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Revolutionary Comics

Revolutionary Comics was an American comic book publisher specializing in unauthorized profiles of entertainers and professional athletes, as well as a line of erotic comics. Its flagship series was Rock 'N' Roll Comics. Founded by Todd Loren, Revolutionary Comics was based in San Diego.

Revolutionary Comics
Parent companyInfinite One, Inc.
StatusDefunct, 1994 (29 years ago) (1994)
Founded1989 (34 years ago) (1989)
FounderTodd Loren
Country of originUnited States of America
Headquarters locationSan Diego, California
Key peopleTodd Loren, Herb Shapiro, Jay Allen Sanford
Publication typesComic books
Nonfiction topicsMusic, biography, sex
Fiction genresHorror
ImprintsCarnal Comics

History edit

Origins edit

After some success with Musicade, a mail order music memorabilia company, Loren formed Revolutionary Comics in 1989. The publisher's first title was Rock 'N' Roll Comics, a line of unauthorized comic book biographies of rock stars prompted in part by the success of a 1986 Bruce Springsteen parody comic called Hey Boss.[citation needed]

Rock 'N' Roll Comics edit

Early issues of Rock 'N' Roll Comics contained straight biographies in comic form and Mad magazine-style parodies. The parodies were later dropped. The line featured unlicensed biographies of rock stars, told in comic book form but geared for adults, often with very adult situations (nudity, drug use, violence, etc.).[1] The comic sported a cover tagline reading "Unauthorized and Proud of it." Some musicians featured in the comic were supportive, while others threatened legal action. The resulting media exposure garnered Rock 'N' Roll Comics huge sales of their early issues.[2]

A later injunction[3] led the company to expand its distribution network outside traditional comic shops, getting their products into music and gift retail outlets which had never carried comics before. This independence from the comic book direct market served the company well, as sales continued to rise from issue to issue.[4]

Revolutionary's only other title at first was the bimonthly Tipper Gore's Comics and Stories, an EC-inspired horror anthology which lasted five issues. Other one-shots and short-lived titles followed, but the heart of the company was Rock 'N' Roll Comics, which continued to sell large quantities.

Expansion edit

By the early nineties, Revolutionary Comics was among the top three selling independent comic companies in the U.S.[citation needed] Loren brought on his father, Herb Shapiro, to be vice president of the growing company, while Jay Allen Sanford, who'd worked for Loren's Musicade and was writing for Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics, became the line's head writer.[1] New music titles were launched, most notably Rock 'N' Roll Comics Magazine and Hard Rock Comics, as well as a line of "Experience" limited series, on such subjects as the Beatles, Elvis Presley, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd (the latter of which the band liked well enough to include in their official Shine On CD box set).[citation needed]

In 1991, Revolutionary started a line of unauthorized sports biographical comics, which eventually included such titles as Baseball Superstars Comics, Baseball Legends Comics, Sports Superstars Comics, and Sports Legends Comics.

Carnal Comics edit

In 1991 Loren launched Carnal Comics, an adults-only imprint, to publish Lyndal Ferguson's erotic anthology series Sexpot, SS Crompton's Demi the Demoness, and Allen Salyer's Pineapple Perfume. Printer troubles led to some delays,[citation needed] but the first three Carnal Comics titles were released all at once in 1992. All only lasted a single issue.

Loren murder and company reorganization edit

Company founder Tood Loren was murdered in June 1992.[5] Despite this tragedy, the company continued for two more years under Loren's father Herb Shapiro, with Sanford serving as managing editor.

During those years, the band Kiss participated in a three-issue biographical series called Kiss Pre-History, and other new music titles were launched, such as British Invasion and Alternative Comics (not to be confused with the Florida-based publishing company of the same name founded around the same time). The erotic imprint's next title, the limited series Carnal Comics: Sarah Jane Hamilton was also successful, selling in numbers almost as high as Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics (which, while in decline, along with all U.S. comics publishers at the time, were still selling 15,000 to 20,000 copies per issue).[citation needed] The Hamilton limited series was the last title published by Revolutionary.

