Jamelia, East London 2000.

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

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Although my aim is sometimes to get to photograph my subjects before they become big stars, occasionally you can get to someone too early.  I think that was the case here.

Although perfectly friendly and well behaved, I met Jamelia when she seemed short of confidence and, perhaps, unsure of the exact direction her career was taking. 

That’s the way it seemed to me in any case.  She very soon became a completely different proposition to the one I encountered.

So this is her during her early, somewhat boyish phase.

Edinburgh 1986.

Friday, 15 July 2011

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There's been a lot in the news recently about News International journalists bribing corrupt police officers to provide information.

I don't suppose it was exactly bribery but I was once involved in acquiring information from a police officer for a newspaper article.

Back in the mid '80s, I was a fully paid up member of the NUJ (the British Journalist's Union) and I was working regularly for the Sunday Telegraph.   I got commissioned to go to Edinburgh to work on a story about the huge number of heroin addicts they had in the city and the way that this was contributing to the AIDS epidemic. 

The plan was for me to photograph prostitutes, junkies in 'shooting galleries' and some of the doctors, research scientists and health workers that were struggling to cope with the situation.

On being briefed, my first question was "how exactly are we going find the prostitutes?"

My second question most probably would have been "and how are we going to avoid getting arrested?"

I didn't get around to the second question because of the answer to the first.  We were going to be shown around town and introduced to various individuals by a senior policeman.  A Superintendent or Chief Superintendent if I recall correctly.  But it may be better if I'm not too specific anyway.

The journalist and I went up to Edinburgh with a big wad of cash, which we knew would all have to be strictly accounted for.

But this is the interesting, or at least relevant, bit.  We were told that under no account would the policeman himself be able to accept any money for helping us, least it be construed as a form of bribery.

This struck me as odd, since he would not have been doing anything illegal for us but simply introducing us to people which we could probably find ourselves, given enough time.  Who knows, bearing in mind the way many heroin addicts finance their habit, maybe they would have found us first.

But, we were advised that it might be just about acceptable to buy the police officer a bottle of whisky, as a token of our appreciation for his help.

Which we did.

On meeting him, in his office, he was very much a Central Casting version of a policeman who really could have stepped right out of an episode of Taggart.   He was big, world weary and very plain speaking.  We'd only been with the guy for four or five minutes before he declared that my kind "made him sick".  In those days I was a Labour Party activist and I may have had a slightly negative view of the police in general (so he probably had a point).

Nevertheless, despite his view of me, I immediately took a shine to the guy.  He was sharp, very amusing and, as far as I could tell, sincerely seemed to care about the job he was doing.

I assumed he'd keep the bottle of whisky for Christmas or at least when he was off duty.

How little I knew.

As soon as he got it, he opened it and fetched three glasses.

I had a decent three fingers of it myself as did the journalist I was with.  The policeman drank almost all the rest and after about 40 minutes, when we left his office, there was only about two inches of it left in the bottle.

He then took us out for tour around Edinburgh's main vice district, with him driving.

It was a Sunday afternoon and the streets were fairly deserted.  It was at a time when the pubs were still not allowed to open on Sunday afternoons.  We parked outside one pub that had absolutely no sign of any life.  The policeman walked over and knocked twice on one of the window shutters, the door opened and we were admitted to a loud, brightly lit pub full of drinkers.  Inside it was just like it was a Friday or Saturday evening.  We bought some drinks and sat at a table in a corner.  No one seemed to bat an eyelid at our presence.  One by one, people came over to greet the policeman and have a brief chat.  Everyone there seemed to know him and he confided to us that, at one time or another, he'd "put away" most them.  Nevertheless, they all seemed pretty friendly.

Later on, after a few calls had been made and some appointments fixed, we left the pub and drove over to meet a prostitute in a dingy flat on a nearby council estate.  The room she lived and worked in contained virtually nothing, save a mattress and bedding on the floor.  There was no actual bed.  She had a radio, a fan heater, some cigarettes, a mug and a paperback book.   And that was just about it.

