The Rocklopedia Fakebandica now has a podcast.
Listen now!

Difference between revisions of "Hester Prim"

From Rocklopedia Fakebandica
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created page with "Very tall folk singer/guitarist from the 1968 detective novel by Philip Atlee, ''The Rockabye Contract'' (aka ''The Star Ruby Contract''), the seventh book in the Joe Gall ser...")
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Very tall folk singer/guitarist from the 1968 detective novel by Philip Atlee, ''The Rockabye Contract'' (aka ''The Star Ruby Contract''), the seventh book in the Joe Gall series.
+
[[Image:Prim_Hester_The_Rockabye_Contract.jpg|right|300px]]Folk singer/guitarist who performs topless, from the 1968 novel by Philip Atlee (pseudonym of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Atlee_Phillips James Atlee Phillips]), ''The Rockabye Contract'', the seventh book in the Joe Gall series. Joe Gall, a contract spy/assassin, becomes her manager as cover for a tour of Europe.
  
 
<blockquote>
 
<blockquote>
Line 9: Line 9:
 
</blockquote>
 
</blockquote>
  
 +
Her name is a play on Hester Prynne, the protagonist of the 1850 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, ''The Scarlet Letter: A Romance'', set in the Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony during the years 1642 to 1649.
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
 
*http://theringerfiles.blogspot.com/2013/06/dig-that-rockabye-bear-rockabye-contract.html
 
*http://theringerfiles.blogspot.com/2013/06/dig-that-rockabye-bear-rockabye-contract.html
 
+
*https://books.google.com/books?id=8eMNEAAAQBAJ&lpg=PT21&pg=PT4#v=onepage&q&f=false
  
 
[[Category:1968|Prim, Hester]]
 
[[Category:1968|Prim, Hester]]
 
[[Category:Folk music|Prim, Hester]]
 
[[Category:Folk music|Prim, Hester]]
 
[[Category:Novels|Prim, Hester]]
 
[[Category:Novels|Prim, Hester]]
 +
[[Category:Fictional singers|Prim, Hester]]
 +
[[Category:Fictional guitarists|Prim, Hester]]

Latest revision as of 10:31, 13 December 2022

Prim Hester The Rockabye Contract.jpg

Folk singer/guitarist who performs topless, from the 1968 novel by Philip Atlee (pseudonym of James Atlee Phillips), The Rockabye Contract, the seventh book in the Joe Gall series. Joe Gall, a contract spy/assassin, becomes her manager as cover for a tour of Europe.

A Miss Hester Prim, who had just come on stage, was wearing a short black vinyl skirt and black boots. Strands of her flaming hair had been taped over the nipples of her breasts, and she handled the twelvestring Gibson like a ukulele. Hester was a big girl, several inches over six feet.

Miss Prim opened with a couple of Child ballads, straight, to not much of a hand. Then she went into the big-beat sound with some imitation Beatle arrangements that got over better. From them she segued into a bawdy Roger Miller and an even bluer lament for a hairdresser named Freddie. Her timing was good, her delivery droll, and she bowed off to heavy applause.

When the applause became insistent, she encored with a fiery number she said was her own arrangement of Lorca's "Bloody Sunday." Pre-Franco Spain could have sued, had there been any jurisdiction, but she got another full hand and that was it. I glanced at my watch and saw that she had done forty minutes. Her voice was appealing, in a light alto range, but she was no Baez, for all her boot-stamping. It was the superb body that had held them.

Her name is a play on Hester Prynne, the protagonist of the 1850 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter: A Romance, set in the Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony during the years 1642 to 1649.

External Links