Archive for the ‘History’ Category

Rebecca’s Picks - Albums You Should Own: Private Eyes by Tommy Bolin

Friday, October 19th, 2007

private-eyes.jpg

Track List
1. Bustin Out For Rosey (Bolin)
2. Sweet Burgundy (Cook)
3. Post Toastee (Bolin)
4. Shake The Devil (Cook)
5. Gypsy Soul (Cook)
6. Someday Will Bring Our Love Home (Bolin, Tesar)
7. Hello Again (Cook)
8. You Told Me You Loved Me (Bolin)
Released May 1976 on CBS Records
Produced by Tommy Bolin and Dennis McKay
Band Members: Tommy Bolin-guitars, piano, lead vocals Reggie McBride-bass Mark Stein-keyboards Carmine Appice-drums Bobby Berge-percussion Norma Jean Bell-saxophone

I first became aware of Tommy Bolin when I was in junior high. Jeff, the high school senior who lived down the street, was a huge fan of his. I was a huge fan of Jeff, and became an instant disciple. Unfortunately, by the time I discovered Tommy Bolin and his music, he was already dead.
If you can find this album, buy it. If not, find what you can on Bolin on the internet. He was a true innovator, mixing rock, jazz, and blues influences for an absolutely unique guitar sound. His style was emotional and funky at the same time, his voice seeming to meld seamlessly with the notes from his guitar.
The production on this album is not the greatest, but you will be amazed at the variety of musical styles and genres that he mixes here, all the while staying true to his own personal sound. This is his second solo record, and the last album he made. Before forming his own band, he replaced Joe Walsh in the James Gang, and was the lead guitarist in Deep Purple after Ritchie Blackmore left. He was only 25 when he died, leaving us to wonder what might have been.

rebecca.jpg

By Rebecca

Cover Story – Nina Simone’s “Let It Be Me”, cover by Sherry Barnett

Monday, October 15th, 2007

nsletitbe1.jpg

All images Copyright 1987 and 2007 Sherry Barnett – www.sherrybarnettphotography.com

Subject - Nina Simone – Let It Be Me – released in 1987 on Verve/Polygram Records, with cover photography by Sherry Barnett.

My wife and I had the good fortune of seeing Nina Simone at the Vine Street Bar & Grill in Hollywood a number of years ago, and so when I was going over the details of my interview with photographer Sherry Barnett, some vivid memories flooded into my head about my experience there. It was a small – very small – club that had room for perhaps 80 people (including those crammed in at the bar), and yet Ron (the owner) managed to book some of the best and biggest acts to come and play there. The place was “cool”, and it had a vibe that musicians and club patrons both just wanted a part of.

What makes this Cover Story so special for me is that it is the first one that is about an artist and a time and place that I have personal experience of. Of course, I’ve seen some of the other musical acts that have been featured on other covers, but in most cases it was after the fact (like seeing Pink Floyd well after they had released Dark Side of the Moon). In this case, I was part of that scene, going in to the Vine Street venue (after seeing a performance at the nearby temporary Ahmanson Theater) for a cocktail and to hear who was playing (and, often times, it was Nina Simone).

The music industry loves to tag its most-interesting artists, and singer Nina Simone had two of them – the “High Priestess of Soul” and the “Queen of African Rooted Classical Music”. I attribute this to the fact that the industry loves to try and categorize artists so that retailers know where on the shelves to put an artist’s music but, in this case, that was the most disrespectful approach as it is that Ms. Simone could sing so many different styles of music so well. She was best-known to fans for her amazing cabaret shows, best enjoyed in intimate venues (although she could make even large venues feel intimate). Verve Records released this gem of a recording in the late 80’s that showcased her ability to work her magic with both traditional cabaret tunes and the works of songwriters such as Janis Ian, Randy Newman and Bob Dylan. Sherry Barnett was asked to produce a suitable cover image for this immense talent, and the details of this assignment are now yours for the reading in today’s unique Cover Story….

In the words of the photographer, Sherry Barnett (interviewed October, 2007) –

“I was approached by Verve Polygram Records during a time in the mid-80’s when they were releasing a series of recordings titled, Live at The Vine St. Bar & Grill. The Vine St. venue in Hollywood was relatively small in size, but had the ambiance of an elegant jazz club in its heyday. Located close to the heart of what was becoming a dilapidated intersection at Hollywood & Vine, it sat directly across from The Huntington Hartford Theatre, where it drew a cross-section of theatre goers and jazz aficionados. A recording deal was struck with owner Ron Berenstein and frequent performer Miriam Cutler to produce a series of live recordings featuring ‘the best of’ Verve/Polygram’s current roster of artists.

I was brought into the mix to shoot portraits of the performers, sometimes incorporating the elements of the club itself. One cover in particular, ‘I Thought About You’ by Shirley Horn, pictured the singer at its deco-styled bar. Another cover, ‘It Is Love’ of stellar jazz/blues singer Marlena Shaw, pictured her in one of the corner booths, surrounded by a colorful array of flowers. This one bore a stronger resemblance to a studio setting than a club. But Nina Simone, however, was the piece-de-resistance.

Her record was to be titled Let It Be Me and I would be shooting it at my home studio in the Hollywood Hills. It would be me with the ‘High Priestess of Soul’, along with a stylist and my favorite lighting assistant. Coincidentally, I had photographed Nina once before in concert in 1971, 15 years prior to this Verve Polygram shoot. I’d been assigned to photograph her at The Village Gate in NYC. One of the shots was published in Rock Magazine, the first publication where I appeared on the masthead as Staff Photographer. It was early in my photographic career, and ironically this shot was the very first photograph that I’d printed myself in my own darkroom. I knew that this new session would be both an honor and a challenge, as I’d heard stories of her fluctuating temperament, and I was determined to be prepared for anything …

We had prepared a choice of backdrops, lighting options, and even had a piano on hand should Ms. Simone choose to grace us with her playing. My crew of two arrived early and we readied ourselves for the soul diva’s arrival. Well, we waited … and waited … and waited. To offset our mounting anxieties, we played & sang, making our own good use of the piano. Finally, several hours past the original ETA, the record company called to confirm her impending arrival and specified that Nina wished to be clad in nothing more than a simple white sheet – and that would be the ONLY set up she would approve of.

After a hasty white sheet scramble, Ms. Simone arrived & time flew from that moment on. What was to happen next remains an incomparable moment in my memory bank. Nina, the diva herself, began to disrobe directly in front of my living room window. As one by one, the garments fell to the floor, she began to wrap herself solely in the white sheet. We did our best not to bat an eye, as she then proceeded to go to make-up without missing a beat. In all my years of photographing the most eccentric rock performers, I thought that nothing would surprise me. But this time, it did!

The ensuing photo session was relatively short – at least compared to the hours spent waiting – and moved along quite quickly. Her concept of the simple white sheet worked beautifully, and required no background or lighting changes. We were on a tight schedule when, all of a sudden, we nailed the shot. The resulting photographs were simple, direct and elegant. All of the elements “worked” and everyone was pleased. Just before Nina left, I asked her to autograph a classic LP I had of hers … something I’d never done before. She obliged, signing it ‘Thank you. Signed, Dr.Nina Simone’.

When the record company’s art department came around to packaging Let It Be Me, they wanted a “live” shot to grace the back of the LP. Ironically, of all the photos considered, the Village Gate shot from 1971 was the one chosen. Both photos were included in the 2005 Let It Be Me CD re-issue as well.

A final note to the story … Apparently, Ms. Simone was quite pleased with the work I’d done - so much so that, in the early 90’s, I received a phone call from her longtime friend and associate, Roger Nupie, requesting that I do another shoot for Ms. Simone at her Hollywood apartment. This commissioned work was to be a B&W portrait to be used for a poster in conjunction with her upcoming performance at The Olympia Music Hall in Paris. This time around, Nina was prompt, up-tempo and easy to please. I actually took the liberty of asking her about her change of spirit from the time we’d met previously. She looked me straight in the eye and said, ‘I’m a happy woman. I finally got the IRS off my back and I’m free at last!’ Whew … what a difference in her vibe. This shoot too, moved quickly, and with great success. She had a concept chosen for what she wanted and all I had to do was capture it on film. This diva had a deep sense of self and knew exactly what was right for her. She was her own direction & I had no one to please except the High Priestess herself.

nsletitbe2.jpg

All images Copyright 1987 and 2007 Sherry Barnett – www.sherrybarnettphotography.com

Though I never saw the finished photograph reproduced in poster form, in 1992 Nina wrote her autobiography, I Put A Spell On You and chose the portrait for her book. A paperback version was issued again in 2003. The album cover photograph continued to be used by Nina throughout the 90’s to promote her live performances, until her passing in 2003. Let It Be Me, the CD, has been reissued, and I Put A Spell On You, the paperback version, remains in print. Yet another photo, from the original Village Gate performance, resurfaced as a full page photo as part of writer Michele Kort’s 2004 feature on Nina in Ms. Magazine.