Dissolution and legacy edit

Herb Shapiro decided to close the company in summer 1994, in part because of debt accrued by a failed color sports comic line.[6] In the end, Revolutionary published more than 300 individual issues.

Under the banner Re-Visionary Press, Sanford continued to publish the Carnal Comics imprint; he later oversaw reprints of Revolutionary titles in digital editions and graphic novels licensed in the U.S. and overseas, including a 2014 Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics series licensed to Croatian publishers.[citation needed]

Sanford and Herb Shapiro kept the Revolutionary archive intact, including over 9,000 pages of original interior artwork, around 250 original cover paintings and illustrations, and all of the scripts, production materials, and printer film used to produce the comics. The copyrights and trademarks to all of the titles Revolutionary produced are also maintained, allowing for digital distribution via iTunes, Amazon.com, and other online outlets, where the comics continue to be popular with fans of both the subjects and offbeat comic books.[citation needed]

Bluewater Productions collections edit

In September 2009, publisher Bluewater Productions announced it would be reprinting Revolutionary's line of music comics (including stories from Rock 'N' Roll Comics) in ten monthly volumes, averaging 250 pages each.[7] The first collections were The Beatles Experience and Hard Rock Heroes, released in early 2010.

Many of Revolutionary's original creators participated in updating and modernizing the contents of the musical comic bios. The reprints and updates were supervised by long-time Rock 'N' Roll Comics writer/editor Jay Allen Sanford. Ultimately, Bluewater released seven titles from 2010–2012:[8]

  • The Beatles Experience (Feb. 2010), 240 pp. ISBN 978-1427642271
  • Hard Rock Heroes (Apr. 2010), 240 pp. ISBN 978-1616239244 — with AC/DC, Metallica, Guns N' Roses, Ozzy Osbourne/Black Sabbath, Van Halen, Megadeth, Spirit, Queensrÿche, Motörhead, ZZ Top
  • The Runaways: Joan JettLita Ford (Aug. 2010), 32 pp.
  • The Pink Floyd Experience (Sept. 2010), 150 pp. ISBN 978-1616239305
  • The Led Zeppelin Experience (Nov. 2010), 150 pp. ISBN 978-1616239398
  • The Elvis Presley Experience (Mar. 2011), 210 pp. ISBN 978-1450700214
  • Stan Lee: the Biography! (Feb. 2012), 32 pp. ISBN 978-0985591120

Two other projected volumes, Rock 'N' Roll Cartoon History: The Sixties; and Rock 'N' Roll Cartoon History: The Seventies, remain unpublished.[8]

Legal challenges edit

The unauthorized nature of Revolutionary's biographical titles, despite the company's commitment to journalistic reporting,[1] led to legal issues from the beginning. Loren billed his company as an advocate for free speech, and made his case in court in a number of decisions.[1][9]

Rock 'N' Roll Comics #1, cover-dated June 1989, resulted in a cease and desist order from the subject band, Guns N' Roses. No lawsuit was filed in that case, and resulting media coverage led to the comic going into multiple printings.[citation needed] Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics #3 and #4, on Bon Jovi and Mötley Crüe, respectively (cover-dated Sept. 1989 and Oct. 1989), did result in legal challenges over merchandising rights,[3] which the company circumvented by distributing the comics through alternative routes.[citation needed] Rock 'N' Roll Comics #8, featuring Skid Row, was never published, due to a similar injunction related to merchandising rights.[10]

Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics #12 (June 1990), an unauthorized biography of New Kids on the Block, led to a lawsuit.[10][11] Loren claimed the First Amendment protected the journalistic rights of his "illustrated articles" and he took the matter to the U.S. District Court in California. In April 1990, U.S. District Judge John S. Rhoades declared that Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics #12 could be distributed because it is “part biography and part satire.” The judge's 12-page ruling stated that “bookstores are filled with biographies — both authorized and unauthorized — of public figures. And, while the subjects of such biographies may be offended by the publication of their life stories, they generally have no claim for trademark infringement.”[citation needed]

