Thursday 26 October 2023

October 27th, 1973 - Marvel UK, 50 years ago this week.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
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In 1973, you were either a Donny Osmond fan or a David Cassidy fan.

Unless you were a fan of someone else altogether.

Thus it was that that age-old rivalry was stoked up again, as Cassidy of the David variety smashed his way to Number One on the UK singles chart, with his classic double-A side Daydreamer/The Puppy Song.

Admittedly, when I say, "Classic," I possess no memory of either track and have no idea how either of them went.

Interesting to see that, although he was ruling the charts in Britain; in the US, by the start of 1973, his chart career was already over, with a string of singles failing to crack the Top 200 until Gettin' It in the Street reached Number 105 in 1976. The divergent tastes of the UK and US publics are ofttimes a mystery.

On the accompanying British LP chart, pole position was now hogged by relentless party blues-boogie three-chord-wonder rock band Status Quo with their album Hello.

I must confess I've never heard that record but think I can make a pretty good guess as to what every track on it sounded like.

The Mighty World of Marvel #56, Hulk vs Smashor

Stranded in China, the Hulk must match the might of the deadly Smashor, thanks to the machiavellian machinations of the mendacious Mandarin.

I would assume this is all part of the villain's attempt to get the Hulk to assist him in his plans for world domination. Setting a giant robot on someone seems a strange way to win friends and influence people but what can you do?

Next, we get an oddity, as the mag presents us with a 1961 Lee/Ditko tale called The Stone Man in which a pensioner asks the statue of a local hero to help the local poor. His prayers are answered but his neighbours cheat him out of his share of the statue’s gift. Can it be long before that statue avenges the old man?

No, it can't.

And, in our final strip of the issue, Dr Strange helps the Fantastic Four rescue Sue Storm from the clutches of the lovesick Sub-Mariner.

The Avengers #6, Wonder Man

Gasp, humanity, as Wonder Man makes his senses-shattering debut!

But is he hero or villain?

Or is he both?

It's true. The man known to the world as Mr Zemo launches his latest plan to destroy the Earth's mightiest heroes, by getting his new recruit to join the gang and then betray them.

Will his foul scheme triumph?

Not if Wonder Man has his way!

Meanwhile, in Dr Strange's deathless strip, Baron Mordo places a spell over our hero's house which transports it to another world.

With Strange out of the way, the villain visits the Ancient One, claiming he's changed his ways. Will the elderly eldritch educator see through his pesky plan?

Too right he will.

Spider-Man Comics Weekly #37, the Rhino

The Rhino's busted out of prison - and he's out for revenge against Spider-Man, after their last meeting!

The cloddish wrongdoer might seem unstoppable but our hero has a secret weapon up his sleeve.

Literally.

Meanwhile, in Thor's current adventure, our hero's still battling Loki in the Trial of the Gods, while Balder attempts to stop the Enchantress and Executioner tormenting Jane Foster.

35 comments:

Anonymous said...

Were you Brits horribly confused to see both the executioner and the enchantress in avengers and Spider-Man weekly at the same time? I know I surely would’ve been…

Anonymous said...

Phillipe, I want to thank you for that sage advice on using beach towels in the bathroom!

Charlee

Anonymous said...

Golden nuggets, Charlie!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

As with the Beatles and Rolling Stones the other day, I'm not bothered about David Cassidy or Donny Osmond, Steve, and instead will opt for the third way and teenybop fluidity, choosing the David Bowie toilet instead (to er... continue dangermash's metaphor from the other day, just in case any one thinks I'm being a bit peculiar there).
All the same though, I find Bowie's early 70s stuff a bit of a mixed bag, and this weeks main hit of his, 'Sorrow', is not a good one. Admittedly it is better than his other top 10 single this month, 'The Laughing Gnome', but thats not saying much.

Over on the album chart its definitely the 70s, with 'Dark Side of the Moon', 'Selling England by the Pound', 'Jesus Christ Superstar' 'Tubular Bells' and Perry Como.
You have to wonder why punk still took a good few years to happen!

-sean

Anonymous said...

I checked out the Dr Strange story in that Avengers Weekly - from Strange Takes #118 - and Doc now has his regular 'tache, without the weird curvy bits. But otherwise, facially he still looks fairly east Asian to me.

Besides the first appearance of Wonder Man, Steve, I believe the Avengers story in that issue is also the senses shattering debut of Don Heck on the strip.