There have been many career highlights in my experience of photographing the musicians and events that have changed our lives. From my earliest shoots of political protests and marches spearheaded by some our major musical commentators, to being at the right time, right place … photographing both Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin each in one of their final concerts, Joni Mitchell recording Court & Spark, Peter, Paul & Mary warming up backstage, The Manhattan Transfer rehearsing with Ella Fitzgerald, Mark Knopfler playing solo acoustic guitar for me as I photographed him alone … these are some of the most memorable. But the opportunities to photograph Nina Simone and capture her essence on film in the way that I did, stand out as photographs that I am honored to have done. And these photos continue to find their way over time.”

Technical footnotes:

All Nina Simone portrait photographs were shot on film with a medium format Bronica SQ-AM camera, using a Dynalite power pack and strobes. The Village Gate performance photographs were shot on 35mm Kodak Tri-X film exclusively with Nikon cameras and lenses.

Nina Simone’s Web site - http://ninasimone.com/welcome.html

About the photographer, Sherry Rayn Barnett –

sherry0366s.jpgSherry began taking pictures as soon as she was able to hold her first pint-size Kodak Brownie box camera (OK, not a true “Brownie” - it was turquoise blue). She began to focus on the things around her that caught her eye … beginning with her B&W cat, her friends and anything in her small, but great outdoors.Growing up in a creative & musical suburban Forest Hills (NYC) household, she simultaneously began a love affair with music. Fortunately, she quickly moved on from an early obsession with the accordion to a lifelong love of the guitar. She attended The High School of Performing Arts as a classical guitar major and began photographing the music - and the musicians around her. While still in high school she had her first magazine cover published by a national dance magazine and became the photo editor for the Performing Arts yearbook. She alternately began photographing concerts and then escaping the city to seek out anything that appeared to be non-urban and connected to nature.

As part of the New York “underground press” of the late 60’s & early 70’s that developed, she began to be photograph the culture and the musicians that provided the soundtrack for it. Relocating to Southern California (L.A.) in the mid 70’s provided a new landscape of musical inspiration that Sherry continues to draw on.

Today, she’s still focused on photography that includes musicians, cats, and nature - as well as anything eccentric, from roadside attractions to people and pets of extraordinary personality. Her extensive music photography archive now spans 3 decades, during which she has captured 100’s of live performances of artists ranging from Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix to Sting and David Bowie. She continues to add to the subject list by shooting both newer and classic folk, rock, jazz and acoustic music artists.

Most recently, she has continued to photograph both eclectic and iconic performers, licensing her work for books, magazines, television & electronic media. She’s been inspired by the “instant gratification” of digital photography, although she continues to shoot on assignment in both B&W and color in 35mm and 2 1/4″ formats also. Her work can often be seen in music publications including ACOUSTIC GUITAR MAGAZINE, GOLDMINE, GUITAR PLAYER, COUNTRY MUSIC MAGAZINE, and GUITAR WORLD ACOUSTIC.

Sherry is also represented by Getty Images for select images. An overview of her work can be seen at: www.sherrybarnettphotography.com. Limited edition prints will soon be available.

To see more examples of iconic album/CD cover artwork in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit
http://www.rockpopgallery.com

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and syndicated on The Rock and Roll Report the following week, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 1987 & 2007 Sherry Barnett www.sherrybarnettphotography.com

Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Cover Story – Nina Simone’s “Let It Be Me”, cover by Sherry Barnett

Monday, October 15th, 2007

nsletitbe1.jpg

All images Copyright 1987 and 2007 Sherry Barnett – www.sherrybarnettphotography.com

Subject - Nina Simone – Let It Be Me – released in 1987 on Verve/Polygram Records, with cover photography by Sherry Barnett.

My wife and I had the good fortune of seeing Nina Simone at the Vine Street Bar & Grill in Hollywood a number of years ago, and so when I was going over the details of my interview with photographer Sherry Barnett, some vivid memories flooded into my head about my experience there. It was a small – very small – club that had room for perhaps 80 people (including those crammed in at the bar), and yet Ron (the owner) managed to book some of the best and biggest acts to come and play there. The place was “cool”, and it had a vibe that musicians and club patrons both just wanted a part of.

What makes this Cover Story so special for me is that it is the first one that is about an artist and a time and place that I have personal experience of. Of course, I’ve seen some of the other musical acts that have been featured on other covers, but in most cases it was after the fact (like seeing Pink Floyd well after they had released Dark Side of the Moon). In this case, I was part of that scene, going in to the Vine Street venue (after seeing a performance at the nearby temporary Ahmanson Theater) for a cocktail and to hear who was playing (and, often times, it was Nina Simone).

(more…)

Cover Story – Nina Simone’s “Let It Be Me”, cover by Sherry Barnett

Monday, October 15th, 2007

nsletitbe1.jpg

All images Copyright 1987 and 2007 Sherry Barnett – www.sherrybarnettphotography.com

Subject - Nina Simone – Let It Be Me – released in 1987 on Verve/Polygram Records, with cover photography by Sherry Barnett.

My wife and I had the good fortune of seeing Nina Simone at the Vine Street Bar & Grill in Hollywood a number of years ago, and so when I was going over the details of my interview with photographer Sherry Barnett, some vivid memories flooded into my head about my experience there. It was a small – very small – club that had room for perhaps 80 people (including those crammed in at the bar), and yet Ron (the owner) managed to book some of the best and biggest acts to come and play there. The place was “cool”, and it had a vibe that musicians and club patrons both just wanted a part of.

What makes this Cover Story so special for me is that it is the first one that is about an artist and a time and place that I have personal experience of. Of course, I’ve seen some of the other musical acts that have been featured on other covers, but in most cases it was after the fact (like seeing Pink Floyd well after they had released Dark Side of the Moon). In this case, I was part of that scene, going in to the Vine Street venue (after seeing a performance at the nearby temporary Ahmanson Theater) for a cocktail and to hear who was playing (and, often times, it was Nina Simone).

(more…)

Rebecca’s Picks: Albums You Should Own: Van Halen I

Friday, October 12th, 2007

van-halen-1.jpg
Van Halen Van Halen I
Track List
1. Runnin’ With The Devil
2. Eruption
3. You Really Got Me (Ray Davies)
4. Ain’t Talkin’ Bout Love
5. I’m The One
6. Jamie’s Cryin’
7. Atomic Punk
8. Feel Your Love Tonight
9. Little Dreamer
10. Ice Cream Man (John Brim)
11. On Fire
All songs written by Van Halen except where noted
Released February 1978 on Warner Brothers Records
Produced by Ted Templeman
Band Members: Edward Van Halen-guitars, Alex Van Halen-drums, Michael Anthony-bass, David Lee Roth-lead vocals

When I started this project, I sent emails to all the musicians I know, (and quite a few that I don’t) and asked them to name the albums that had influenced them the most. This album was mentioned more than any other. A lot more.
I was 13 when this album came out, and it changed my life. I thought “Eruption” was the coolest thing I had ever heard. I still do. Van Halen was a huge factor in determining the kind of music I listen to. I still listen to this album, and it sounds as good to me today as it did almost thirty (yikes!) years ago. My friend Robin and I listened to it over and over on her little portable turntable. Her mom thought we were crazy. We were.
Van Halen is reunited, with Wolfgang Van Halen replacing Michael Anthony on bass. You should go see them. At the very least, buy this album. Especially if you are a guitarist. Let Edward Van Halen show you how it’s done.

By Rebecca

Cover Story – Frank Zappa’s “We’re Only In It For The Money”, cover by Jerry Schatzberg

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

zappaonlymoney2s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

Subject – Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention – We’re Only In It For The Money - Released in 1968 on Verve/Bizarre Records, with cover photography by Jerry Schatzberg.