Rhoades’ ruling also stated, “It appears that the First Amendment may trump any claim that the plaintiffs have for trademark infringement.” The resultant order stated that Winterland Concessions Co. failed to show that the case met the standards required to issue a preliminary injunction. This dissolved the temporary restraining order prohibiting distribution. New Kids responded by filing suit for trademark infringement since its logo appeared in the comic. A settlement between New Kids and Revolutionary was reached in August 1990. It permanently enjoined Revolutionary from “advertising, manufacturing, distributing and/or selling or otherwise commercially exploiting any publication displaying the trademark and/or logo of the New Kids on the Block, either as a group or individually.” Loren promptly reprinted the New Kids story in magazine format (Rock 'N' Roll Comics Magazine), without depicting the band's logo.

The lawsuits garnered Revolutionary worldwide press, eventually resulting in high sales for an independent comics publisher.[12]

Rock 'N' Roll Comics #61, about the band Yes, and scheduled for July 1993 release, was blocked from publication.[citation needed]

Revolutionary's sports titles also faced legal challenges. In 1993, the company lost a lawsuit filed by the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins over the use of the team's logo in one of Revolutionary's sports comics.[13] In 1994, the company settled a suit brought by football player Joe Montana based on one of its comics.[14]

Documentary film edit

In 2005, BulletProof Film released a documentary titled Unauthorized and Proud Of It: Todd Loren’s Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics. The documentary features interviews with Loren's family, surviving "Revolutionaries," comic book colleagues, adversaries, supporters, and past and present rock 'n' roll stars featured in Revolutionary's comics. Appearing in the film are Alice Cooper, publishers Gary Groth (Fantagraphics) and Denis Kitchen (Kitchen Sink Press), famed groupie Cynthia Plaster Caster, underground painter and cover artist Robert Williams (known for his controversial album art for the first Guns N' Roses LP), Jay Allen Sanford, Gene Simmons (audio only), and more. The documentary also details the San Diego police department's investigation into Loren's murder; interviews with Loren's coworkers and family members suggest that the police failed to follow up on all available leads.

The documentary was released on DVD in April 2012 by Wild Eye Releasing, under the title Unauthorized: The Story of Rock 'N' Roll Comics. The DVD includes over two hours of bonus footage, interviews, news footage, and art galleries, and liner notes by Sanford.

Titles published (selected) edit

Music edit

  • The Beatles Experience (8 issues, Mar. 1991–May 1992)
  • The Elvis Presley Experience (7 issues, Aug. 1992–Apr. 1994)
  • Elvis Shrugged (3 issues, 1991; one-shot, 1993)
  • Hard Rock Comics (20 issues, Mar. 1992–Nov. 1993)
  • Kiss Pre-History (3 issues, 1993)
  • The Led Zeppelin Experience (4 issues, 1992–1993)
  • The Pink Floyd Experience (5 issues, 1991–1992)
  • Rock 'N' Roll Comics (63 issues, July 1989–Nov. 1993)
  • Rock N' Roll Comics Magazine (7 issues, July 1990–Nov. 1992)

Entertainers and politicians edit

  • Contemporary Bio-Graphics (8 issues, 1991–1992)
  • Star Jam Comics (10 issues, Apr. 1992–Mar. 1993)

Sports edit

  • Baseball Legends Comics (19 issues, Mar. 1992–Sept. 1993)
  • Baseball Superstars Comics (20 issues, Nov. 1991–Aug. 1993)
  • Sports Legends Comics (11 issues, 1992–May 1993)
  • Sports Superstars Comics (16 issues, Apr. 1992–Aug. 1993)

Other titles edit

  • Tipper Gore's Comics and Stories (5 issues, Oct. 1989–July 1990)
  • Carnal Comics: Sarah-Jane Hamilton (May–July 1994)