She looked absolutely nothing like any fictional depiction of a prostitute like, say, the one in Pretty Woman.  Without wishing to appear in any way ungallant, this woman was not pretty.  She was short, dowdy and rather plump.  Instead of the fictional high heels, suspenders and stockings, she wore only a large, baggy shirt.

She seemed unhappy, undoubtedly with very good reason.  In another room was a baby, about nine months old, in a cot.  We were told before we arrived that they both had AIDS.  The baby seemed content enough and looked exactly like any other nine month old baby.

It was all desperately sad. I can't even type these words twenty five years later without it bringing a tear to my eye.  No one should really have to live a life like that.

Afterwards, we drove back to the policeman's beautiful flat in a much nicer part of town and spent the evening talking and drinking.  At no point, during the time we were with him, did the policeman appear at all the worse for drink.  I'm afraid I can't say the same for the journalist or myself.  I woke up the next day with the most monumental hangover.

Over the next couple of days, I met up with several groups of heroin addicts. They all seemed to me like fairly normal, happy teenage boys and young men.  In chatting to them they all came across as intelligent and articulate.  They claimed to know about the risks they were taking but gave the impression of being totally resigned to what might not be a particularly long or fruitful life.  They didn't have to share their needles, they just didn't seem to care much either way.  I'm no psychologist but it appeared like they didn't think they had very much to live for anyway.

Since I did this particular assignment a quarter of a century ago, I'd never really looked back through the prints or negatives again, until a few days ago.

I didn't mind doing that kind of work.  I've shot other depressing subjects, like the homeless or parents of murdered children for instance (for Time Out) and I was happy to do those kind of jobs because I felt it was somehow worthwhile.

But I'd be lying if I said that I was always as keen to photograph subjects like that as I was to work with actors and pop stars.  And I suppose it's true to say that my photographic priorities were probably not always what they should have been.  To shoot star portraits, which are basically just a small part of a PR campaign for a film or a record, is not in any way important or life changing.  It’s sometimes useful to remember that.

Having spent the better part of the last 30 years engaged in exactly that kind of photography, it's probably something I ought not to dwell on.

Helen Mirren, Los Angeles 1997.

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

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Sometime in the early '90s, I was in LA with the journalist James Brown.  Again I found that I'd been booked to stay at the Riot House (mentioned in the previous entry).

One early evening I went into the bar to wait for James to come down from his room, so that we could go out and get dinner.  In those days the bar there was small and rather dreary.  There were only two other customers in the place.  A guy sat at the bar and Little Richard reading in one of the booths.  It sounds odd now but seeing Little Richard around the place in those days wasn't that unusual, since he lived there.  I didn't run up and ask for his autograph or anything, I just assumed he wanted to be left in peace.  

So I sat next to the guy at the bar.  He was quite a friendly, chatty bloke and, after asking me where I was from etc., he said to me in a low voice "Hey, you know who that is over there, it's Little Richard.  Why don't you go over and get his autograph?"

I said "I really don't think I want to bother him" but the guy was insistent.

"He really doesn't mind, he does it all the time" he said.

So, after being badgered a bit by this bloke, I did as he suggested.  I walked over and asked Little Richard for his autograph.  At which he pulled out some religious paperback, from a bag, signed it and gave it to me.  He seemed rather pleased to have been asked.  Apparently in those days, he always gave one of these little religious books away with every autograph. 

Just about this time, James turned up. 

I thanked the guy at the bar for his tip and me and James walked out.

When we got outside, as we were waiting for a cab James said to me "You know who that was a the bar don't you?"

"No" I said.

"That was Bobby Womack."

This isn't simply another excuse for my name dropping.  I mention this incident because it shows just how pleasant and humble some very famous people can turn out to be.  Bobby Womack for one.  He's almost as big an icon as Little Richard.  He never told me he was Bobby Womack. Or for a moment suggest I might want his autograph too.

God only knows what I did with that book.  I'm not really an autograph hunter.  I never have been.

I was searching for another photograph taken in and around the Riot House to illustrate this piece but couldn't find one.  So I've used a photograph of Helen Mirren, taken at the Chateau Marmont a few years later.

The Chateau Marmont is only a few blocks East down Sunset Boulevard but it's a far more upscale and discreet hotel than the Riot House.

Helen Mirren was tremendously good fun.