Sticking with out “psychedelic” theme another week, this week’s Cover Story is on one of the best from the era – Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention’s fantastic spoof of everything and everyone involved in making (and promoting) that genre’s music titled We’re Only In It For The Money. Using an overall style of songwriting that would serve for many years as Zappa and The Mother’s trademark – sparing no subject, touching on all aspects of that subject that made it a joke in the songwriter’s mind, and then delivering this material via bound-to-be-censored lyrics, memorable melodies and with superb musicianship and studio craftsmanship – this record made more people laugh uncomfortably than any other I know of (until the Sex Pistols released Never Mind The Bullocks… 10 years later.

The record parodied everything that the Hippie/Flower Power movement stood for and used as its symbols – from songs such as “Who Needs the Peace Corps” , “Flower Punk”, “Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance”, to the finale of “The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny” – and was Zappa’s conscious effort to get the youth of the day to stop a minute and look at how silly everything was. After The Beatles had released their widely-praised concept record Sgt. Pepper’s, Zappa wanted to show the world both that he’d mastered many technical aspects of the modern recording studio and that, perhaps, some of the widely praised concepts were, in fact, nonsensical, superficial and often meaningless in the long run.

The record did have some decent commercial success, hitting #30 on the Billboard Album charts in 1968, but it has had its greatest impact when viewed historically by fans of rock music. Rolling Stone Magazine included it in its “Top 100 Albums” list in its 20th Anniversary issue in 1987, commenting on how mercilessly – and with great talent - a band from that era could spoof its musical brethren of the time (it also came in at #296 on Rolling Stone’s 2003 list of the “Top 500 Albums of All Time”).

Of course, one of the most-memorable aspects of the record was the packaging. Here again, The Beatles and Sgt. Pepper’s stood for what was in vogue at the time, and so Zappa and his crew felt that it was important to use their newly-famous imagery as a starting point for their parody. Famed photographer and (film-maker) Jerry Schatzberg was called in to aid in this “homage to the collage” of Sir Peter Blake and Michael Cooper, creating the first of what would be many parodies of that work (I particularly liked the one done on The Simpsons in the 90s). How it all came together is addressed in today’s Cover Story….

In the words of the photographer, Jerry Schatzberg (interviewed September, 2007) –

“I had shot a photograph for the Rolling Stones in drag for the U.K. release of their single “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?”. Zappa had seen that and after seeing the cover of Sgt. Peppers, he had the idea the he wanted to do a spoof of that image, with the principals in drag. I had met Zappa a couple of times before that, but we’d never worked together, so I was intrigued when I was told that this was going to be the cover of his next record.

We had a couple of weeks to produce this, and keeping the Sgt. Pepper’s cover in mind – with its elaborate costumes, flower-filled foreground, and its amazing cast of celebrity guests who were featured on the cover, both of our staffs set out to find the clothes, the props and some “celebrities” who would be part of the final composition.

We all agreed that it’d be very funny if we’d use fruit and vegetables and other junk in the foreground (instead of flowers), and since both of us knew Jimi Hendrix, we asked him to take part (you’ll find a real-live Jimi Hendrix on the far right-hand side of the shot, the second person to the right of Zappa, who’s posed in a mini-skirt). Zappa and his record company then decided on the rest of the background imagery and then a series of photos were taken. I submitted all of my tests over the two weeks and then the final one was selected. No special effects or lenses were used – the final photograph contains just the props and the people you see. Everyone was very happy with the results.”

On the original Sgt. Pepper’s record package, the collage was the cover, a photo of the band with Paul standing with his back to the viewer (“Paul Is Dead?”) was on the back cover, and the inside gatefold image (quite strange for a single LP) showed the band in costume on a bright yellow background, spread across both panels. For the Zappa version, we shot a back cover photo of the band with only one member facing the viewer, and then a gatefold portrait of the band – in costume/drag – standing in front of a bright yellow background.

zappaonlymoneyin1s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

When the record was first released, a lot of the songs were censored, and so the record company decided to make changes to the packaging, too, and basically turned the package inside-out, with the gatefold image presented as the front cover and the collage on the inside. Years later, when the record was re-released on CD, the original cover was returned to its proper position.

zappaonlymoney3s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

About the photographer, Jerry Schatzberg –

jnsportrait.jpgBorn In the Bronx, New York in 1927, Jerry attended the University of Miami, and then worked as assistant to Bill Helburn (1954-1956), after which he left to start his career as a freelance photographer. His fashion and portrait photography has been published in magazines such as Vogue, McCalls, Esquire, Glamour, Town and Country, and Life. He was also in demand by the record companies as a photographer and was the one who shot the famous cover photo image (as well as the other photos used on the record sleeve) for Bob Dylan’s 1966 LP Blonde on Blonde. His cover photo portfolio also includes Sonny & Cher’s Wonderous World of Sonny & Cher, The Rascals’ Young Rascals, Wilson Pickett’s Midnight Mover, and others for Herbie Mann, Aretha Franklin, Carmen McRae and many others. In 2006, Genesis Publications released a limited-edition collection of Schatzberg’s photos of Dylan entitled Thin Wild Mercury.It was his portrait photography that taught him how to deal with actors. He realized that most people feared the photographer’s lens. To relax them, he would spend as much time with them as possible, not only to know them better, but to see beyond the surface and discover their true self - the one they hid from the outside world. Most of his great portraits of the sixties - Bob Dylan, Francis Coppola, Andy Warhol, Arlo Guthrie, Roman Polanski, Fidel Castro, Milos Forman, Jimi Hendrix, Frank Zappa, The Rolling Stones and many more - reveal these moments of truth.

By not giving specific directions to his photographic models Schatzberg gave them rein to find the moment. It is the same way he gets actors to reach inside. In many ways his photographic style is much closer to that of Andre Kertesz or Henri Cartier-Bresson than to the more-contemporary Irving Penn or Richard Avedon. Instead of the self-contained space of the frame, he looks for the space beyond. His photographs are narrative; they tell a story. In an instant they recognize an action, a gesture, an emotion while at the same time they have a rigorous formal pattern that expresses their meaning. The style however, never manifests itself ostentatiously and never encroaches the fluidity of life.

After expanding into directing TV commercials, he made his debut as a film director in 1970 with “Puzzle of a Downfall Child”, the story of a fashion model. Schatzberg then scored with his second directorial effort, the gripping, finely acted “The Panic in Needle Park” (1971), a bleak study of heroin addiction starring Al Pacino. Pacino co-starred with Gene Hackman in Jerry’s next film, “scarecrow” (1973), which was a moody tale of two drifters which in many ways is an apotheosis of 70’s alienation and confusion. Schatzberg was one of the leading protagonists in the Hollywood Renaissance that struck critics and film-goers alike at the beginning of the 70’s. Perhaps significantly, Schatzberg’s critical following in the United States rose and fell with the 70’s; after 1979’s “Seduction of Joe Tynan”, the trend in Hollywood shifted from small introspective films to the Spielberg/Lucas blockbuster mentality.

Jerry Schatzberg never lost his European devotees, as witnessed by the international success of 1989’s “Reunion”. He also directed 1995’s Lumiere et Compagnie with Sylvia Miles and Rob Cea and 2000’s The Day the Ponies Come Back with Burt Young and Guillaume Canet. He’s been nominated for 4 Golden Palm Awards at Cannes (winning one for “Scarecrow” in 1973 and serving on the jury in 2004) and continues to work on projects – writing books and screenplays – to this day.

Ed. note – I’d like to extend a special “thank you” to Florence Annequin, Assistant to Jerry Schatzberg, for her help with this article.

To see more examples of Jerry Schatzberg’s work, please visit his Web site at:
http://www.jerryschatzberg.com

To see more examples of psychedelic artwork in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit
http://www.rockpopgallery.com

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and syndicated the following week on The Rock and Roll Report, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 1967 & 2007 Jerry Schatzberg www.jerryschatzberg.com

Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Cover Story – Frank Zappa’s “We’re Only In It For The Money”, cover by Jerry Schatzberg

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

zappaonlymoney2s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

Subject – Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention – We’re Only In It For The Money - Released in 1968 on Verve/Bizarre Records, with cover photography by Jerry Schatzberg.