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Peisneraug, David. "Part Ramones Biography, Part Dreamscape," New York Times (Aug. 8, 2013).
  2. ^ "New Kids vs. Revolutionary": Rolling Stone (Apr. 1992).
  3. ^ a b "Rock 'N Roll Comics Distribution Interrupted," Comics Buyer's Guide, #829 (Oct. 6, 1989), p. 1, 28.
  4. ^ Fogel's Underground Comix Price Guide, 2006.
  5. ^ "NewsWatch: Todd Loren Slain," The Comics Journal #151 (July 1992), p. 11.
  6. ^ Groth, Gary. "Revolutionary In Financial Disarray," Comics Journal #164 (Dec. 1993).
  7. ^ Parkin, J.K. "Don’t call it a comeback: Bluewater to collect classic Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics," Comic Book Resources: Robot6 (September 10, 2009).
  8. ^ a b Sanford, Jay Allen, "No more Rock ‘N’ Roll Comics reprint editions from Bluewater Productions," San Diego Reader blog (March 23, 2013).
  9. ^ Groth, Gary. "Todd Loren - First Amendment Advocate Or Lying Sack Of Shit?" Comics Journal #138 (Oct. 1990).
  10. ^ a b Herrmann, Brenda. "Rockin' Comics: Super Heroes Of Music Play An Exciting New Venue — the World Of Cartoons," Chicago Tribune (October 20, 1991).
  11. ^ "New Kids On The Block Sue Revolutionary," The Comics Journal #136 (July 1990), p. 17.
  12. ^ "New Kids on the Block vs. Revolutionary Comics," San Diego Reader blog (Sept. 13, 2007).
  13. ^ "Newswatch: Revolutionary Told to Ice Penguin Usage," The Comics Journal #159 (May 1993), p. 19.
  14. ^ "Joe Montana Suit Settled". The Comics Journal. No. 168. May 1994. pp. 38–39.

Sources edit

  • Revolutionary Comics at the Grand Comics Database
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • "Todd Loren's Rock 'N' Roll Comics". Bay Area Reporter. May 11, 2006.
  • Frankenhoff, Brent (2002). The Standard Catalog of Comic Books. Krause Publications. p. 333. ISBN 978-0873419161.
  • Johnson, J. (June 16, 2006). "Remember Todd Loren?". Comics Buyer's Guide. No. 1621. p. 87.
  • Shirley, Ian (2005). Can Rock & Roll Save the World?: An Illustrated History of Music and Comics. Dumfries, Scotland: S.A.F. Publishing. ISBN 0-946719-80-2.

External links edit

  • Unauthorized and Proud of It: Todd Loren's Rock 'n' Roll Comics at IMDb
  • on Cosmic Book News, 2010
  • "Rock 'N' Roll Comics: The Inside Story" San Diego Reader blog (September 12, 2007).
  • "Komplete Kiss Comix Kronicles," San Diego Reader blog (September 12, 2007).