When she was asked if she’d mind if we photographed her in the shower, she didn’t bat an eye. Afterwards, she and I went for an ice cream at the Double Rainbow on Melrose.

The Beautiful South, Los Angeles 1990.

Thursday, 30 June 2011

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When I look back at the time I spent as a rock photographer, it's shoots like this that sum up why it can often be such a lively and fun job.

It was a beautifully hot Los Angeles afternoon.  Paul Heaton and Dave Hemingway, from the band The Beautiful South were in the pool of a ritzy hotel.  I can't deny it, I was even in the pool myself.  And it certainly seemed like a good photo opportunity to me.

It's a wonderful pool.  It's right at the top of a very well known hotel on Sunset Boulevard and the views of West Hollywood and distant towers of Downtown Los Angeles are spectacular.

This particular pool is quite well known and it’s at the top of the the hotel forever known in the rock pantheon as the 'Riot House.'

For those that don't know, the Continental Hyatt House (or slightly more recently The Hyatt On Sunset) was the hotel most synonymous with the over the top, rock star antics of the '70s and '80s.

At their peak Led Zeppelin would rent as many as six floors there and John Bonham apparently rode a motorcycle along it’s corridors.  In 'Cocksucker Blues', the unreleased documentary about the Rolling Stones made by the legendary photographer Robert Frank, Keith Richards is seen chucking a TV off a balcony there.  The Who often stayed at the Riot House during the days when Keith Moon was at his most outrageous.  It's reported that he also threw TV's from the balconies there but, for him, that would have just been for starters.

And the hilarious end of tour party scene in Spinal Tap was filmed around the very same pool.

I suppose The Beautiful South would be about as different to Led Zeppelin or The Who as it would be possible to be and still be in the same business.  Whilst I'm sure they must have had their moments of youthful excess, for the short time I spent with them on tour in California, they were about as quiet, friendly and polite as it would be possible to imagine a rock band to be.

Me and the journalist, Stuart Maconie had met up with them a few days previously in San Francisco.  There we had all been booked into the two story Phoenix Motel which, for some unfathomable reason, all the rock bands of that era also liked to stay in.  Maybe, like the Riot House in LA, it was because the staff were similarly unconcerned by all the bacchanalia?   Or maybe it was because the TV’s had less of a distance to fall?

Whatever the reason, the Phoenix was certainly in a very rough neighbourhood, cheek by jowl with the notorious Tenderloin district.  I suppose airborne TVs were the least of the area’s problems.

On our first evening there, we went out with the band and some members of their road crew and managed to get into a fight.

Or at least "fight" is the way the incident is remembered in Stuart Maconie's otherwise wonderful book 'Cider With Roadies.'

It's not quite the way I remember it.  There were about eight or nine of us and we walked into what Stuart says was a Mexican bar called Spartacus.  I was the first one through the door and even before I'd got up to the bar, for reasons best known to himself, a real tough looking character took a swing at me.  I tried to duck and he only caught me a glancing blow on the shoulder.

Call me old fashioned but I always do my best to avoid getting into bar fights, whatever the perceived justification might be.  All the more so in countries where the police and a sizeable proportion of the citizenry own guns.  In his book Stuart claims that a fight ensued and that pool cues were involved.  I certainly didn't see any.  The Beautiful South were just not the fighting with pool cues types.  Not at all.  All I remember is getting punched once and there was a bit of shouting.  After which we all rapidly exited the bar.   We were then chased a short distance up the street.

So we simply walked around the corner and found a different, slightly more friendly bar to have a drink in.

Does this story make me and the band out to be a bunch of wimps?  I suppose so.  It's not half as rock n' roll as Stuart's version.  But if I'd ended up in hospital or in jail I'd never have had the chance, a few days later, to shoot the Beautiful South in the Riot House pool.  A photograph which later graced the cover of the NME.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Cider-Roadies-School-without-Growing/dp/0091891159

Van with no wheels, Feltham 1981.

Wednesday, 22 June 2011

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This may look like a van with no wheels but to me it was an epiphany.