Sticking with out “psychedelic” theme another week, this week’s Cover Story is on one of the best from the era – Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention’s fantastic spoof of everything and everyone involved in making (and promoting) that genre’s music titled We’re Only In It For The Money. Using an overall style of songwriting that would serve for many years as Zappa and The Mother’s trademark – sparing no subject, touching on all aspects of that subject that made it a joke in the songwriter’s mind, and then delivering this material via bound-to-be-censored lyrics, memorable melodies and with superb musicianship and studio craftsmanship – this record made more people laugh uncomfortably than any other I know of (until the Sex Pistols released Never Mind The Bullocks… 10 years later.

The record parodied everything that the Hippie/Flower Power movement stood for and used as its symbols – from songs such as “Who Needs the Peace Corps” , “Flower Punk”, “Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance”, to the finale of “The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny” – and was Zappa’s conscious effort to get the youth of the day to stop a minute and look at how silly everything was. After The Beatles had released their widely-praised concept record Sgt. Pepper’s, Zappa wanted to show the world both that he’d mastered many technical aspects of the modern recording studio and that, perhaps, some of the widely praised concepts were, in fact, nonsensical, superficial and often meaningless in the long run.

The record did have some decent commercial success, hitting #30 on the Billboard Album charts in 1968, but it has had its greatest impact when viewed historically by fans of rock music. Rolling Stone Magazine included it in its “Top 100 Albums” list in its 20th Anniversary issue in 1987, commenting on how mercilessly – and with great talent - a band from that era could spoof its musical brethren of the time (it also came in at #296 on Rolling Stone’s 2003 list of the “Top 500 Albums of All Time”).

Of course, one of the most-memorable aspects of the record was the packaging. Here again, The Beatles and Sgt. Pepper’s stood for what was in vogue at the time, and so Zappa and his crew felt that it was important to use their newly-famous imagery as a starting point for their parody. Famed photographer and (film-maker) Jerry Schatzberg was called in to aid in this “homage to the collage” of Sir Peter Blake and Michael Cooper, creating the first of what would be many parodies of that work (I particularly liked the one done on The Simpsons in the 90s). How it all came together is addressed in today’s Cover Story….

In the words of the photographer, Jerry Schatzberg (interviewed September, 2007) –

“I had shot a photograph for the Rolling Stones in drag for the U.K. release of their single “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?”. Zappa had seen that and after seeing the cover of Sgt. Peppers, he had the idea the he wanted to do a spoof of that image, with the principals in drag. I had met Zappa a couple of times before that, but we’d never worked together, so I was intrigued when I was told that this was going to be the cover of his next record.

We had a couple of weeks to produce this, and keeping the Sgt. Pepper’s cover in mind – with its elaborate costumes, flower-filled foreground, and its amazing cast of celebrity guests who were featured on the cover, both of our staffs set out to find the clothes, the props and some “celebrities” who would be part of the final composition.

We all agreed that it’d be very funny if we’d use fruit and vegetables and other junk in the foreground (instead of flowers), and since both of us knew Jimi Hendrix, we asked him to take part (you’ll find a real-live Jimi Hendrix on the far right-hand side of the shot, the second person to the right of Zappa, who’s posed in a mini-skirt). Zappa and his record company then decided on the rest of the background imagery and then a series of photos were taken. I submitted all of my tests over the two weeks and then the final one was selected. No special effects or lenses were used – the final photograph contains just the props and the people you see. Everyone was very happy with the results.”

On the original Sgt. Pepper’s record package, the collage was the cover, a photo of the band with Paul standing with his back to the viewer (“Paul Is Dead?”) was on the back cover, and the inside gatefold image (quite strange for a single LP) showed the band in costume on a bright yellow background, spread across both panels. For the Zappa version, we shot a back cover photo of the band with only one member facing the viewer, and then a gatefold portrait of the band – in costume/drag – standing in front of a bright yellow background.

zappaonlymoneyin1s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

When the record was first released, a lot of the songs were censored, and so the record company decided to make changes to the packaging, too, and basically turned the package inside-out, with the gatefold image presented as the front cover and the collage on the inside. Years later, when the record was re-released on CD, the original cover was returned to its proper position.

zappaonlymoney3s.jpg

All images Copyright 1968 and 2007 Jerry Schatzberg – www.jerryschatzberg.com

About the photographer, Jerry Schatzberg –

jnsportrait.jpgBorn In the Bronx, New York in 1927, Jerry attended the University of Miami, and then worked as assistant to Bill Helburn (1954-1956), after which he left to start his career as a freelance photographer. His fashion and portrait photography has been published in magazines such as Vogue, McCalls, Esquire, Glamour, Town and Country, and Life. He was also in demand by the record companies as a photographer and was the one who shot the famous cover photo image (as well as the other photos used on the record sleeve) for Bob Dylan’s 1966 LP Blonde on Blonde. His cover photo portfolio also includes Sonny & Cher’s Wonderous World of Sonny & Cher, The Rascals’ Young Rascals, Wilson Pickett’s Midnight Mover, and others for Herbie Mann, Aretha Franklin, Carmen McRae and many others. In 2006, Genesis Publications released a limited-edition collection of Schatzberg’s photos of Dylan entitled Thin Wild Mercury.It was his portrait photography that taught him how to deal with actors. He realized that most people feared the photographer’s lens. To relax them, he would spend as much time with them as possible, not only to know them better, but to see beyond the surface and discover their true self - the one they hid from the outside world. Most of his great portraits of the sixties - Bob Dylan, Francis Coppola, Andy Warhol, Arlo Guthrie, Roman Polanski, Fidel Castro, Milos Forman, Jimi Hendrix, Frank Zappa, The Rolling Stones and many more - reveal these moments of truth.

By not giving specific directions to his photographic models Schatzberg gave them rein to find the moment. It is the same way he gets actors to reach inside. In many ways his photographic style is much closer to that of Andre Kertesz or Henri Cartier-Bresson than to the more-contemporary Irving Penn or Richard Avedon. Instead of the self-contained space of the frame, he looks for the space beyond. His photographs are narrative; they tell a story. In an instant they recognize an action, a gesture, an emotion while at the same time they have a rigorous formal pattern that expresses their meaning. The style however, never manifests itself ostentatiously and never encroaches the fluidity of life.

After expanding into directing TV commercials, he made his debut as a film director in 1970 with “Puzzle of a Downfall Child”, the story of a fashion model. Schatzberg then scored with his second directorial effort, the gripping, finely acted “The Panic in Needle Park” (1971), a bleak study of heroin addiction starring Al Pacino. Pacino co-starred with Gene Hackman in Jerry’s next film, “scarecrow” (1973), which was a moody tale of two drifters which in many ways is an apotheosis of 70’s alienation and confusion. Schatzberg was one of the leading protagonists in the Hollywood Renaissance that struck critics and film-goers alike at the beginning of the 70’s. Perhaps significantly, Schatzberg’s critical following in the United States rose and fell with the 70’s; after 1979’s “Seduction of Joe Tynan”, the trend in Hollywood shifted from small introspective films to the Spielberg/Lucas blockbuster mentality.

Jerry Schatzberg never lost his European devotees, as witnessed by the international success of 1989’s “Reunion”. He also directed 1995’s Lumiere et Compagnie with Sylvia Miles and Rob Cea and 2000’s The Day the Ponies Come Back with Burt Young and Guillaume Canet. He’s been nominated for 4 Golden Palm Awards at Cannes (winning one for “Scarecrow” in 1973 and serving on the jury in 2004) and continues to work on projects – writing books and screenplays – to this day.

Ed. note – I’d like to extend a special “thank you” to Florence Annequin, Assistant to Jerry Schatzberg, for her help with this article.

