Showing posts with label sex drugs rock and roll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sex drugs rock and roll. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Annie Leibovitz and the Rolling Stones: sex drugs and rockn roll

annie leibovitz, one of my favorite portrait photographers, has a new book coming out. if you aren't familiar with her work here's a brief bio: she was the chief photographer of rolling stone from 1973-83 and helped define the look of the magazine (you may remember the controversial john lennon/yoko ono cover (right). she also served as the rolling stones official tour photographer in 1975.

since then, she's worked for vanity fair as a portrait photographer and taken several celebrities' photographs for some of the most successful ad campaigns (american express, louis vuitton).

leibovitz has a new book coming out and vanity fair has posted an excerpt. in the article, leibovitz shares the stories behind portraits of mick jagger, demi moore, queen elizabeth ii, and arnold schwarzenegger.

all are worthy of a read, but the mick jagger story is especially interesting because of the romantic nature of the situation. her story is very reminiscent of cameron crowe's struggles as a rock journalist ("the enemy") chronicled in the semi-autobigraphical film "almost famous". when the rolling stones asked leibovitz to photograph their tour leibovitz was a young woman ("kidnapped by rockstars" if you will). leibovitz recalls struggling to find her place as a photographer on the tour-should she blend in, or remain an outsider?.

this hilarious clip features interviews from leibovitz's mother, the rolling stones, friends, and annie about her tour with the rolling stones...and the shots are amazing!


Annie, on photographing Mick Jagger in Buffalo, NY in 1975 (below):

Mick Jagger
When I first worked for Rolling Stone, in the early 70s, we wouldn’t photograph a band until they came to town. I hardly ever traveled. I took some pictures of the Rolling Stones when they came through San Francisco in 1971 and 1972. Truman Capote was supposed to write a story for the magazine about the 1972 tour, and the editor, Jann Wenner, said it was O.K. if I went along to two or three cities. Robert Frank was traveling with the band, making a 16-mm. film that would become Cocksucker Blues. The band had commissioned him to do it, but it was never formally released, presumably because of the drugs and sex that were filmed. Danny Seymour, Frank’s friend and camera assistant, was involved in a lot of that. He died mysteriously while the film was being edited.

I guess the band liked the few pictures I took then, and in 1975 Mick called and asked me if I would like to be their tour photographer. Mick is very shrewd. He seems to understand that the documentation of the band is important. He kept all of his costumes from the tours. And he’s always had a photographer. Like the president or the Queen has a photographer.

I went to Jann and told him I wanted to go on the tour. He said that he couldn’t guarantee that there would be a job for me when I came back, but I thought it was too good an opportunity to miss. Robert Frank had photographed the Rolling Stones and now it was my turn.

The band was rehearsing at Andy Warhol’s place in Montauk, at the end of Long Island, and I went out there for a month or so, and then there was a break and the tour started in June. I was very naïve. I brought my tennis racket with me. I thought that maybe as we went from city to city I would take tennis lessons. I didn’t know what I was getting myself into. They were paying me a few hundred dollars a week and I was supposed to create publicity pictures, but I only managed to get a few out the first day and that was it. I was never up during the day again. I was always with the band.

At the time, I thought that the way to get the best work was to become a chameleon. To become so much a part of what was going on that no one would notice you were there. It was unbelievably stupid of me to pick that situation to become part of. I did everything you’re supposed to do when you go on tour with the Rolling Stones. It was the first time in my life that something took me over.

A rock ‘n’ roll tour is unnatural. You’re moving through time and space too fast. The experience is extreme. There is the bigness of the performances and then the isolation and loneliness that follows. The band was like a group of lost boys, but their music saved them. It gave them a reason to exist. When they weren’t on tour they didn’t spend that much time together. On the road they worked. It was the first time in my life—and I’d been at Rolling Stone for five years by then—that I saw how music is made. I saw how it is produced organically. The riffs I heard in hotel rooms during the tour were the songs on the next album—“Memory Motel,” “Fool to Cry.”

