Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 December 2010

Jörg Brüggemann

Photos from Jörg Brüggemann's series entitled Metalheadz which is a work in progress.

Images © Jörg Brüggemann




Thursday, 9 December 2010

Monday, 22 November 2010

Wednesday, 17 November 2010

Peter Beste

Peter Bestewor mainly follows musics sub genre's, these photos are from a selection of these projects my favourite being London's Grime scene. I like how it is almost a sequal to Ewen Spencer's Open Mic, even showing some of the same MC's but a few years further on.

Images © Peter Beste




Sunday, 14 November 2010

.

Just got a load of film developed, and have now got a lot of scanning to do, anyway this is from Bestival, I had an amazing weekend personal highlights were Jonsi and Caribou.

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Monday, 27 September 2010

Chris Cunningham - Gil Scott Heron "New York is Killing Me"

At the MOMA last night Chris Cunningham the visionary director showed his first video for four years. Gil Scott Heron's "New York Is Killing Me".


Sunday, 19 September 2010

Three's A Crowd

Photos from the forthcoming book "Three's a Crowd" chronicling the White Stripes rise from 2001 to 2005 shot by Ewan Spencer

Images © Ewan Spencer

Thursday, 19 August 2010

Gil Scott-Heron

This has been getting a lot of plays from me, very much looking to seeing his performance at Bestival next month.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Them - Mystic Eyes

This song is a real grower and worth a listen to the end even if you arent enjoying the harmonica at the begining, which I personaly think is amazing.

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Daft?

Anyone up for making one of these with me?

Superman Lover

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

Working with Ryan McGinley

Working with Ryan McGinley looks insane.....



Images ©Ryan McGinley

Thursday, 26 March 2009

Andy Earl


Andy Earl has been at the forefront of music photography since he graduated, when his first job was for 80's band Bow Wow Wow which ended him being arrested for showing the lead singer Annabella Lwin aged just fifteen, artistically nude as a parody of Edouard Manet's Le Dejeuner Sur l'Herbe (The Luncheon on The Grass). Andy started his talk of by talking about his time as a student where he developed a flash and a slow colour film to create a blur technique this later on lead him to create a music video for Rolling stones completely out of stills using 2 Nikon cameras. It seemed that this technique and the controversy surrounding the Bow Wow Wow incident were enough to kick start his career and he missed the assistant stage as he was having work thrown at him like Prince, Duran Duran's Rio cover and so on. 



Andy talked about various musicians he had photographed and mentioned stories on how Madonna was a nightmare to photograph and Courtney love turned up waisted, but it was the image that he did for Pink Floyd's the Delicate Sound of Thunder that interested me the most as the band have always had such strong imagery for their album covers, I mean an album cover that contains a man with light bulbs attached to his jacket whilst another is releasing several doves (which were waited so as not to have to take the picture first time) whilst the two men look like they are about to have a dual is always going to look good. 



Andy offered several pieces of advice firstly the History of Art is important like his parody of Manet's work, and this can be seen in many other photographers work especially that of early photography. To take risks but to also take a backup so if the risk doesn't pay off then you have a fall back point. To keep shooting like a pianist keeps practicing as to avoid getting rusty. 

He mentioned that there is more freedom in music photography than advertising and that your ideas are the selling point for the photographer in this industry which is why I think Andy's images do stick out compared to the majority of music photographers he isn't interested in just the band he is interested in making a really good image that as he Say's 'How can I say something?' Maybe this is why he stressing that the history of art is important. 

The final thing I want to mention about Andy is a story he told us about being commissioned by Cosmopolitan Magazine where he shot in the style of Cosmo, when he returned with the photographs they said they had commissioned you because of your style, which says that you should keep shooting in your style even if seems weird or take a back up as I mentioned earlier.