Overview

A History Of Music In Sam Costello's Labor & Love

Headline - Press release

Share this headline

  • Button Delicious
  • Bttn Digg
  • Bttn Facebook
  • Bttn Ff
  • Bttn Myspace
  • Bttn Stumble
  • Bttn Twitter
  • Bttn Reddit

There is a group of compelling, bewitching folk songs that are part of American's cultural DNA: murder ballads, work songs, sea shanties. Though many of them originated in the British Isles, immigrants brought them here and filtered them through American experiences, making them part of the foundation of American music. A comic adapting them will be debuting at SPX in a few weeks.

 

And these songs are weird. From songs narrated by a bird witnessing murder committed by a spurned lover to a song about a fiddle made of flesh and bone playing the song of its creation, they explore—as Greil Marcus famously dubbed it—the old, weird America.

The songs may seem initially clear, but they’re also impossible to completely understand. Listening to them, it often feels that there’s an entire world of meaning beneath the lyrics and the events described that one knows is there but has no hope of accessing. It's that sense of mystery and wonder and memory that is present in each story in Labor and Love.

Labor and Love is a collection of comics adapting 4 of these classic folk ballads. It is written by Sam Costello, the creator of Split Lip, and drawn by Neal Von Flue. The comic contains adaptations of:

• The Wind and The Rain
• The Wreck of the Old 97
• The Mermaid
• Henry Lee.

Besides the comics, each story includes a common or canonical version of the lyrics, information about what albums each song can be heard on, and notes about the song or the comic's creation.

Labor and Love will debut at SPX, Sept. 10-11, 2011. The comic can be previewed and pre-ordered for US$7 at its own website.

Related content

Related Lowdowns

Comments

There are no comments yet.

In order to post a comment you have to be logged in. Don't have a profile yet? Register now!

Latest headlines

READ ALL HEADLINES

Latest comments
Comics Discussion
Broken Frontier on Facebook