COVID-19 has put a hold on singer David Lee Roth’s solo Las Vegas residency and his gig as the opening act to KISS’s End of the Road arena tour, but that hasn’t stopped the on-and-off-again Van Halen frontman from expressing himself creatively.
Variety (opens in new tab) reports for the last several months ‘Diamond Dave’ has been drawing and posting Covid-19-themed single panel sketches on his social media (opens in new tab) pages and now he’s launched The Roth Project (opens in new tab), a new interactive digital graphic novel.
According to the Hollywood trade, Roth explains the graphic novel – a collaboration with PhotoshopCAFE founder Colin Smith – is an entirely new approach to the form and what he calls an immersive “hyper-classic” platform that pairs Smith’s animations with Roth’s Japanese Sumi-e inspired illustrations
“You can interact with it. You have narration. You have music,” Roth explains. “You have the future.”
Roth narrates the story himself – in full “In a world” trailer mode – which also includes original songs, incidental music, and sound effects he created.
The story scrolls – sometimes up and down, sometimes left to right – for readers, and according to Roth, it was inspired by his interest in the computer program AlphaGo.
(opens in new tab)
The plot, as Variety attempts to summarize, “imagines a futuristic world where artificial intelligence has attained the capability to mimic humans — Roth among them — to chaotic and, eventually, murderous ends.”
“There’s a real hard-boiled, dark undertone that’s perfectly fitting to the general anger of our tremulous times,” Roth says. “Relatively few artists get to show that side of the coin. But Diamond Dave is very, very real.”
But what Roth is most excited about is the format.
“The most entertaining, the most colorful, and the most engaging thing is the medium itself – the mechanism,” Roth tells Variety. “It’s vastly superior to the turned and printed page.”
“When there aren’t any more trees, your comic books are going to go the way of all vinyl,” he adds.
Speaking of your comic books going the way of vinyl, here’s a look at the best digital comic book readers.