revolutionary, comics, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, sept. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Revolutionary Comics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Revolutionary Comics was an American comic book publisher specializing in unauthorized profiles of entertainers and professional athletes as well as a line of erotic comics Its flagship series was Rock N Roll Comics Founded by Todd Loren Revolutionary Comics was based in San Diego Revolutionary ComicsParent companyInfinite One Inc StatusDefunct 1994 29 years ago 1994 Founded1989 34 years ago 1989 FounderTodd LorenCountry of originUnited States of AmericaHeadquarters locationSan Diego CaliforniaKey peopleTodd Loren Herb Shapiro Jay Allen SanfordPublication typesComic booksNonfiction topicsMusic biography sexFiction genresHorrorImprintsCarnal Comics Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Rock N Roll Comics 1 3 Expansion 1 4 Carnal Comics 1 5 Loren murder and company reorganization 1 6 Dissolution and legacy 1 7 Bluewater Productions collections 2 Legal challenges 3 Documentary film 4 Titles published selected 4 1 Music 4 2 Entertainers and politicians 4 3 Sports 4 4 Other titles 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Sources 7 External linksHistory editOrigins edit After some success with Musicade a mail order music memorabilia company Loren formed Revolutionary Comics in 1989 The publisher s first title was Rock N Roll Comics a line of unauthorized comic book biographies of rock stars prompted in part by the success of a 1986 Bruce Springsteen parody comic called Hey Boss citation needed Rock N Roll Comics edit Main article Rock N Roll Comics Early issues of Rock N Roll Comics contained straight biographies in comic form and Mad magazine style parodies The parodies were later dropped The line featured unlicensed biographies of rock stars told in comic book form but geared for adults often with very adult situations nudity drug use violence etc 1 The comic sported a cover tagline reading Unauthorized and Proud of it Some musicians featured in the comic were supportive while others threatened legal action The resulting media exposure garnered Rock N Roll Comics huge sales of their early issues 2 A later injunction 3 led the company to expand its distribution network outside traditional comic shops getting their products into music and gift retail outlets which had never carried comics before This independence from the comic book direct market served the company well as sales continued to rise from issue to issue 4 Revolutionary s only other title at first was the bimonthly Tipper Gore s Comics and Stories an EC inspired horror anthology which lasted five issues Other one shots and short lived titles followed but the heart of the company was Rock N Roll Comics which continued to sell large quantities Expansion edit By the early nineties Revolutionary Comics was among the top three selling independent comic companies in the U S citation needed Loren brought on his father Herb Shapiro to be vice president of the growing company while Jay Allen Sanford who d worked for Loren s Musicade and was writing for Rock N Roll Comics became the line s head writer 1 New music titles were launched most notably Rock N Roll Comics Magazine and Hard Rock Comics as well as a line of Experience limited series on such subjects as the Beatles Elvis Presley Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd the latter of which the band liked well enough to include in their official Shine On CD box set citation needed In 1991 Revolutionary started a line of unauthorized sports biographical comics which eventually included such titles as Baseball Superstars Comics Baseball Legends Comics Sports Superstars Comics and Sports Legends Comics Carnal Comics edit Main article Carnal Comics In 1991 Loren launched Carnal Comics an adults only imprint to publish Lyndal Ferguson s erotic anthology series Sexpot SS Crompton s Demi the Demoness and Allen Salyer s Pineapple Perfume Printer troubles led to some delays citation needed but the first three Carnal Comics titles were released all at once in 1992 All only lasted a single issue Loren murder and company reorganization edit Company founder Tood Loren was murdered in June 1992 5 Despite this tragedy the company continued for two more years under Loren s father Herb Shapiro with Sanford serving as managing editor During those years the band Kiss participated in a three issue biographical series called Kiss Pre History and other new music titles were launched such as British Invasion and Alternative Comics not to be confused with the Florida based publishing company of the same name founded around the same time The erotic imprint s next title the limited series Carnal Comics Sarah Jane Hamilton was also successful selling in numbers almost as high as Rock N Roll Comics which while in decline along with all U S comics publishers at the time were