Friday, December 19, 2008

What I'm listening to...

After watching the film a few weeks ago and rediscovering  Joy Division, early Bowie and the raw beauty that is Anton Corbijn's work. 

Levon Helm at the Ryman

These are from his show in September. The Americana Music Association was kind enough to give me an all access pass and to set me free to shoot whatever caught my eye backstage. Irony of all ironies, I had just gotten my new digital camera that week but chose to shoot film that night instead. The lab misprocessed the film. Most of it was muck. I managed to save a few that weren't too far gone. Sam Bush, Alison Krauss, Billy Bob Thornton and the kind kind Levon Helm. 

Sunday, December 7, 2008

LeAnn Rimes - What I Cannot Change


Congrats to LeAnn on her Grammy nomination for Best Country Female Vocal Performance for What I Cannot Change. 

The nomination just confirms what a lot of us knew all along -- it's an incredible song with an even more incredible performance. Wish we had gotten the green light to go ahead with the video -- we had the concept, the shoot dates, etc all set to go.  It would have been the perfect compliment to Nothin Better to Do.



 


Saturday, December 6, 2008

Ray Mortenson - Images of the South Bronx

An 1983 Ray Mortenson photograph taken in the South Bronx.

Really enjoyed the piece in the NY Times last week about Ray Mortenson's photos taken during an 'I Am Legend' period of NY in the early 80s. Check out the link (if it works) and the other photos from his series.  They are part of an exhibit showing at the Museum of the City of New York called 'Broken Glass.' Hope to get a chance to check out this show in person. Some beautiful, haunting images. Would be great to hear him speak with the images as well (giving us the backstory behind each one)...

If you like Mortenson's work, then you may wanna check out the film Downtown 81. It starred the artist Basquiat as a struggling painter and featured him walking around different bombed out sections of NYC around the same time. Would love have seen NY during this period (and to have picked up one of Basquiat's incredible paintings for a few hundred dollars. Unlike Lars, I could never have parted with a Basquiat no matter how much someone offered me). 

With the way the economy is going, I may get that chance to see NY (or others) the way they once were...and to buy some cheap art.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/01/arts/design/01brok.html