I was prostrate, stripped to a pair of shorts in a corner of the car park of Feltham Swimming Baths at the time, so it was an odd position to be seeing the light from.  But it was at just about that moment, whilst I was taking that photograph, that I came to realise that I didn't really want to be doing that sort of thing anymore. 

By "that sort of thing", I mean advertising photography.  At that moment, I realised that, other than financially, it was never going to amount to a particularly sensible career aspiration for me.

It was in August 1981 and it was only a few months after I'd left work at the London advertising agency Royds, where I'd spent the previous three years working as an art director.

Though I say "left" that word isn't exactly right.  I was fired for reasons which, even now, I'm not completely sure about.  But it wasn't the first time I'd been fired from an advertising agency, far from it.  In those days, employers never needed much of a reason.  Especially in the rather cut-throat advertising business.

Thinking back, it might have been because I'd elected not to work on the apartheid era South African Airways account.  I don't honestly know.  I'd worked on quite a lot of successful accounts at Royds and I thought I'd done very well.  But refusing to work on the South African Airways account may have upset the ultra-Conservative (with a cap C) chairman.  I thought I had a choice but maybe I really didn't.

A few weeks later they just said "we're going to have to let you go" and that was it.

I really enjoyed working as an ad agency art director.  At times, it really was a bit like the TV show Mad Men.  But with a lot more emphasis on the mad.

In the context of 2011, some of the habits and working processes of ad men of the time would seem totally certifiable.  Even then we realised much of what we were getting away with was a little excessive.   Hugely enjoyable but certainly excessive. (I hope to tell more stories from my time in the ad world on here).

But, after ten years, a little voice in my head suggested that maybe I'd be better off out of the ad world.  And besides, if you're in the creative department and you're not at, or near, the top by the time you're 30, you're rapidly reaching your sell-by date anyway.

But my sacking came at a perfect time in my fledgling photography career.  I'd just had my second one man show ('Skinheads' in the Autumn of 1980) and I was getting my work into print fairly regularly.  Plus many of my advertising friends said that they'd give me some photography work, if I decided to try to make a career out of it.

And so, a few months after I left Royds, one of my old colleagues called me in and asked me to take a photo of a van with no wheels.  They showed me a few layouts and said it could be any van, just as long as it had no wheels.  They didn't want anything much in the background either.  That was all.  It seemed simple enough.

So that's how I came to be laying down, half naked, in the grit and grime of Feltham Swimming Baths car park.  It was the only place I could find near where I lived that would allow me to take a photo of the van without too many buildings or trees in the background.

It seemed like relatively easy money, so I hired a van and four car stands and set about the task.

Anyone who'd been watching me that day whilst I did that shoot would have seen someone drive in and park a rental van in the emptiest corner of the car park.  Then they'd have seen them jack up and remove all four wheels, remove most their clothes, (it was an extremely hot, humid day) and then go and lie down on the ground about 40 feet away take a few photographs of the wheelless van.  Then then they'd have seen that person put the wheels back on, get dressed and drive off....

Anyone watching might have thought it seemed crazy.

As I was laying there sweating, with car park grit sticking to my chest, elbows and legs, it started to dawn on me that maybe I didn't want to be an advertising photographer after all.

I didn't have an assistant in those days (it would be nearly a decade before I had one) and it simply didn't occur to me how much stress and bother I would have saved if I'd simply hired an assistant for the day.  That is what photographic assistants are for, after all, to do the hard stuff, so you don't have to.

But this was the moment I decided that that kind of photography work just wasn't for me.

The guys at the agency seemed pleased and the ad itself turned out surprisingly well.  But it wasn't the kind of photograph anyone dreams of taking and if it wasn't for this blog, this photograph would have been forgotten by all concerned three decades ago.

Tom Waits, Paris 1992.

Thursday, 9 June 2011

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This photograph looks for all the world like I came across Tom Waits lounging about the jazz quarter of Marseilles or New Orleans. In fact it was taken among the cloisters in the grounds of a rather upscale hotel in Paris.