To see more examples of Jerry Schatzberg’s work, please visit his Web site at:
http://www.jerryschatzberg.com

To see more examples of psychedelic artwork in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit
http://www.rockpopgallery.com

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and syndicated the following week on The Rock and Roll Report, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 1967 & 2007 Jerry Schatzberg www.jerryschatzberg.com

Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Rebecca’s Picks - Albums You Should Own: Rocks by Aerosmith

Friday, October 5th, 2007

rebecca.jpg Track List
1. Back In The Saddle (Tyler,Perry)
2. Last Child (Tyler, Whitford)
3. Rats In the Cellar (Tyler, Perry)
4. Combination (Perry)
5. Sick As A Dog (Tyler, Hamilton)
6. Nobody’s Fault (Tyler, Whitford)
7.Get The Lead Out (Tyler, Perry)
8. Lick and A Promise (Tyler, Perry)
9. Home Tonight (Tyler)

Released May, 1976 Columbia Records
Produced by Jack Douglas and Aerosmith
Band members:
Steven Tyler-vocals, Joe Perry-guitars, six string bass, lap steel guitar, Brad Whitford-guitars, Tom Hamilton-bass, Joey Kramer-drums

The first track on “Rocks” starts off with a slow-building intro, then Steven Tyler screams “I’m back!”, and you are sucked in. This is Aerosmith’s hardest album…the blues are still evident, but the metal is dominate. Having been dismissed as “the American Rolling Stones” by many critics, this album showcases the band’s true essence. Bluesy, ballsy American rock that grabs you by the throat and doesn’t let go.
“We were doing a lot of drugs by then, but you can hear that whatever we were doing was still working for us”-Joe Perry
This is NOT the “We-have-a-ballad-on-the-soundtrack-of-a-cheesy-action-movie” Aerosmith. Were they a better band before they got sober? Hmmm…you tell me. Buy this album. Now.

Rock and Roll Report TV: The 13th Floor Elevators - “You’re Gonna Miss Me”

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

Many people will argue the case that Roky Erickson and his 13th Floor Elevators were the first true psychedelic band. While you argue this over a cold pint, check out this vintage video I found on Aversion for You’re Gonna Miss Me and enjoy one of the true innovators of rock and roll.

Cover Story – Pink Floyd’s “Piper at the Gates of Dawn”, cover by Vic Singh

Monday, October 1st, 2007

vspfpiper1.jpgSubject – Pink Floyd – Piper at the Gates of Dawn - a 1967 release on Columbia Records (distributed in the U.S. by Capitol Records), with cover photography by Vic Singh.

All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

2007 marks the 40th anniversary of the world’s introduction to the recorded music of Pink Floyd. Clubgoers in London had been treated to the band’s psychedelic blues and instrumentals - with 20 minute jams of “Interstellar Overdrive” and ground-breaking lightshows the highlights of a typical concert event – but it was their first singles, “Arnold Layne” and “See Emily Play”, released early in 1967, that introduced the song-writing capabilities of Syd Barrett to a wider listening audience. The singles had done pretty respectably in the U.K. charts and the band was keen on trying out new technologies in the studio. As it was that Barrett – the chief songwriter and singer – was also quite fond of LSD, it only made sense that their first full-length effort, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (whose title was adapted from a chapter in a fondly-remembered book – The Wind in the Willows – from Barrett’s childhood), would both employ these new technologies to craft songs and experimental musical tracks and also be altered by drugs to the point that they were considered “spacey” and “hallucinogenic” in nature.

While the record was a hit in the U.K. at the time (hitting #6 on their album charts), the record did not fare well here in the U.S. until it was re-released in the 70s, after the band’s popularity had soared due to the popularity of their subsequent albums and their touring with other psychedelic stars of the day - including Jimi Hendrix – and their appearances at many music festivals. Of course, Floyd fans are all aware of Syd Barrett’s rapid and disturbing slide into sickness – both mental and physical – that ultimately lead to his ouster from the band in 1968. After his departure and guitarist David Gilmour’s joining the band, Roger Waters took on the role of the creative lead and the band would go on to create a roster of rock classics, selling over 250 million records (!) world-wide. It wasn’t until many years later that rock critics and fans would revisit the band’s debut album and explore its many intricacies, with most fans and critics now in agreement that it deserves consideration as on of the most-important and influential psychedelic recordings of the rock era.

Pink Floyd has also been associated with a number of the best-known artists and illustrators throughout the years, including Storm Thorgerson/Hipgnosis (who created covers for Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here and many others) and Gerald Scarfe (creator of the amazing imagery used for The Wall’s packaging and stage show). After they had reached a certain degree of fame (i.e., right after their first album), they did not appear on the cover of any other album, but in 1967, it was an “industry standard” to feature a photograph of the recording artist on the cover, and so London photographer Vic Singh has the distinction of having shot the image that turned out to be the only one that featured the band – and that featured the soon-to-be-sacked Syd Barrett. Vic, too, was interested in creating something unusual (and “psychedelic”) for this commission, and the result was an image that represented the “vibe” of the time exceptionally well. The “making of” this image is the topic of today’s groovy and gear fab Cover Story, so enjoy, you dig?

In the words of the photographer, Vic Singh (interviewed in September, 2007)

In the mid-1960’s, I was a young established photographer and a member of the 60’s swinging “in-crowd”. I first met the Pink Floyd at an event - or happening as it was called in those days -under the statue of Eros in Piccadilly Circus in London. They were a new, unknown band and we all chatted for a while. They looked trippy and said they were making their first record album.

A few weeks after our meeting at Piccadilly, their manager (I can’t remember who called, but it was probably either Peter Jenner or Andrew King) rang me at my studio and asked me if I would like to shoot the album cover for The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. I agreed, and we fixed a date for a one day shoot in my studio. At that time, The Pink Floyd were a new band unsigned to any record label, and so there was no art director. I asked their manager if he or the band had any ideas for the album cover, the answer was “no”, and so it was left up to me to come up with ideas. I don’t know if the band had seen any of my work, and since I was not given much to work with visually, the inspiration would need to come from the music and the band’s image.

The band was psychedelic and their music was surreal and alien compared to other popular music of the time, so it needed a far-out image. Having to work with a small production budget (Colour labs for special effects were mega-expensive, and there was no technology like today), I decided to use a prism lens which George Harrison had given me because he could not find a use for it and I had not used it up till then, so it seemed like the perfect solution. All I had to do was screw it on my Hasselblad camera lens and the creative special effect would go straight on to the film.

vsprism2.jpg

All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

The photo shoot was in my studio and was shot on a white background with flat, even electronic strobe lighting (i.e., a studio flash). I used my Hasselblad with an 80-mm lens and 2 1/4 square Kodak Ektachrome Daylight type film. As I had decided to shoot with the prism lens - which multiplied and softened some of the images - I also asked the band to bring colorful psychedelic clothes (fashionable at the time) which would stand out and provide us with more contrast as the prism lens tended to soften and loose contrast as it split the image. I don’t know how long it took the band to get the clothes together, but they arrived at the studio in the morning, put the coffee pot on, and sat around the studio chatting. There was a lot to chat about as London was buzzing - it was a time of love and peace.Finally, we decided to get on with the photos and the boys went to the changing room and started trying on the clothes. I first started with some test Polaroid shots, positioning them on the white background, which was a bit tricky as the prism lens multiplied each figure - they all overlapped each other! - so I had to get the figures positioned right or the whole thing looked like a mess. Syd got especially interested at this point and was quite intense, changing outfits and the positions of the band on the background and shooting tests on the Polaroid film with me.

vspfpiper3.jpgvspfpiper4.jpg
All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

(Above) Alternate takes from the session

When it was time for a lunch break, my assistant arrived with sandwiches, a couple bottles of Scotch and some joints - all quite enjoyable. After lunch, we put on some Piper music. I had a rather loud stereo system and the Piper sounds could be heard all the way down the street. With the music blasting away, we got into the session, shooting quite a few reels of film and finishing up around 6:00 PM. We had the films processed the next day and I delivered the photos the day after.They loved the photos and Syd got inspired to create the back of the album cover. It had been a beautiful day – as had the day before the shoot and the day after – I attribute it to Flower Power!

About the photographer, Vic Singh

vicsingh1.jpgVic was born in Lucknow, India, his father a son of Raja of Kalakankar, situated on the banks of The Ganges in northern India and his mother a daughter of a well-known Austrian society photographer in Vienna. He was sent to St. Christopher’s College in Letchworth, Hertfordshire as a young child and his mother decided to move to London.In his teens, he attended St. Martin’s College of Art in London and then got a job at Mayflower Studios as a junior assistant - delivering prints, sweeping the floor, making tea, etc. He then moved on to his first job as a photographer with Studio Five in London’s Mayfair, and a couple of years later, he opened his own photo studio called “Vic Singh Limited” also in Mayfair.