The photograph that is emblematic of the 1975 tour for me is the one of Mick in the elevator. It was toward the end of the tour, and he was not on the ground. He was flying. From another world. He was the most beautiful object. Like a butterfly. Ethereal. After all the time on the road, his dancing was very loose. It was almost surreal. I was always aware of where Mick was. What might have seemed like a nuisance to him became a source of comfort. To know that I was somewhere nearby. It was a subject-photographer relationship of an obsessive kind. I remember him saying that I should tell him if I wanted him to be at a specific place on the stage at any point in the show, but I found that too daunting. I couldn’t think of anything for him to do that he wasn’t already doing.

At the end of the performances, the band would do two or three encores that had been planned. Nothing was ad-libbed. They were professional in a way I hadn’t seen until then. They’d been doing it awhile. After the last encore, when everyone in the audience thought they were coming onstage again, they would get out of Dodge. Mick dumped several pails of water on his head every night as part of the show and he would leave the stage totally wet, with his eye makeup running. He wrapped himself up in towels and jumped in the car. Usually the band went straight to the plane, but we were staying in town the night I photographed him in the elevator. The picture was taken on the way up to Mick’s room. He and I were alone. We were on some level out of it. Not because of drugs, but because of all that travel, and sleep deprivation, and the exertion of the performances.

I learned about power on that tour. About how people in an audience can lose a sense of themselves and melt into a frenzied, mindless mass. Mick and Keith had tremendous power both on and offstage. They would walk into a room like young gods. I found that my proximity to them lent me power also. A new kind of status. It didn’t have anything to do with my work. It was power by association.

I’ve been on many tour buses and at many concerts, but the best photographs I’ve made of musicians at work were done during that Rolling Stones tour. I probably spent more time on it than on any other subject. For me, the story about the pictures is about almost losing myself, and coming back, and what it means to be deeply involved in a subject. You can get amazing work, but you’ve got to be careful. The thing that saved me was that I had my camera by my side. It was there to remind me who I was and what I did. It separated me from them.

read more about Annie Leibovitz's portraits of Demi, Arnold, and the Queen at Vanity Fair.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

american apparel vibrators?

American Apparel now carries the Hitachi Magic Wand, also known as "The Cadillac of Vibrators". First Dov Charney rought us soft porn billboards, then paint-on leotards, and now its hand-held vibrators. purchase one here for $50 + s/h.


via BuzzFeed

funny cartoon making fun of dov charney:

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

25 most fiercely fashionable femmes


Stylish Songbirds

Stylish Songbirds

Victoria Legrand: One-half of ethereal Baltimore-based duo Beach House, Victoria sports flowy thrift store dresses that evoke a faded photograph look.

Becky Stark: Becky Stark, lead singer of Lavender Diamond, wears flowery frocks that compliment her angelic, operatic folk ballads.

Zooey Deschanel: Wide-eyed actress turned songstress Zooey Deschanel sings creaky folk ballads alongside M. Ward in She & Him, always donning a dress that we could totally see the Oliva d'Abo character on the Wonder Years wearing.

Joanna Newsom: Recently crowned the cover girl for PAPER's Beautiful People issue, Joanna dresses like a chic (think Sonya Rykiel and Stella McCartney) wood nymph.

Chapin Sisters: This sister act -- comprised of Abigail Chapin, Lily Chapin and Jessica Craven -- rocks an L.A. meets Appalachia kind of style.

THE ORIGINAL: Joni Mitchell

Stylish Songbirds

Stylish Songbirds

Chan Marshall: Performing under the moniker Cat Power, this Chanel-clad chanteuse was approached by Karl Lagerfeld outside of a New York club and he apparently told her: "Only a certain type of woman can look glamorous when smoking."

Eleanor Friedberger: As the be-banged sister half of brother-sister duo Fiery Furnaces, the former Miu Miu model likes mixing and matching thrift duds with the likes of Alberta Ferreti and Prada.