-sean

dangermash said...

This week's Avengers and the next two weeks' Avengers stories must be the worst run of three stories in the Marvel silver age. Casting Don Heck adrift from Kirby layouts left him floundering badly. It's not just the step down in artwork quality; it's his clunky story telling. This week we have the Wasp kidnapped by Wonder Man behind the scenes, In two weeks we have Spider-Man just turn up in Mexico and demonstrate an ability to fly by whipping up web wings.

Yeah, I'll claim to have been in the Bowie camp too, Sean, rather than David Cassidy or Donny Osmond. Better than telling the truth and admitting to having wanted to be in the gang.

Anonymous said...

For both David & Donny, songs involved puppies. For David, the Puppy Song - for Donny, "And they called it Puppy Lo-ve, just because we're..." Aargh! - no more, I can't take it!

To be serious, when Donny was trying to cultivate a pitiful 'bad-boy' image ('Soldier of Love'), he ridiculed 'Puppy Love', singing it in a whiny, babyish voice. That, however, upset Donny's die-hard fans very much, as they loved the song. At that moment, Donny had an epiphany - he realized he didn't own his songs; instead, they belonged to the fans who loved his music.

Don Heck returned on Wonderman for 'A Ghost in Stone' - the third Marvel Superheroes Annual (1980/1981?), featuring Avengers # 157. In that issue, Wonderman did much worse against the Black Knight's 'statue', than the Vision. And yet, in the following issue, 'Wonderman vs the Vision', Wonderman clearly had the edge. I seem to remember Simon uttered something like, "Seems I'm getting my old power back again", to explain that inconsistency.

Phillip


Anonymous said...

I meant ('Soldier of Love' era).

Phillip

Anonymous said...

dangermash, Not to defend Don Beck particularly, but I do think Stan the Man needs to take some responsibility for the clunky storytelling in the Avengers. I mean, he is the credited writer and editor...

Btw, I hope you noticed I didn't include 'Brothers and Sisters' in that list of very 70s chart albums!

-sean

Anonymous said...

*this weeks very 70s chart albumsA
Sorry, missed a bit with some poor editing there.

-sean

dangermash said...

Yeah, one of nine albums in that 1973 top 50 that I have in my collection, Sean. Two more on the wishlist.

Allmans, Pink Floyd, Stones, LED Zep, Neil Young, Slade, Bowie*5. I'm pretty easy to read.

Anonymous said...

Neil Young? Have you got 'Time Fades Away' then, dangermash? A new entry this week... I wonder if it'll stay in the chart for long.
Not necessarily the kind of record you'd expect as a follow up to 'After the Gold Rush' and 'Harvest'...

-sean

Colin Jones said...

Never mind David Cassidy and Donny Osmond - the Beatles are back! They found an old John Lennon tape at the back of a cupboard and tarted it up via AI technology so hey presto a new "Beatles" song is born! Apparently this new song, called NOW AND THEN, is officially the final Beatles song...until somebody finds another old Lennon tape I assume.

Colin Jones said...

Phillip, Sade also had a song called Soldier Of Love but it's not the Donny Osmond one.

At Christmas a few years ago Radio 2 had two documentaries about the Cassidy/Osmond rivalry, an hour for Cassidy and an hour for Osmond, both presented by Nina Myskow - any UK readers remember her? I saw her recently on YouTube arguing the remain case in a furious ding-dong with a rabid Brexiteer.

Anonymous said...

I wonder if Bowie wrote Diamond Dogs having been burned that he missed out on his core audience's love of puppies? The timing works.

DW

Anonymous said...

So… I’m the only one here who actually LIKES Dashing Don Heck’s artwork on THE AVENGERS?

b.t.

Steve W. said...

Bt, I can officially confirm that I too like Heck's early work on the Avengers.

Charlie, I didn't have the very early Avengers issues. So, the Enchantress/Executioner omnipresence wasn't a problem for me.

dangermash said...

I don't have Time Fades Away yet,Sean - it's one of the two on my wishlist.

Anonymous said...

b.t. - I remember one Don Heck Avengers story, in which different Avengers separately battled duplicate Kangs simultaneously. Don Heck's sequence, with Thor hammer-striking Kang, knocking him out, was quite impressive, at the time. Also, Don Heck's Iron Man (vs Titanium Man) impressed me very much. Other Don Heck stuff wasn't so good. Although, as adults, we negatively comment, as kids, I suppose we liked all artists (albeit to widely varying degrees), or we wouldn't have finished their stories. Besides, very invested in particular characters, you'd continue, even if quality temporarily dipped slightly. If quality dipped for a long while, however...it was curtains!