He worked for the fashion, advertising and music industries. Being a member of “the Swinging 60’s In-Crowd” from it’s formation, he had many acquaintances in the music industry. Besides photographing various independent artists such as Pink Floyd, Marc Bolan and others, he also worked for Chris Blackwell of Island Records with artists such as Jimmy Cliff, The Spencer Davis Group (Stevie Winwood) and others shooting PR, record covers and music video (16-mm b/w film), including The Beatles film ‘A Day in the Life’ (from Sgt.Pepper) for Apple Records.

In the last few years, Vic’s concentrated his efforts on the digital side of photography and video and is working in a new environment of the avant-garde music and fashion scene that is, at present, evolving in London.

To see more examples of Vic Singh’s work, please visit his Web site at:

http://www.vicsingh.co.uk

To see more examples of artwork related to Pink Floyd in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/pink_floyd/list.htm

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and syndicated on The Rock and Roll Report the following Monday, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 1967 & 2007 Vic Singh www.vicsingh.co.uk
Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Cover Story – Pink Floyd’s “Piper at the Gates of Dawn”, cover by Vic Singh

Monday, October 1st, 2007

vspfpiper1.jpgSubject – Pink Floyd – Piper at the Gates of Dawn - a 1967 release on Columbia Records (distributed in the U.S. by Capitol Records), with cover photography by Vic Singh.

All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

2007 marks the 40th anniversary of the world’s introduction to the recorded music of Pink Floyd. Clubgoers in London had been treated to the band’s psychedelic blues and instrumentals - with 20 minute jams of “Interstellar Overdrive” and ground-breaking lightshows the highlights of a typical concert event – but it was their first singles, “Arnold Layne” and “See Emily Play”, released early in 1967, that introduced the song-writing capabilities of Syd Barrett to a wider listening audience. The singles had done pretty respectably in the U.K. charts and the band was keen on trying out new technologies in the studio. As it was that Barrett – the chief songwriter and singer – was also quite fond of LSD, it only made sense that their first full-length effort, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (whose title was adapted from a chapter in a fondly-remembered book – The Wind in the Willows – from Barrett’s childhood), would both employ these new technologies to craft songs and experimental musical tracks and also be altered by drugs to the point that they were considered “spacey” and “hallucinogenic” in nature.

While the record was a hit in the U.K. at the time (hitting #6 on their album charts), the record did not fare well here in the U.S. until it was re-released in the 70s, after the band’s popularity had soared due to the popularity of their subsequent albums and their touring with other psychedelic stars of the day - including Jimi Hendrix – and their appearances at many music festivals. Of course, Floyd fans are all aware of Syd Barrett’s rapid and disturbing slide into sickness – both mental and physical – that ultimately lead to his ouster from the band in 1968. After his departure and guitarist David Gilmour’s joining the band, Roger Waters took on the role of the creative lead and the band would go on to create a roster of rock classics, selling over 250 million records (!) world-wide. It wasn’t until many years later that rock critics and fans would revisit the band’s debut album and explore its many intricacies, with most fans and critics now in agreement that it deserves consideration as on of the most-important and influential psychedelic recordings of the rock era.

Pink Floyd has also been associated with a number of the best-known artists and illustrators throughout the years, including Storm Thorgerson/Hipgnosis (who created covers for Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here and many others) and Gerald Scarfe (creator of the amazing imagery used for The Wall’s packaging and stage show). After they had reached a certain degree of fame (i.e., right after their first album), they did not appear on the cover of any other album, but in 1967, it was an “industry standard” to feature a photograph of the recording artist on the cover, and so London photographer Vic Singh has the distinction of having shot the image that turned out to be the only one that featured the band – and that featured the soon-to-be-sacked Syd Barrett. Vic, too, was interested in creating something unusual (and “psychedelic”) for this commission, and the result was an image that represented the “vibe” of the time exceptionally well. The “making of” this image is the topic of today’s groovy and gear fab Cover Story, so enjoy, you dig?

In the words of the photographer, Vic Singh (interviewed in September, 2007)

In the mid-1960’s, I was a young established photographer and a member of the 60’s swinging “in-crowd”. I first met the Pink Floyd at an event - or happening as it was called in those days -under the statue of Eros in Piccadilly Circus in London. They were a new, unknown band and we all chatted for a while. They looked trippy and said they were making their first record album.

A few weeks after our meeting at Piccadilly, their manager (I can’t remember who called, but it was probably either Peter Jenner or Andrew King) rang me at my studio and asked me if I would like to shoot the album cover for The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. I agreed, and we fixed a date for a one day shoot in my studio. At that time, The Pink Floyd were a new band unsigned to any record label, and so there was no art director. I asked their manager if he or the band had any ideas for the album cover, the answer was “no”, and so it was left up to me to come up with ideas. I don’t know if the band had seen any of my work, and since I was not given much to work with visually, the inspiration would need to come from the music and the band’s image.

The band was psychedelic and their music was surreal and alien compared to other popular music of the time, so it needed a far-out image. Having to work with a small production budget (Colour labs for special effects were mega-expensive, and there was no technology like today), I decided to use a prism lens which George Harrison had given me because he could not find a use for it and I had not used it up till then, so it seemed like the perfect solution. All I had to do was screw it on my Hasselblad camera lens and the creative special effect would go straight on to the film.

vsprism2.jpg

All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

The photo shoot was in my studio and was shot on a white background with flat, even electronic strobe lighting (i.e., a studio flash). I used my Hasselblad with an 80-mm lens and 2 1/4 square Kodak Ektachrome Daylight type film. As I had decided to shoot with the prism lens - which multiplied and softened some of the images - I also asked the band to bring colorful psychedelic clothes (fashionable at the time) which would stand out and provide us with more contrast as the prism lens tended to soften and loose contrast as it split the image. I don’t know how long it took the band to get the clothes together, but they arrived at the studio in the morning, put the coffee pot on, and sat around the studio chatting. There was a lot to chat about as London was buzzing - it was a time of love and peace.Finally, we decided to get on with the photos and the boys went to the changing room and started trying on the clothes. I first started with some test Polaroid shots, positioning them on the white background, which was a bit tricky as the prism lens multiplied each figure - they all overlapped each other! - so I had to get the figures positioned right or the whole thing looked like a mess. Syd got especially interested at this point and was quite intense, changing outfits and the positions of the band on the background and shooting tests on the Polaroid film with me.

vspfpiper3.jpgvspfpiper4.jpg
All images Copyright 1967 and 2007 Vic Singh – www.vicsingh.co.uk

(Above) Alternate takes from the session

When it was time for a lunch break, my assistant arrived with sandwiches, a couple bottles of Scotch and some joints - all quite enjoyable. After lunch, we put on some Piper music. I had a rather loud stereo system and the Piper sounds could be heard all the way down the street. With the music blasting away, we got into the session, shooting quite a few reels of film and finishing up around 6:00 PM. We had the films processed the next day and I delivered the photos the day after.They loved the photos and Syd got inspired to create the back of the album cover. It had been a beautiful day – as had the day before the shoot and the day after – I attribute it to Flower Power!

About the photographer, Vic Singh

vicsingh1.jpgVic was born in Lucknow, India, his father a son of Raja of Kalakankar, situated on the banks of The Ganges in northern India and his mother a daughter of a well-known Austrian society photographer in Vienna. He was sent to St. Christopher’s College in Letchworth, Hertfordshire as a young child and his mother decided to move to London.In his teens, he attended St. Martin’s College of Art in London and then got a job at Mayflower Studios as a junior assistant - delivering prints, sweeping the floor, making tea, etc. He then moved on to his first job as a photographer with Studio Five in London’s Mayfair, and a couple of years later, he opened his own photo studio called “Vic Singh Limited” also in Mayfair.

He worked for the fashion, advertising and music industries. Being a member of “the Swinging 60’s In-Crowd” from it’s formation, he had many acquaintances in the music industry. Besides photographing various independent artists such as Pink Floyd, Marc Bolan and others, he also worked for Chris Blackwell of Island Records with artists such as Jimmy Cliff, The Spencer Davis Group (Stevie Winwood) and others shooting PR, record covers and music video (16-mm b/w film), including The Beatles film ‘A Day in the Life’ (from Sgt.Pepper) for Apple Records.

In the last few years, Vic’s concentrated his efforts on the digital side of photography and video and is working in a new environment of the avant-garde music and fashion scene that is, at present, evolving in London.

