Cadabra Records’ spoken word adaptation of ROBERT W. CHAMBERS‘ The Yellow Sign — the cult classic which inspired the acclaimed HBO series, True Detective – is nearing release in early July. The story has been recited by filmmaker and actor, Anthony D. P. Mann, the LP features extensive notes by weird fiction scholar S. T. Joshi, and the brilliant and haunting original score was created by composer Maurizio Guarini, of Italian prog/horror ions, Goblin.
A brief new trailer for ROBERT W. CHAMBERS’ The Yellow Sign LP has been issued; view it at THIS LOCATION.
Hear a previously-released sample of The Yellow Sign at Dread Central HERE.
Cadabra Records will issue The Yellow Sign on June 16th, with a retail version as well as direct/deluxe label-only versions of the album planned. Both editions will be released in runs of 500 copies each, both on 150-gram colored vinyl. Both versions feature a twelve-page booklet with new liner notes by weird fiction scholar, S. T. Joshi, Maurizio Guarini, and newly commissioned art by Alan Brown. The direct version is housed in deluxe heavy weight gatefold tip-on jacket, includes an 18″ x 24″ promotional poster, and features exclusive centerfold art only for this edition.
The Yellow Sign will see release on July 7th; preorders for the yellow marble LP as well as the “Eyes of the Night-Watchman” variant limited to 150 copies at Cadabra Records’ webshop RIGHT HERE.
ROBERT W. CHAMBERS (1865–1933) is the very embodiment of the cult writer. Although in his day he was an immensely popular author of historical and romance novels, he is today remembered for a handful of books he wrote early in his career–books that powerfully fuse mystery, supernatural horror, and psychological aberration into a uniquely unnerving amalgam. The pinnacle of his achievement in this realm is The King in Yellow (1895), a title that has covertly inspired generations of horror writers, beginning with H. P. Lovecraft. When Nic Pizzolatto, creator of the television show True Detective, revealed that he was inspired by CHAMBERS, Lovecraft, and other weird writers, CHAMBERS was the beneficiary of a mini-boom–just about the last thing its author would have expected for work that he appeared to repudiate after he had capitulated to the sirens’ song of bestsellerdom.
Best known as keyboard player of the prog band Goblin, Maurizio Guarini is a composer, arranger and multi- instrumentalist. Born in Rome, Italy in 1955, his music exploration went through prog, jazz-rock, fusion, and since joining Goblin in 1975, he has worked on hundreds of film scores and studio/live productions, including soundtracks for cult classics like Suspiria, the European release of Dawn Of The Dead, and much more. Guarini relocated to Canada in 1999, and has been recently touring worldwide with Goblin. He released his first solo album in 2013, and is currently working on a new solo project.
Anthony D.P. Mann is a Canadian-based filmmaker and actor with five feature films and a lifetime of stage and radio to his credit. In roles ranging from Count Dracula and The Phantom Of The Opera, to Ebenezer Scrooge, his love of the classics is evident in his work. He is delighted to be lending his voice to a series of releases with Cadabra Records.
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