PhotogRaPhy
Transcription
PhotogRaPhy
iy d A g et d i u o Rock Photography b y ju s tina villanu e va an introduction << a great resource for learning how to find things to photograph h u nte r qualities a pho to grap h e r s h ould h ave by a u tho r D a vid La Be lle : B u rning Des ire / Curiosity / I m a g i n a t i o n / L istening / People watching / I n s i g h t / A b i l ity To Blend / Prepa ra tio n / Pat ie nce / P e r sistence / Planning / A Nee d T o S h a r e / Re s o ur ceful ness / Co nfidence / Com pas s ion What is rock photography Jim Marshall is one of the most famous rock photographers ever. He used to say that he could SEE the music. A great music photograph shows the music. It can be a portrait, a live shot or a candid documentary photo that shows how a musician lives. It can show life backstage or in a van. It can show fans' reactions and emotions. The most important thing it needs to show, however, is the power of music. important Photographer Qualities Passion having a deep fire within you to document a music scene Awareness understanding the culture you are capturing and the magic that surrounds you Patience having the calm persistance to wait for the right moment Discipline having the technical skill to make the images you see in your head elements of art Principles of art (building blocks of visual art) (arrangement of the elements) Line Pattern Shape/form Rhythm / Movement Color Proportion / Scale Value Balance Texture Unity Space / Perspective Emphasis H ow d o i g et sta rt ed? What do I need? To make your very first pictures you need a camera. Cameras can cost anything from free (a gift) to $40,000. Cameras are everywhere, in your phone, your ipod, in pharmacies (disposable cameras are awesome too). When you are just starting you should use what you can get your hands on (aka the cheapest thing) and learn the basics. The camera you have on you is better than no camera at all. Once you start shooting more and more, you can RENT a camera or buy a REFURBISHED camera. I bought my first DSLR (digital single lens reflex camera) at B&H (a giant photography gear store) for $400. It was money I saved up. Even though the camera looked pretty crappy and was taped all over, I still own it and it works great. H ow do I get access? Besides having a camera, the second most important thing you need is ACCESS. I started out in the DIY (do it yourself) scene where I didn't need permission from someone's publicist to take pictures. I could just show up and take pictures. The bigger the band or musician, the tighter the security and accessiblity will be. A lot of smaller all ages clubs are awesome. BUT, if you need to get into a “Photo Pit” you will need a “Photo Pass” to get there. One way to get a photo pass is to contact the band directly through email or facebook. When a band is too big for personal contact, you can find out who their publicist is through their record label or website. OR you can ask the venue directly. And when that doesn't work, you can use the school-paper angle (“I am doing a story for my high school newspaper”) and you can use the “I'm working on a school project” angle. And at first you might sit out a lot of the big shows, but if you keep at it (and with a smile the whole way) you will be shooting at MSG in no time. Eventually you will learn what magazines and blogs are right for each band and you can freelance for those magazines or blogs and they will help you get into the bigger shows. But until then, discover the next big thing at the All Ages shows (like matinees at ABC No Rio). And use your small point and shoot or camera-phone to make pictures and develop your style. H ow do I go pro? Here's a list of what makes a professional photographer a “professional”. This is from the Photoshelter Blog. After the CEO of Flickr made a statement about professional photographers no longer existing, the founder of Photoshelter compiled this list. I live by this. A Professional Photographer: 1. Approaches a project in a manner that shows respect for both the subject and the client's goal. 2. Works with a client to achieve that goal under specific budget constraints. 3. Delivers the end result, as agreed upon, on time and in a manner that shows the client's most critical needs are understood. 4. Finds ways to make a client's life easier from the beginning of a project to the end, including saving them time and making them look like a hero. 5. Is prepared to face any problem with a creative solution, from the most dire to the off-the-wall. 6. Takes criticism and adjusts (quickly) in order to get the job done. 7. Can completely pivot among all kinds of changing circumstances. 8. Presents, negotiates, agrees, executes, invoices, and follows up with consistency and personal pride. 9. Knows how to pitch and market oneself with accuracy so the promised service is what's delivered. 10.Researches the subject of a story and contributes insights and vision that make the end result better. 