still selling 15 000 to 20 000 copies per issue citation needed The Hamilton limited series was the last title published by Revolutionary Dissolution and legacy edit Herb Shapiro decided to close the company in summer 1994 in part because of debt accrued by a failed color sports comic line 6 In the end Revolutionary published more than 300 individual issues Under the banner Re Visionary Press Sanford continued to publish the Carnal Comics imprint he later oversaw reprints of Revolutionary titles in digital editions and graphic novels licensed in the U S and overseas including a 2014 Rock N Roll Comics series licensed to Croatian publishers citation needed Sanford and Herb Shapiro kept the Revolutionary archive intact including over 9 000 pages of original interior artwork around 250 original cover paintings and illustrations and all of the scripts production materials and printer film used to produce the comics The copyrights and trademarks to all of the titles Revolutionary produced are also maintained allowing for digital distribution via iTunes Amazon com and other online outlets where the comics continue to be popular with fans of both the subjects and offbeat comic books citation needed Bluewater Productions collections edit In September 2009 publisher Bluewater Productions announced it would be reprinting Revolutionary s line of music comics including stories from Rock N Roll Comics in ten monthly volumes averaging 250 pages each 7 The first collections were The Beatles Experience and Hard Rock Heroes released in early 2010 Many of Revolutionary s original creators participated in updating and modernizing the contents of the musical comic bios The reprints and updates were supervised by long time Rock N Roll Comics writer editor Jay Allen Sanford Ultimately Bluewater released seven titles from 2010 2012 8 The Beatles Experience Feb 2010 240 pp ISBN 978 1427642271 Hard Rock Heroes Apr 2010 240 pp ISBN 978 1616239244 with AC DC Metallica Guns N Roses Ozzy Osbourne Black Sabbath Van Halen Megadeth Spirit Queensryche Motorhead ZZ Top The Runaways Joan Jett Lita Ford Aug 2010 32 pp The Pink Floyd Experience Sept 2010 150 pp ISBN 978 1616239305 The Led Zeppelin Experience Nov 2010 150 pp ISBN 978 1616239398 The Elvis Presley Experience Mar 2011 210 pp ISBN 978 1450700214 Stan Lee the Biography Feb 2012 32 pp ISBN 978 0985591120Two other projected volumes Rock N Roll Cartoon History The Sixties and Rock N Roll Cartoon History The Seventies remain unpublished 8 Legal challenges editThe unauthorized nature of Revolutionary s biographical titles despite the company s commitment to journalistic reporting 1 led to legal issues from the beginning Loren billed his company as an advocate for free speech and made his case in court in a number of decisions 1 9 Rock N Roll Comics 1 cover dated June 1989 resulted in a cease and desist order from the subject band Guns N Roses No lawsuit was filed in that case and resulting media coverage led to the comic going into multiple printings citation needed Rock N Roll Comics 3 and 4 on Bon Jovi and Motley Crue respectively cover dated Sept 1989 and Oct 1989 did result in legal challenges over merchandising rights 3 which the company circumvented by distributing the comics through alternative routes citation needed Rock N Roll Comics 8 featuring Skid Row was never published due to a similar injunction related to merchandising rights 10 Rock N Roll Comics 12 June 1990 an unauthorized biography of New Kids on the Block led to a lawsuit 10 11 Loren claimed the First Amendment protected the journalistic rights of his illustrated articles and he took the matter to the U S District Court in California In April 1990 U S District Judge John S Rhoades declared that Rock N Roll Comics 12 could be distributed because it is part biography and part satire The judge s 12 page ruling stated that bookstores are filled with biographies both authorized and unauthorized of public figures And while the subjects of such biographies may be offended by the publication of their life stories they generally have no claim for trademark infringement citation needed Rhoades ruling also stated It appears that the First Amendment may trump any claim that the plaintiffs have for trademark infringement The resultant order stated that Winterland Concessions Co failed to show that the case met the standards required to issue a preliminary injunction This dissolved the temporary restraining order prohibiting distribution New Kids responded by filing suit for trademark infringement since its logo appeared in the comic A settlement between New Kids and Revolutionary was reached in August 1990 It permanently enjoined Revolutionary from advertising manufacturing distributing and or selling or otherwise commercially exploiting any publication displaying the trademark and or logo of the New Kids on the Block either as a group or individually Loren promptly reprinted the New Kids story in magazine