MPLS sound / Joseph P. Illidge & Hannibal Tabu, writers ; Meredith Laxton, artist ; ALW's Troy Peteri with Ryan Lewis, letterers ; [foreword by Josh Jackson ; afterword by Fabrice Sapolsky]
Material type: TextPublisher: Los Angeles, CA : Humanoids, Inc., [2021]Copyright date: ©2021Edition: First editionDescription: 115 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cmContent type:- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781643378404
- 1643378406
- Minneapolis sound
- Popular music -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis -- Comic books, strips, etc
- African Americans -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis -- Music -- History -- Comic books, strips, etc
- Prince -- Comic books, strips, etc. -- Fiction
- Bands (Music) -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis -- Comic books, strips, etc
- Rock musicians -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis -- Comic books, strips, etc
- Minneapolis (Minn.) -- Comic books, strips, etc. -- Fiction
Item type | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adult Book | Main Library | Graphic Novel | Adult Display - Second Floor | ILLIDGE, JOSEPH | Black Music Month | Available | 33111010510473 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The ultimate love letter to the funky pop-rock sound that made The Artist Formerly Known as Prince a legend.
When Prince burst onto the pop scene in 1978, he put Minneapolis on the music map. Many up-and-coming bands followed the trail that he blazed. MPLS Sound is the story of one such group--Starchild, led by a young woman inspired by Prince to start her own revolution. Through her journey, we see from within exactly how His Royal Badness transformed the entire Minneapolis scene.
"When Prince burst onto the pop scene in 1978, he put Minneapolis on the music map. Many up-and-coming bands followed the trail that he blazed. MPLS Sound is the story of one such group--Starchild, led by a young woman inspired by Prince to start her own revolution. Through her journey, we see from within exactly how His Royal Badness transformed the entire Minneapolis scene."--Provided by publisher.
The group in the graphic novel is fictitious. According to Publisher's Weekly, "Illidge described Starchild as a " fictional band that competed to play with Prince in the early Eighties. Basically, they were the prototype for The Revolution.'"--Publisher's Weekly, Jan. 19 2020 news brief.