11. Builds rapport with a subject in a way that gains unique access, makes them more comfortable, or exposes their personality. 12.Keeps one's composure while dodging bombs, borders, and mobs, linebackers and foul balls, sharks, elephants, horses, and bees, roadies, divas, tornadoes, and brides and any other incoming threats or obstacles, and still gets the job done. 13.There's nobody I've met on this planet who can tell stories like a professional photographer can. Period. The most important thing you can do as a photographer of any kind is to BUILD TRUST. Build trust with musicians, people around you (like other fans), people who pay you and yourself. The T ec h n i ca l these are your camera controls focus The focal point is a point at which rays of light converge. Most lenses have numbers on top that measure your distance from a subject in feet or meters. You can use those numbers to focus on your subject. If a guitarist is 3 feet away from you, you can use that guide on your lens to get a better focussing point. Once you learn how to control your lens and manually focus, you will be a master at getting the best shots. Once you learn the space of a room, you will be able to walk in, look around, and set your cameras settings. You will have done so much shooting that the scary technical parts of photography will be second nature. You will become your own light meter. Aperature The measure of the lens opening which dictates how much light enters into the lens. It is measured by an f-number (sometimes called f-stops). In concert photography you always want your lens to be opened wide, which means a smaller f-number (somewhere from f/1.4 to 2.8 is ideal in scenarios when a flash can't be used). However, the larger your aperature (again, a smaller number), the more your background will be blurred. This makes focussing extremely important. Shutter speed The amount of time that light is let into the lens to expose an image. In concert photography you want a fast shutter speed to capture moving people. I try to keep mine at least at 1/125 of second when I'm not using a flash. iso The ISO number dictates the camera's sensor or the film's sensitivity to light. The higher the ISO the more light the camera lets in, but this also means you will have a higher amount of grain on your images. White balance Adjusting your white balance to the color temperature of the room will allow the colors in your images to be more realistic. Color temperature is measured in kelvins. Candles and matches have really low color temperatures and produce a reddish-orange hue. Flourescent lights, daylight (the sun) and cloudy skies produce a white light. Other terms to look up RAW, depth of field, perspective distortion, rule of thirds, panorama, timelapse, fill flash, motion blur, macro, pinhole, red eye effect, lomography, vignetting, cross processing, bokeh, megapixels Some r es o u rc e s photo blogs Books Alice Wheeler featureshoot.com (there is an endless Francine Winham flakphoto.com list of photography aphotoeditor.com books you should famous women strobist.com check out. go to your photographers mastheads.org library and STUDY Diane Arbus blog.photoshelter.com as many pictures as Eve Arnold photorumors.com you can.) Tina Barney thisisacult.org noplasticsleeves.com Lillian Bassman women rock Margaret Bourke- photographers White music blogs Angela Boatwright Donna Ferrato brooklynvegan.com Merri Cyr Nan Goldin pitchfork.com Justine DeMetrick Jill Greenberg stereogum.com Cindy Frey Dorothea Lange spin.com Jill Furmonovsky Brenda Ann Kenneally invisibleoranges.com Lynn Goldsmith Nina Leen cvltnation.com Janet Macoska Annie Leibovitz rookiemag.com Catherine McGann Helen Levitt amoeba.com Maria Mochnacz Vivian Maier Clare Muller Mary Ellen Mark magazines Marcia Resnick Linda McCartney Tom Tom Magazine Sheila Rock Cindy Sherman Decibel Magazine Pennie Smith Lorna Simpson The Fader Gloria Stavers Vice Ellen Von Unwerth photography Rolling Stone Elizabeth Weinberg organizations ASMP Documentary Assistant // American Society of Editorial Set designer Media Photographers Event Food Stylist Fashion Prop Stylist PPA Fine Art Stylist (clothing) // Professional Food Art Director Photographers of Forensic Photo editor America Lifestyle Retoucher Medical Art Buyer YPA Paparazzi Producer // Young Photojournalism Agent Photographers Alliance Product Designer Police & Legal Digital Tech RockArchive.Org Portrait Artist Representative // look at famous Real Estate Coordinator rock photographs Sports Studio Manager and read about the Still Life Model people who shot Stock Accountant them Street photography Bookkeeper Travel Attorney other Types of Underwater Caterer photography War Costume Designer Aerial photography Wedding Hair & Makeup Animal & Pet Wildlife Astrophotography Architechture photo inudstry jobs Commercial Photographer a guide to r o c k p hotograph y