To see more examples of Vic Singh’s work, please visit his Web site at:

http://www.vicsingh.co.uk

To see more examples of artwork related to Pink Floyd in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/pink_floyd/list.htm

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and syndicated on The Rock and Roll Report the following Monday, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 1967 & 2007 Vic Singh www.vicsingh.co.uk
Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Rebecca’s Picks - Albums You Should Own: Highway to Hell by AC/DC

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Just last week I was talking about how much I was enjoying the local classic rock radio station one weekend because I don’t listen to this stuff much anymore. My whole point was that you cannot deny the impact of “Classic Rock” on the rock and roll of today and that listened to in moderation, this is still great stuff and a lot of fun. Well I am happy to add Rebecca to the fold here at The Rock and Roll Report as she delves into her record collection to give you some examples of albums she thinks you should own. You can contact Rebecca at her MySpace page at http://www.myspace.com/metalmuffin. Take it away Rebecca!

Hello everyone!

rebecca.jpgMy name is Rebecca. I love music. Specifically, rock and roll music.

Every week I will be sharing an album with you. It could be an album from the 60’s, the 70’s, or the 80’s. These albums will all have one thing in common. You should own them.

You might ask, “Why the 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s, Rebecca?”

I might answer, “Well, being (cough-cough) 40-ish, these are the eras I know the best. I was in high school in the late 70’s-early80’s, and my main hobby was going to concerts and buying albums. I still own many of these albums on vinyl, (That’s the stuff they used to make records out of) not counting the ones a certain ex-boyfriend took off with.”

I still attend a lot of shows, and regard many musicians as friends. I myself am not a musician. I own a sweet Stratocaster, which I play badly. While I was researching these albums, I asked many musicians to tell me the albums that had influenced them the most, the music that made them decide that they had to make music themselves. I got a surprising variety of answers, and I still think that it’s a fascinating question to ask someone.

So, check out my column…you never know, you might learn a little rock and roll history. At the very least, you’ll find out about an album that rocks!

highway-to-hell.gif
AC/DC Highway To Hell

Track List
1. Highway To Hell
2. Girls Got Rhythm
3. Walk All Over You
4. Touch Too Much
5. Beating Around The Bush
6. Shot Down In Flames
7. Get It Hot
8. If You Want Blood (You Got It)
9. Love Hungry Man
10. Night Prowler

all songs written by Young, Young, and Scott
Released July 1979 on Atlantic Records
Produced by Mutt Lange

Band members
: Angus Young-lead guitar, Malcolm Young-rhythm guitar, Phil Rudd-drums, Cliff Williams-bass, Bon Scott-lead vocals

When “Highway To Hell” came out in the summer of 1979, it was a most welcome antidote to the other albums being released at the time. The crunchy power chords and thumping bass line were present, but producer Mutt Lange had colored the songs with his own crisp, clean sound. It was much more polished than the band’s previous albums, but still managed to stay raunchy, dirty, and loud. Bon Scott, who died of alcohol poisoning just seven months after “Highway To Hell” was released, once said, “All the songs we do are about one of three things…booze, sex, and rock and roll.” Hell yeah.

Mick Rock’s New Book on Syd Barrett

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

syd-barrett.jpg

Photo copyright Mick Rock 2007 - www.mickrock.com

Mick Rock has published a stunning photo book on the late, great but also very fucked up Syd Barrett called Psychedelic Renegades. Rolling Stone has an online preview of what to expect and the shots are just….chilling. Could the story of Syd Barrett be the saddest sorry in rock? If not it’s pretty damn close.

Later.

Mark

Rock and Roll Report Blitz: The Backsliders

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

the-backsliders.jpg
From Dallas, Texas come the Backsliders, another very cool unsigned band loaded with soul and hooks. I absolutely love Fat Girls which is slated for their upcoming CD You’re Welcome scheduled for release sometime this fall.

Have a listen to Typically I Don’t Mind and the beautiful Pass On All Your Fears for a nice variety in sound and texture. Kim Pendelton has just enough of that scratch in her vocal to make this worth multiple listens. Great stuff.

Check out their MySpace page at http://www.myspace.com/thebacksliders and have a listen for yourself.

Later.

Mark

Cover Story – R.E.M.’s “Reckoning” & Talking Heads’ “Little Creatures”, covers by Rev. Howard Finster

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Subject - R.E.M.’s Reckoning and the Talking Heads’ Little Creatures, with cover paintings done by the Reverend Howard Finster

davidlwfinster11.jpgThe late Reverend Howard Finster (1916 – 2001) was one of the country’s most talked-about folk/outsider artists. In 1965, he said that he heard a voice from the Lord which told him to transform two acres of land in Summerville, GA into a “Paradise Garden.” Using junk, broken dolls, tools and clocks, he embedded these materials in concrete walls which surround both a 30-foot tower built of bicycle parts and his own church called “The World’s Folk Art Church.”

Rev. Finster w/D. Leonardis All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery – www.dlg-gallery.com

“Paradise Garden” was an ongoing project that expressed his religious convictions and creativity and he explained that he assembled the pieces for a purpose -”to mend a broken world.” In 1976, he had a vision of a tall man at his gate (the Lord) who directed him to begin painting “sermon art” because, “preaching don’t do much good - no one listens - but a picture gets on a brain cell.” The voice commanded him to paint this sacred art and to create individual paintings and portraits of personal heroes, religious and patriotic images and to pass on his spiritual messages to the world. Finster’s paintings have evangelical themes and inspirational images which come from his own interpretations of the Bible. Angels and saints as well as earthly characters are often portrayed, and all of his paintings contain witty, printed quotations known as “Finsterisms.”

Several of his paintings show how he was influenced by the imagery on postcards, popular magazines, cultural icons like Elvis Presley, historical figures and, of course, figures from the Bible. Some of his creations have joined the contemporary art and music world through his paintings for the album covers of the rock groups REM and The Talking Heads. Other artists to use Finster art on their record covers include Memory Dean, Pierce Pettis, and Adam Again.

Finster made art out of nail heads, gourds, bottles, cement, mirrors, plastic, snow shovels and even an old Cadillac. However, the majority of his works were usually made out of plywood or heavy canvas, with the works ranging in size from a few square inches to 8-9 feet in height. His art was original, innovative and expressive. In 1994, a portion of his Paradise Garden was installed as part of the permanent collection of Atlanta’s High Museum.

He believed he came from another world and is often referred to as “This Stranger From Another World.” Finster believed the more he painted, the more people he would save, and went on to create over 46,000 works of art. The works are presented in many forms, sometimes called “paintings in tongue,” visions of other worlds where people live in harmony. Finster had his visions for the future. “A day when one computer will run the earth and the final day when giant tidal waves will cover the world. And then the time will come for G-D to create men again - men like the Reverend Howard Finster.”

Chicago-based art gallery owner, Finster historian and owner/curator of the new Howard Finster Vision House museum (located directly across the road from Finster’s “Paradise Garden”) David Leonardis worked for a number of years with the Reverend (until his death in 2001) and spoke with him about “the making of” the two record covers he’s best-known for – R.E.M.’s Reckoning and the Talking Heads’ Little Creatures. He shared his insights with Cover Stories in a September, 2007 interview, highlight of which are detailed below…

mcdlhfrem1.jpg

All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery – www.dlg-gallery.com

On R.E.M.’s Reckoning - The Summerville, GA evangelical preacher and folk artist first gained national fame after collaborating on a number of projects with the Athens, GA – based rock band R.E.M.. Both Finster and the band had appeared in a documentary (released in 1987 and featured on MTV in both their Cutting Edge and 120 Minutes series) about the Athens, GA music scene by writer/director Tony Gayton titled Athens, GA: Inside/Out and, in 1983, the band chose to film the promotional video for their debut recording “Radio Free Europe” at Finster’s “Paradise Garden” compound. The following year, the band’s creative lead, singer Michael Stipe, collaborated with Finster on the painting for the cover of their second LP titled Reckoning. The relationship continued into their third record (Fables of the Reconstruction) as the band wrote the song “Maps and Legends” in honor of Finster.

Reckoning was the second studio album by the band, released in 1984 by Miles Copeland’s independent label I.R.S. Records to both critical acclaim and much improved record sales that their debut album (Murmur), reaching #27 in the U.S. and becoming the band’s first charting album (peaking at #91) in the U.K. Songs such as “So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)”, “Pretty Persuasion”, “Time After Time”, “Little American” and “(Don’t Go Back To) Rockville” have gone on to become R.E.M. standards, and with Michael Stipe’s unique lyricism, singing style and intense stage presence emerging at this point, Reckoning has, over time, established itself as one of the most-influential records of the 1980s.