Tom Waits is quite obviously a very sharp and perceptive bloke, but his manner and boho demeanour might, if you didn’t know his work, lead you to think the opposite.  I always smile when I think of the time a very young Ian Hislop made the mistake of trying to make fun of him on British TV.  Ian Hislop certainly got what he deserved that day because Tom Waits gave him a terrible verbal going over. Now that Ian Hislop is a big TV star himself, I’m rather surprised they don’t show that clip more in the before-they-were-famous shows. Maybe Ian Hislop's had it destroyed?

Apparently Charles Bukowski once said of Tom Waits that "the guy doesn't have an original bone in his body."  Coming from someone who owed quite a bit to John Fante, I don't think this is entirely fair.  Plus it’s not quite the point.  Tom Waits may never have really lived the life quite like Bukowski did but they both wrote equally brilliantly about a certain milieu.  One that I suspect is far better to hear or read about than actually live within.

At Taboo, Leicester Square 1986.

Saturday, 21 May 2011

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Following on from my posting yesterday, I think I should explain how I came to be in Xenon nightclub that night.

I'd been working for about a year for the Sunday Telegraph. Being way right of centre, the Telegraph had never been a paper I'd read but the people working there were nice and I enjoyed the opportunity it afforded me to shoot portraits of people other than rock stars and actors. Unfortunately, whenever they commissioned me to shoot photographs other than portraits, they almost always had a very fixed, preconceived idea about what they wanted. Irrespective of whatever I may or may not have found when I arrived to that the photos, they always wanted them to precisely illustrate a particular point. And very often the story had already been written.

George Harrison and Madonna, Kensington 1986.

Friday, 20 May 2011

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Recently the actor Hugh Grant has been on the radio and TV speaking in support of High Court 'super' injunctions and moaning about how the British tabloids have tried to “steal the privacy” of famous celebrities like himself.

If he'd decided to do whatever he did that time with Divine Brown in private, instead of in a car parked just off Sunset Boulevard, maybe he'd have a point.

I do happen to think the British tabloids are far too intrusive but, most famously in the case of the late Princess of Wales, there is often a element of covert collusion.

And sometimes it's hard to know exactly what celebrities do really want.

In 1987 I got commissioned by The Sunday Telegraph to take photographs of young people having fun in various London nightclubs.  I walked into Xenon nightclub in Piccadilly (which was a notorious celeb hangout) with a camera over my shoulder and almost as soon as got through the door a guy came running over.  He said he was with "Frida from Abba", he was her manager and she was having a quiet night out with friends.  "Under no circumstances", he told me, should I take her photograph.  He said I should make sure that she wasn't even in the background of any of my photos.

I told him I wasn't a member of the paparazzi and I promised him that he need not worry.  I said I wouldn't come anywhere near either of them.

This seemed to satisfy him but about ten minutes later he came over to me again.  This time he told me that he'd had a word with Frida and that, if I was really quick, she'd consent to having her photograph taken.  "But just the one mind."   I thanked him and again tried to explain that it wasn't the type of photograph I was after anyway and, if he didn't mind, I'd really rather not.  On hearing this he offered to buy me a drink if I came over and took a few photos of her.  I still declined.

I left the club soon after that to avoid being further bothered by the fellow.

I honestly have no idea if it really was Frida or whether the guy really was her manager.  Xenon was an awful nightclub.  I think it was the only time I ever went there.

But it does rather remind one of Oscar Wilde's maxim that "the only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about" - in this case, extrapolating the notion to photography.

I've never been a member of the paparazzi myself but I've known a couple (including Nick Elgar, the grandson of Edward) and they always struck me as decent, hardworking guys just trying to make a crust.  But standing outside in the cold waiting to photograph someone who may or may not want to be photographed never really appealed to me much.

The photograph above is from one of the few times I came closest to acting like a paparazzi.  It's from a photo call in 1986 for the film Shanghai Surprise and it took place in the famous Roof Garden club above Barkers in Kensington.  Afterwards, I ran after Madonna's car as she left and took a few more photos. Trying to avoid being pushed over or attacked by her security guards, which only a few minutes before had been helping me, was a strange but oddly exhilarating experience.  But not one I ever wanted to repeat.

The above photograph isn't very good, I know.  All the rest were even worse.  Maybe it's just as well I never became a member of the paparazzi.  I'm just not an in-your-face type photographer.  I'm sure I'd have been no good at it.