Lykke Li: The best thing to come out of Sweden of late, singer Lykke Li (who is in the process of relocating to New York) is known for sporting (generally black) deconstructed, Imitation-of-Christ-y numbers.

Jenny Lewis: She of Rilo Kiley fame loves a classy hot pant -- whether it be in flower jumper or sparkly high-waisted shorts form -- and vintage mini dresses.

Janelle Monae: The futuristic R&B sensation is a recent signee to Bad Boy records and her new album Metropolis Suite, out this month, introduces us to her alter-ego Cindi Mayweather. Monae's trademark look consists of a tuxedo jacket, mini bow tie and saddle shoes.

THE ORIGINAL: Marianne Faithful

Stylish Songbirds

Stylish Songbirds

Kid Sister: There's nothing childish about this hood-chic (and sometimes blonde) bombshell who kicks it with Kanye without breaking a bedazzled nail.

Katy Perry: Conservative she is certainly not, but referencing an '80s interpretation of the '50s for her style inspiration, the coquettish pop phenom still manages to keep it classy.

MIA: Don't be confused by a Marc Jacobs campaign -- the Sri Lankan/British singer, with her Day-Glo-hued, eccentric threads, has a style all her own.

Santogold: All that glitters isn't gold, but the MIA-likened musician backs her funky hip hop-meets-punk panache with beats that prove she's just as solid as her style.

Yelle: This Parisian starlet has invaded the States, bringing energizing anthems in coy pixie haircut and awesome neon nylons.

THE ORIGINAL: Salt N Pepa

Stylish Songbirds

Stylish Songbirds

Sabina Sciubba: Lead singer of the dance-tastic Brazilian Girls (who are not from Brazil) is known for her way, way out there looks -- from translucent face masks to dresses made from Chinese lanterns to silver-ball-adorned frocks.

CocoRosie: Sisers Sierra Rose Casady and Bianca Leilani Casady sport freaky, gypsy-esque duds mirroring their freaky, gypsy-esque sound.

Karen O: The lead wailer of New York's Yeah Yeah Yeahs doused herself in olive oil for her first live show and hasn't looked back since. The bowl-hair-cut-ed singer tends to sport outrageous outfits for her shows, including (but not limited to) dresses made from safety pins, cat-suits covered in tinsel and lion-esque headdresses.

Lizzi Bougatsos: The queen of downtown art-rock, the lead singer of Gang Gang Dance favors a miss-matched Roma-style look.

Ebony Bones: The Brit it girl calls her look "cartoon couture" -- i.e. clothes made from Legos, neon-colored wigs and humungous necklaces.

THE ORIGINAL: Björk

Stylish Songbirds

Stylish Songbirds

Amy Winehouse: The controversial English crooner is not unlike a bad car crash: rockin' a raggedy beehive and some busted ballet shoes, we still can't look away.

Lily Allen : The outspoken songstress' cocktail dresses and Converse combination spawned a slew of copycats and even landed her a clothing line in 2007.

Aubrey O'Day: Being one of five pretty ladies in Danity Kane, it's hard to stand out. But Aubrey, with her platinum tresses and boob-revealing party dresses (sometimes featuring brown splotches courtesy of her fake tan), always seems slightly unhinged -- in a good way!

Dirty Harry: So much for cleaning up nicely, as the British performer (née Victoria Harrison), who's been in the business since she was 15 and is good friends with Courteney Love, keeps it positively filthy instead.

Lovefoxxx: The lead singer of Brazilian electro outfit CSS loves performing barefoot, jumping like a madwoman into the audience and wearing a spandex jumpsuit… or two, or three, or four -- all at the same time.

THE ORIGINAL: Courtney Love

With additional reporting by Ashley James


via Paper

Saturday, May 17, 2008

groupie wear

sex, drugs, rock and roll necklace: made of reflective gold mirror acrylic, hanging on non-tarnish gold chain. by freshnakedtofu @ etsy

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