According to David Leonardis, “As an art student in the Athens, GA area, Michael Stipe had heard of Reverend Finster and his folk art church, and both were featured in the documentary film called Athens, GA: Inside/Out about the mid-1980s music scene in Athens, Georgia. As Finster recalled it, when Michael needed a collaborator for the painting for the cover of R.E.M.’s 2nd record (Reckoning), he came to Finster and started the work by drawing the outline of the snake that is at the center of the image. Howard then did the rest. I’m not exactly sure where the snake image came from – perhaps it was a sexual reference, or perhaps it was derived from Michael having seen the large ‘Snake Mountain’ that was found in the Paradise Garden, which was a cement sculpture Howard had done. R.E.M. used a similar snake-inspired design in creating a collectible bandana for fans, and also produced a poster for the band that featured Finster’s ‘Snake Mountain’.”

mcdlhfthlc1.jpg

All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery – www.dlg-gallery.com

On the Talking Heads’ Little Creatures - The winner of the “Best Album of the Year” in 1985 in writer Robert Christgau’s annual “Pazz and Jop” poll for The Village Voice, the Talking Head’s Little Creatures (on Sire Records) found the band writing songs that were much more mainstream (though, in my opinion, no less unique and interesting) than some of their earlier records. Riding on the success of its well-received singles – “And She Was”, “Stay Up Late” and “Road To Nowhere” – and coming off of the commercial success of their Top 10 hit single/video (“Burning Down The House”) and the tour that was documented in the Jonathan Demme film Stop Making Sense, Little Creatures sold well and eventually went Platinum.David Leonardis recalls – “The Talking Heads commissioned a Finster painting for Little Creatures in 1985. There was a fine art dealer in Chicago (now in NYC) named Phyllis Kind who was Finster’s principal dealer and was also friends with David Byrne, so she acted as the producer/liaison and lead the project to create the painting. Howard had done a painting that showed himself holding the world on his shoulders, and that served as the basis for this new image. Howard received photographs of the band members and then incorporated their likenesses into the new composition. The final image was so different and appealing that it was later selected as ‘album cover of the year’ by Rolling Stone magazine. He went on to also design the covers for four Talking Heads singles, including ‘And She Was’ and ‘The Lady Don’t Mind’.

Years later, David Byrne and Finster finally met during a trip Howard took to New York (Finster addressed him as ‘David Burns’!). Byrne is an accomplished graphic artist himself (Ed. note - he was a graduate of the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design), and he owns the original painting and has it on display in his home.”

And while Howard Finster may have been responsible for introducing millions to folk art, he remained focused on spreading the word of God. He said of the Talking Heads album, “I think there’s twenty-six religious verses on that first cover I done for them. They sold a million records in the first two and a half months after it come out, so that’s twenty-six million verses I got out into the world in two and a half months!” (Finster 1989, p. 197).

About David Leonardis and the DLG Art Gallery

At the height of the Recession in 1990, David Leonardis started collecting art. When he realized he wanted to collect more art than he could afford, he got a job working at a gallery. Eight months later, allied with artists Howard Finster, Chris Peldo, Glenn Wexler and Andy Kane, he turned a few profitable art sales into a commitment to own and operate the David Leonardis Gallery. Fifteen years later the Wicker Park (Chicago) gallery is at the forefront of 21st Century American art. In September of 2006, DLG expanded to another location in the prestigious River North Gallery district in order to reach an even broader demographic of art lovers. DLG also carries 19th century French lithographs and 20th century Contemporary, Pop, Folk Art and Photography and focuses on making people and corporations happy by selling them art. The DLG features an “Instant art collection” group show yearly. DLG suggests that you buy one of each of all artists exhibited.

http://www.dlg-gallery.com/index.html

To learn more about the new DLG-run Finster museum in Summerville, GA, please visit http://www.myspace.com/howardfinstervisionhouse

To see examples of Howard Finster’s record cover artwork available at RockPoP Gallery, please visit http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/howard-finster/list.htm

To see more examples of artwork related to R.E.M. and the Talking Heads in the RockPoP Gallery collection, please visit either/both of the following pages – http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/r.e.m./list.htm
http://rockpopgallery.easystorecreator.com/items/talking_heads/list.htm

About “Cover Stories” - Our weekly series will give you, the music and art fan, a look at “the making of” the illustrations, photographs and designs of many of the most-recognized and influential images that have served to package and promote your all-time-favorite recordings.

Every Friday and the followinf week on The Rock and Roll Report, we’ll meet the artists, designers and photographers who produced these works of art and learn what motivated them, what processes they used, how they collaborated (or fought) with the musical acts, their management, their labels, etc. - all of the things that influenced the final product you saw then and still see today.

We hope that you enjoy these looks behind the scenes of the music-related art business and that you’ll share your stories with us and fellow fans about what role these works of art - and the music they covered - played in your lives.

All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery www.dlg-gallery.com
Except as noted, All other text Copyright 2007 - Mike Goldstein & RockPoP Gallery (www.rockpopgallery.com) - All rights reserved.

Cover Story – R.E.M.’s “Reckoning” & Talking Heads’ “Little Creatures”, covers by Rev. Howard Finster

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Subject - R.E.M.’s Reckoning and the Talking Heads’ Little Creatures, with cover paintings done by the Reverend Howard Finster

davidlwfinster11.jpgThe late Reverend Howard Finster (1916 – 2001) was one of the country’s most talked-about folk/outsider artists. In 1965, he said that he heard a voice from the Lord which told him to transform two acres of land in Summerville, GA into a “Paradise Garden.” Using junk, broken dolls, tools and clocks, he embedded these materials in concrete walls which surround both a 30-foot tower built of bicycle parts and his own church called “The World’s Folk Art Church.”

Rev. Finster w/D. Leonardis All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery – www.dlg-gallery.com

“Paradise Garden” was an ongoing project that expressed his religious convictions and creativity and he explained that he assembled the pieces for a purpose -”to mend a broken world.” In 1976, he had a vision of a tall man at his gate (the Lord) who directed him to begin painting “sermon art” because, “preaching don’t do much good - no one listens - but a picture gets on a brain cell.” The voice commanded him to paint this sacred art and to create individual paintings and portraits of personal heroes, religious and patriotic images and to pass on his spiritual messages to the world. Finster’s paintings have evangelical themes and inspirational images which come from his own interpretations of the Bible. Angels and saints as well as earthly characters are often portrayed, and all of his paintings contain witty, printed quotations known as “Finsterisms.”

Several of his paintings show how he was influenced by the imagery on postcards, popular magazines, cultural icons like Elvis Presley, historical figures and, of course, figures from the Bible. Some of his creations have joined the contemporary art and music world through his paintings for the album covers of the rock groups REM and The Talking Heads. Other artists to use Finster art on their record covers include Memory Dean, Pierce Pettis, and Adam Again.

Finster made art out of nail heads, gourds, bottles, cement, mirrors, plastic, snow shovels and even an old Cadillac. However, the majority of his works were usually made out of plywood or heavy canvas, with the works ranging in size from a few square inches to 8-9 feet in height. His art was original, innovative and expressive. In 1994, a portion of his Paradise Garden was installed as part of the permanent collection of Atlanta’s High Museum.

He believed he came from another world and is often referred to as “This Stranger From Another World.” Finster believed the more he painted, the more people he would save, and went on to create over 46,000 works of art. The works are presented in many forms, sometimes called “paintings in tongue,” visions of other worlds where people live in harmony. Finster had his visions for the future. “A day when one computer will run the earth and the final day when giant tidal waves will cover the world. And then the time will come for G-D to create men again - men like the Reverend Howard Finster.”

Chicago-based art gallery owner, Finster historian and owner/curator of the new Howard Finster Vision House museum (located directly across the road from Finster’s “Paradise Garden”) David Leonardis worked for a number of years with the Reverend (until his death in 2001) and spoke with him about “the making of” the two record covers he’s best-known for – R.E.M.’s Reckoning and the Talking Heads’ Little Creatures. He shared his insights with Cover Stories in a September, 2007 interview, highlight of which are detailed below…

mcdlhfrem1.jpg

All images Copyright 2007 David Leonardis Gallery –