock 'N' Roll Comics #12 could legally be distributed because it is "part biography and part satire." The judge's twelve-page ruling stated that "bookstores are filled with biographies — both authorized and unauthorized — of public figures. And, while the subjects of such biographies may be offended by the publication of their life stories, they generally have no claim for trademark infringement."

Rhoades' ruling also stated "It appears that the First Amendment may trump any claim that the plaintiffs have for trademark infringement." The resultant order stated that Winterland Concessions Co. failed to show that the case met the standards required to issue a preliminary injunction. This dissolved the temporary restraining order prohibiting distribution. Nonetheless, the New Kids responded by filing suit for trademark infringement since their logo appeared in the comic.[12] A settlement between the New Kids and Revolutionary was reached in August 1990. It permanently enjoined Revolutionary from "advertising, manufacturing, distributing and/or selling or otherwise commercially exploiting any publication displaying the trademark and/or logo of the New Kids on the Block, either as a group or individually." Loren promptly reprinted the New Kids story in magazine format (Rock 'N' Roll Comics Magazine), without depicting the band's logo anywhere in the story.

Documentary film

In 2005, BulletProof Film released a documentary film titled Unauthorized and Proud of It: Todd Loren's Rock 'N' Roll Comics. The film features interviews with Loren's family, surviving "Revolutionaries," comic book colleagues, adversaries, supporters and past and present rock 'n' roll stars featured in Revolutionary's comics. Appearing in the film are Alice Cooper, publishers Gary Groth (Fantagraphics) and Denis Kitchen (Kitchen Sink Press), famed groupie Cynthia Plaster Caster, underground painter and RevCom cover artist Robert Williams (known for his controversial album art for the first Guns N' Roses LP), Jay Allen Sanford, Gene Simmons (audio only), and more.

The film also details the San Diego police department's investigation into Todd Loren's 1992 murder; interviews with Loren's coworkers and family members suggest that the police failed to follow up on all available leads. The film was released on DVD in April 2012 by Wild Eye Releasing, under the title Unauthorized: The Story of Rock 'N' Roll Comics. The DVD includes over two hours of bonus footage, interviews, news footage, and art galleries, and liner notes by long-time Rock 'N' Roll Comics writer-editor Jay Allen Sanford.

