The thread had progressed to people presenting opinions as facts.
Like others have said...no need to get hung up on words like Best/Better.Okay, I give up. And, yes, I didn’t even have to look at the article to know what the anointed photo was. For capturing something of the raw explosive energy of rock and roll in one shot, what’s a better one? Honest question.
The best? Puleez. Doth saying it make it so?
By one of may favorite photographers!As a photographer, with respect to album covers, one of my favorites is this one.
View attachment 232532
......... so what are we looking at there.?Not the greatest Rock and Roll Photo of all time - but it is my photo..
View attachment 257489
My photo of Lou Reed in concert.......... so what are we looking at there.?
Aahhh.....OK.My photo of Lou Reed in concert.
Displayed on the front page of Page Friday, which was the "entertainment" section of the Ubyssey - the thrice weekly student newspaper at the University of British Columbia that I was chief photographer for during the a good part of the latter half of the 1970s.
Essentially where I spent most of my misspent youth, while also obtaining my BSc degree.
I still have all my negatives from that experience. I should print a few of them again.
I also took photographs of Lou Reed and his bass player during an interview the day before - a truly surreal experience in the Garden Lounge of the Four Seasons hotel.
Oh no, we had college radicals.Aahhh.....OK.
I THOUGHT the photo looked like Lou, but the "Page Friday" did not ring any bells.
I suppose you are about the best Canada could hope to do....to scrape up a "College Radical"
10-4....... just a bit of South Of The Border humor on my part.Oh no, we had college radicals.
And have some to this day.
Some were imported - think of those who left the US during the Vietnam war.
Some were home grown, but in the land where the creator of our universal healthcare system is considered by a majority as a Canadian hero, our version of "radical" may differ from yours.
Just as in your country though, the impetus toward college radicalism was starting to fade a bit by the end of the 1970s.
Most of the exported Canadian Rock and Roll tends to be the songwriter type - eg Neil Young, The Band, etc.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?