Phillip

McSCOTTY said...

I really liked Don Hecks Avengers as well .

B Smith said...

Just wondering if anyone knows who did the art for that MWOM cover...?

Steve W. said...

B, my guess would be Ron Wilson. I shall check to see that the Grand Comics Database says.

Steve W. said...

The Grand Comics Database says it's likely to have been pencilled by Ron Wilson and John Romita with inks by Frank Giacoia and John Romita.

Anonymous said...

Perhaps we could consider 'Puppy Love' to be the wholesome Mormon answer to the Stooges 'I Wanna Be Your Dog'...?

Btw, 'Quadrophenia' was released this week in '73.
Its an odd record in a way - a hairy concept album about mods, scooters and whatnot. I suppose the Who had moved on quite a bit since the mid-60s. As a look back, maybe it should be seen as part of the same trend as Bowie's 'Pin Ups' and Bryan Ferry's 'My Foolish Things'... Although obviously its not made up of covers, and its a fair bit better than those other two (Bowie really massacred 'See Emily Play', and Ferry was not suited to 'Sympathy for the Devil').

-sean

Colin Jones said...

ATTENTION UK READERS: British Summer Time ends at 2am tomorrow so don't forget to put your clocks back an hour.

It's curious that BST lasts for seven months and GMT only five but GMT is counted as normal, standard UK time.

Colin Jones said...

I've been watching Top Of The Pops on BBC Four (via iplayer) which was presented by David "Kid" Jensen with Peter Powell making his first ever appearance! This episode was originally broadcast on October 27th 1977, just three days after I'd been to the cinema to see 'Sinbad & The Eye of The Tiger'. The song at #1 was Baccara's 'Yes Sir I Can Boogie' and other acts included ABBA (on video singing 'The Name Of The Game' which reached #1 the following week), Darts, Rod Stewart, Tom Robinson, Smokey Robinson and Boney M singing 'Belfast' which was their disco-influenced attempt to solve The Troubles. A fascinating glimpse at TOTP in its' heyday when it was so influential!

Yes sir, I can boogie
but I need a certain song
I can boogie
boogie boogie
all night long...

FUN FACT: Baccara were the first female duo to reach #1 on the UK singles chart but the second female duo to reach #1 came along only three months later - Althia & Donna singing 'Uptown Top Ranking'.

Anonymous said...

One WHO album had 'Leeds' in its title. Donny's Yorkshire variant title could have been: "My puppy love makes me steal them" - and, for the Stooges, "I Wanna Be Your Dog Thief". There, I've said it first!

Phillip

Anonymous said...

Colin - I watched that TOTP, last night. In the 70s TOTP (unlike the mid 80s), it starts by running down the entire chart - so there's no suspense over what's in the top 10, or what's No #1. Seems odd!

Phillip

Colin Jones said...

Phillip, TOTP seemed more genteel in the '70s. In the '80s it got much more garish and OTT in my opinion.

Colin Jones said...

I forgot to mention that Slade also appeared on the 1977 TOTP episode but they looked a lot different from their glam-rock heyday of a few years earlier. Amazing to think that it's now 50 years since 'Merry Xmas Everybody' was released in 1973.

Does your granny always tell ya
that the old songs are the best
then she's up and rock'n'rollin' with the rest...

Anonymous said...

'The Who Live in Leeds', Phillip.
But as a wise man once pointed out - our host here in fact, on this very blog - that was a lie. The Who don't, and never did, live in Leeds.

-sean

Anonymous said...

Sean - Maybe in Don Revie's era, a Leeds address had a cachet which it lost, in subsequent years!

Phillip

B Smith said...

I'm sure you're all aware of it, but the Chartmusic podcast does an aces job of dissecting episodes of "Top Of The Pops" - featuring a rotating panel of Melody Maker writers, and put together by Affable Al Needham, it's tops listening, chums.

(Be warned - any one episode can be up to seven hours long, but the time just flies, trust me)

https://chartmusiccouk.wordpress.com/

Colin Jones said...

Seven hours to discuss one episode of TOTP?!?!?!

Anonymous said...

Maybe appropriate for an episode featuring the Goombay Dance Band!

Phillip