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Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childhood. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Country Bank

Since my childhood, listening to my dad belt out The Wabash Cannonball every Sunday morning while getting ready for church, or to the Johnny Cash 8-track tapes he played on camping trips, or watching Hee Haw every week, Country Music has always been a part of the background of my life. Then came my teens along with a certain TV show that brought Country into the very forefront of my life on the wheels of a bright orange Dodge charger. 

Dukes of Hazzard brought me a visual representation, albeit not necessarily an accurate one, of something I’d always wanted - a rural life on a farm, surrounded by animals and wildlife, far from the bustling of an urban or even suburban environment. And this idyllic vision of country life came naturally ensconced in Country Music. In my teen years, when I discovered that to the governing influences around me, music was a slightly more acceptable pursuit than art, I surrounded and filled my life with this music, to the point of temporarily redirecting my Disney-flavored dreams toward Nashville, and becoming a singer/songwriter who, perhaps one day, might play the stage of the Grand Ole Opry. 

I recently received the thunderbolt of a revelation of a deeper purpose to the influence born unto me upon the harmonic melodies and chords of this special music that resonated so intimately with whom I was at the time. As the songs spoke to me, I in turn spoke to them, hiding parts and pieces of myself, as if planting seeds, between the notes to be harvested at a future time when I’d acquired the skills and know-how to do so. I am now reaping the rewards of my Teenage Urban Cowboy Blues - the title of the first song I ever wrote. 






Monday, July 12, 2021

Space Shark

In between my other comic projects I found myself working on something I'd wanted to do just for fun for a long time. When I self-published my Little Brother graphic novel, being about a soul retrieval I performed on myself to reconnect with and heal a younger part of myself, I included one of the earliest comics I'd ever drawn to honor that young boy of me to see his work actually published. The comic was a four page adventure called Space Shark about a race of space-faring sharks.

In Little Brother, though, I just included what were basically photocopies of my original work, which was drawn in pencil on lined paper. So recently I took those photocopies as if they were my own penciled pages, and I inked them in, trying to stay true to the original lines as if the younger me had done the inking. Then I uploaded them, ran them through a couple filters, and used an editing program to attempt to clean up the splotches as well as the original college-ruled blue lines, leaving, in essence, what the comic may have looked like had the younger me drawn it on actual drawing paper and had finished it off by inking it. 

It was a fun side project and I'm happy to present it here:





NOTE: No endorsement of any dental brands or products is to be
assumed by this comic drawn by a prepubescent boy in the 1970s


 And If you'd like to check out and purchase Little Brother, or any of my other graphic novels, you can do so by clicking the Book Preview below. Thank you!

LIttle Brother
Little Brother
By Patrick Corrigan
Photo book