"I can look at a fine art photograph and sometimes I can hear music."
B.B. King in Savannah, 2002.
– Ansel AdamsI'm a music lover. And I have to admit that music moves me more emotionally than the finest photograph. If I could scratch out a living making music, I'd do it. But alas, that takes a certain amount of talent which I just don't possess. I believe I've been blessed with a discerning ear, but the sounds that come out of my mouth and my guitar don't qualify as something that, well, someone with a discerning ear would be particularly pleased with. I think your mind has to be wired a certain way to be a good musician. My mind is wired for something else.
Instead, when I have the opportunity, I try to combine something I'm good at (photography) with something else I love (live musical performances). While music is primarily an aural experience, there is a strong visual element to musicians plying their craft. Great music, like great photographs, is something you can feel. And you can actually see when musicians pour their heart and soul into their performances. The challenge is to make a visual document that somehow communicates what you hear and feel.
Virtuoso violinist Isaac Stern rehearses with the Savannah Symphony. |
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Jazz musician Doug Carn on break at his club Adagio. |
By photographing lesser known musicians in smaller venues, it's easy to get the kind of access that creates more interesting, revealing pictures. The in-your-face action. The behind-the-scenes stuff. You don't get herded like cattle into roped-off areas and get forced to shoot the same stuff twenty other photographers are shooting.
Statesboro's own Chris Mitchell in 1999. |
Recently, country music star (and now actor!) Tim McGraw came to town and played the football stadium at Georgia Southern University. There was a buzz because big name artists rarely stray from their big-city, big-venue tours and make a stop in Statesboro.
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View from the soundboard |
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As close as I could get |
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Tim McGraw fans Greg and Carolyn Taylor |
After the opening act was over, someone came to the area that was part of McGraw's immediate management. There seemed to be some confusion and she was herding us together again. I couldn't hear exactly what she was saying at first, but it seems that we were not shooting from an "approved" area. She was concerned about us interfering with the sound crew and special guests. Great. So now we were going to be moved further away?
Well, I griped too hastily. Apparently, we were supposed to be up next to the stage, but someone forgot to make accommodations. Eventually, we were given the option of staying where we were, or we could be escorted through the crowd to the stage. "Lead the way," I said. Event staff led some of us through the crowd. I got slimed with sweat, hollered at by drunk fans, and pinched in the derrière, but I found my way to the T-shaped runway extending from the stage. I quickly made friends with a couple of very excited fans and a security worker, who very much looked the part but was quite friendly. I was one with the crowd when McGraw hit the stage, and I wouldn't have wanted it any other way.
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Lisa Peavy, left, and Rachel Jackson in the front row. |
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Fans next to the stage reach out to country music star Tim McGraw at Paulson Stadium in Statesboro. |
Amazing what just a little access can do for my psyche.
It's like music to my ears.
on May 11, 2010 at 9:38 PM
Great blog, Scott! Man, that photo of me is when I had more brown hair than grey. My friend Rob said something very interesting to me tonight. He said "A movie can take two hours to get you to an emotional high. A song can do it in 20 seconds". Funny thing is, he's a movie buff-not a musician.
on May 19, 2010 at 6:12 AM
I always find it ironic when I'm being led away after the three song limit and see dozens of hands in the air holding cell phones, taking pictures.
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