format Rock N Roll Comics Magazine without depicting the band s logo The lawsuits garnered Revolutionary worldwide press eventually resulting in high sales for an independent comics publisher 12 Rock N Roll Comics 61 about the band Yes and scheduled for July 1993 release was blocked from publication citation needed Revolutionary s sports titles also faced legal challenges In 1993 the company lost a lawsuit filed by the NHL s Pittsburgh Penguins over the use of the team s logo in one of Revolutionary s sports comics 13 In 1994 the company settled a suit brought by football player Joe Montana based on one of its comics 14 Documentary film editIn 2005 BulletProof Film released a documentary titled Unauthorized and Proud Of It Todd Loren s Rock N Roll Comics The documentary features interviews with Loren s family surviving Revolutionaries comic book colleagues adversaries supporters and past and present rock n roll stars featured in Revolutionary s comics Appearing in the film are Alice Cooper publishers Gary Groth Fantagraphics and Denis Kitchen Kitchen Sink Press famed groupie Cynthia Plaster Caster underground painter and cover artist Robert Williams known for his controversial album art for the first Guns N Roses LP Jay Allen Sanford Gene Simmons audio only and more The documentary also details the San Diego police department s investigation into Loren s murder interviews with Loren s coworkers and family members suggest that the police failed to follow up on all available leads The documentary was released on DVD in April 2012 by Wild Eye Releasing under the title Unauthorized The Story of Rock N Roll Comics The DVD includes over two hours of bonus footage interviews news footage and art galleries and liner notes by Sanford Titles published selected editMusic edit The Beatles Experience 8 issues Mar 1991 May 1992 The Elvis Presley Experience 7 issues Aug 1992 Apr 1994 Elvis Shrugged 3 issues 1991 one shot 1993 Hard Rock Comics 20 issues Mar 1992 Nov 1993 Kiss Pre History 3 issues 1993 The Led Zeppelin Experience 4 issues 1992 1993 The Pink Floyd Experience 5 issues 1991 1992 Rock N Roll Comics 63 issues July 1989 Nov 1993 Rock N Roll Comics Magazine 7 issues July 1990 Nov 1992 Entertainers and politicians edit Contemporary Bio Graphics 8 issues 1991 1992 Star Jam Comics 10 issues Apr 1992 Mar 1993 Sports edit Baseball Legends Comics 19 issues Mar 1992 Sept 1993 Baseball Superstars Comics 20 issues Nov 1991 Aug 1993 Sports Legends Comics 11 issues 1992 May 1993 Sports Superstars Comics 16 issues Apr 1992 Aug 1993 Other titles edit Tipper Gore s Comics and Stories 5 issues Oct 1989 July 1990 Carnal Comics Sarah Jane Hamilton May July 1994 See also editPersonality ComicsReferences editNotes edit a b c d Peisneraug David Part Ramones Biography Part Dreamscape New York Times Aug 8 2013 New Kids vs Revolutionary Rolling Stone Apr 1992 a b Rock N Roll Comics Distribution Interrupted Comics Buyer s Guide 829 Oct 6 1989 p 1 28 Fogel s Underground Comix Price Guide 2006 NewsWatch Todd Loren Slain The Comics Journal 151 July 1992 p 11 Groth Gary Revolutionary In Financial Disarray Comics Journal 164 Dec 1993 Parkin J K Don t call it a comeback Bluewater to collect classic Rock N Roll Comics Comic Book Resources Robot6 September 10 2009 a b Sanford Jay Allen No more Rock N Roll Comics reprint editions from Bluewater Productions San Diego Reader blog March 23 2013 Groth Gary Todd Loren First Amendment Advocate Or Lying Sack Of Shit Comics Journal 138 Oct 1990 a b Herrmann Brenda Rockin Comics Super Heroes Of Music Play An Exciting New Venue the World Of Cartoons Chicago Tribune October 20 1991 New Kids On The Block Sue Revolutionary The Comics Journal 136 July 1990 p 17 New Kids on the Block vs Revolutionary Comics San Diego Reader blog Sept 13 2007 Newswatch Revolutionary Told to Ice Penguin Usage The Comics Journal 159 May 1993 p 19 Joe Montana Suit Settled The Comics Journal No 168 May 1994 pp 38 39 Sources edit Revolutionary Comics at the Grand Comics Database Revolutionary Comics at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Todd Loren s Rock N Roll Comics Bay Area Reporter May 11 2006 Frankenhoff Brent 2002 The Standard Catalog of Comic Books Krause Publications p 333 ISBN 978 0873419161 Johnson J June 16 2006 Remember Todd Loren Comics Buyer s Guide No 1621 p 87 Shirley Ian 2005 Can Rock amp Roll Save the World An Illustrated History of Music and Comics Dumfries Scotland S A F Publishing ISBN 0 946719 80 2 External links editUnauthorized and Proud of It Todd Loren s Rock n Roll Comics at IMDb An interview with Jay Allen Sanford on Cosmic Book News 2010 Rock N Roll Comics The Inside Story San Diego Reader blog September 12 2007 Komplete Kiss Comix Kronicles San Diego Reader blog September 12 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revolutionary Comics amp oldid 1163764818, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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