Issue guide

Cover-date Subject Cover artist Writer Story artist Notes
1 July 1989 ? 7 printings; 7th printing is entirely new with new color artwork and a different cover
2 Aug. 1989 Todd Loren 6 printings; 6th printing is entirely different with new color artwork, a different cover and two new backup stories featuring Megadeth and Motorhead.
3 Sept. 1989 Lyndal Ferguson Todd Loren Larry Nadolsky & Scott Goodell
4 Oct. 1989 Lyndal Ferguson Todd Loren
5 Nov. 1989 Lyndal Ferguson Todd Loren Larry Nadolsky & Johnny Childish 2 printings
6 Dec. 1989 Todd Loren
7 Jan. 1990 Todd Loren
8 Feb. 1990 N/A Todd Loren ? Prevented from being published by injunction from Great Southern Company; skipped in issue number sequencing
9 Mar. 1990 Scott Jackson
10 Apr. 1990 Scott Jackson
11 May 1990 Scott Jackson Dean Hsieh Greg Fox
12 June 1990 Lyndal Ferguson & Greg Fox Robert V. Conte Mitch Waxman & Greg Fox 2 printings
13 July 1990 Scott Jackson Greg Fox
14 Aug. 1990 Scott Jackson Todd Loren
15 Sept. 1990 Scott Jackson Todd Loren Greg Fox
16 Oct. 1990 Scott Jackson Todd Loren Greg Fox
17 Nov. 1990 Todd Loren Greg Fox
18 Dec. 1990 Scott Jackson
19 Jan. 1991 Todd Loren
20 Jan. 1991 Scott Jackson
21 Feb. 1991 Scott Jackson Todd Loren Stuart Immonen
22 Feb. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Mike Sagara
23 Mar. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox
24 Mar. 1991 Scott Jackson Spike Steffenhagen/
Jay Allen Sanford
Stuart Immonen/
Larry Nadolsky
25 Apr. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford/
Todd Loren
Stuart Immonen/
Scott Jackson
The Mojo Nixon story was billed as the first authorized biography to appear in the series
26 May 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox The Doors, part I
27 June 1991 The Doors Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox The Doors, part II
28 June 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Marc Erickson Ozzy Osbourne/Black Sabbath, part I
29 July 1991 Ozzy Osbourne/Black Sabbath Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Marc Erickson Ozzy Osbourne/Black Sabbath, part II
30 July 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox
31 Aug. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox
32 Aug. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
33 Sept. 1991 Guns N' Roses Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Johnny Childish & Mike Sagara Billed as "Guns N' Roses '91"
34 Sept. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
35 Oct. 1991 Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell
36 Oct. 1991 Stuart Immonen Jay Allen Sanford
37 Nov. 1991 Scott E. Pentzer Jay Allen Sanford Scott E. Pentzer & Stuart Immonen
38 Nov. 1991 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
39 Dec. 1991 New Kids on the Block Jay Allen Sanford Billed as "The Fall of the New Kids"
40 Dec. 1991 Earl Ferguson Jay Allen Sanford Joe Paradise
41 Jan. 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
42 Jan. 1992 Metallica Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Scott E. Pentzer billed as "Metallica II"
43 Feb. 1992 Guns N' Roses Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford billed as "Tales from the Tour"
44 Feb. 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
45 Mar. 1992 Scott Jackson Heather Cheney & Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell billed as "Grateful Dead (Part One: The Summer of Love)"
46 Apr. 1992 Grateful Dead Scott Jackson Heather Cheney & Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell billed as "Grateful Dead (Part Two: The Seventies)"
47 May 1992 Grateful Dead Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell Grateful Dead, part III
48 June 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell
49 July 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
50 Aug. 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell Bob Dylan, Part I
51 Sept. 1992 Bob Dylan Scott E. Pentzer Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell Bob Dylan, Part II
52 Oct. 1992 Bob Dylan Scott E. Pentzer Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell Bob Dylan, Part III
53 Nov. 1992 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford
54 Dec. 1992 U2, part I
55 Jan. 1993 U2 Scott Jackson Michael K. Willis Dave Briggs U2, part II
56 Feb. 1993 ? Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox
57 Mar. 1993 ? Michael K. Willis Larry Nadolsky billed as "Aerosmith II"
58 Apr. 1993 Scott Jackson Jay Allen Sanford Marshall Ross
59 May 1993 Scott Jackson Michael K. Willis
60 June 1993 Ken Meyer, Jr. Jay Allen Sanford Greg Fox
61 July 1993 N/A ? ? Never published due to injunction from Great Southern; skipped in issue number sequencing
62 Aug. 1993 ? Michael K. Willis ?
63 Sept. 1993 ?
64 Oct. 1993 60s San Francisco Ken Meyer, Jr. Jay Allen Sanford Blackwell, Greg Fox, Scott E. Pentzer, Randy Silverman, Bill Williams
65 Nov. 1993 Sci-Fi Space Rockers Lyndal Ferguson Jay Allen Sanford, Spike Steffenhagen Greg Fox, Ken Landgraf, Terry Pallot, Marshall Ross Featured "Pink Floyd, Genesis, Marillion, Hawkwind, and more"

See also

References

Sources consulted

External links

Notes and References

  1. Peisneraug, David. "Part Ramones Biography, Part Dreamscape," New York Times (Aug. 8, 2013).
  2. Herrmann, Brenda. "Rockin' Comics: Super Heroes Of Music Play An Exciting New Venue — the World Of Cartoons," Chicago Tribune (October 20, 1991).
  3. Reed, Patrick A. "Pop Music Comics: The 90s, part one. Rock-It Comics, Revolutionary, Marvel Music, Grateful Dead Comix," Depth of Field magazine (November 10, 2011).
  4. "New Kids vs. Revolutionary," Rolling Stone (Apr. 1992).
  5. "Retailing," Billboard (May 24, 1986), p. 2.
  6. "Rock 'N Roll Comics Distribution Interrupted," Comics Buyer's Guide, #829 (Oct. 6, 1989), p. 1, 28.
  7. Fogel's Underground Comix Price Guide, 2006.
  8. Sanford, Jay Allen. "New Kids on the Block versus Revolutionary Comics," San Diego Reader blog (Sept. 13, 2007).
  9. Loren, Todd. "Rock 'n' Roll Comics to Go Twice Monthly," "Revolutionary Comments" (letters page), Rock 'N' Roll Comics #17 (Nov. 1990).
  10. Parkin, J.K. "Don't call it a comeback: Bluewater to collect classic Rock 'N' Roll Comics," Comic Book Resources: Robot6 (September 10, 2009).
  11. Sanford, Jay Allen, "No more Rock 'N' Roll Comics reprint editions from Bluewater Productions," San Diego Reader blog (March 23, 2013).
  12. "New Kids On The Block Sue Revolutionary," The Comics Journal #136 (July 1990), p. 17.