Jackie Roman

Feature Submission- A Giant Dog by Jackie Roman

A Giant Dog by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Hell Gate Exclusive of reportage and portraits of A Giant Dog on the day of their Death By Audio gig by Jackie Roman, Brooklyn, NY May 4, 2013 View the gallery here.

Norton Records Recovery

Norton Records Owners Billy Miller and Miriam Linna by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Many small business and independent businesses are still reeling from the impact of hurricane Sandy and Norton Records had a lot of damage to their inventory being based in Red Hook Brooklyn. Hundreds of volunteers such as our very own Jackie Roman and Jared Swilley of The Black Lips pitched in to physically clean & dry over 250,000 plus records. Jackie has done an excellent job of her first person account, read her blog entry.

Norton is having a great raffle to raise money to help with the recovery, you can still enter the raffle. Prizes include prints and limited edition books from Jackie. You can also donate directly here. 

Just to reiterate what a jewel Norton Records is, check out their 25th anniversary celebration photographed, of course, by Jackie. Thanks again for continuing to shine a light on Norton.

Jackie Roman on Noisey

This year Jackie Roman was hired as the Bruise Cruise’s staff photographer- She did a phenomenal job last year for us with her Hell Gate Exclusive images. We will have Jackie’s images from this year’s antics available for licensing shortly.

Till then, Noisey’s done another great segment on Jackie. The tropical storms where no match for Jackie, Fucked Up and King Khan.

Feature Submission- Norton Records 25th Anniversary by Jackie Roman

Russell Quan of the Phantom Surfers by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Celebrating 25 years from the label that’s  introduced and/ or reissued seminal records from the Sonics, Question Mark and the Mysterians, the 5.6.7.8′s   and Hasil Adkins. Jackie Roman was on hand to document 4 nights of music history.

Friday Night Is Curry Night

The Biters by Jackie Roman/The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Jackie Roman’s long time, deep, deep under cover project with The Biters is something very close to the Hell Gate’s heart.  Her commitment to the cause led her to a scene like this. The Brick Lane curry challenge here in NYC.

Shit hot curry. Shit hot photographer.

 

Mr. Animal

Andy Animal of the Stalkers, photo by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

If The Hell Gate had its choice of a mascot, it would be Andy Animal of the Stalkers. Someone once described him as “what illness would look like if it where a person” but what we see is a wear-your-heart-on-your-sleeve-type of fellow. He’s at once lovable and repulsive…. and being the front man of the Stalkers follows in the tradition of the New York Dolls and the Ramones- when New York does music right. Here’s some images of Andy and the  Stalkers in action, may he never change. And yes, that photo of him in the police car is real.

Andy Animal of the Stalkers, photo by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Walk The Plank

Jared of The Black Lips- Jackie Roman/Hell Gate Exclusive- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Well I guess these things are cyclical… Doesn’t seem so long ago that the live experience was being held up as the savior of the music bottom line. Now we hear more about the explosion in platforms, great performance figures for internet radio despite Pandora & Rhapsody & artists placing their work in all kinds of original & relentlessly commercial ways… Maybe there is a buck or two in digital….

This article in The Independent yesterday points to some uncomfortable numbers & a few things that have become obvious to the regular gig enthusiast. As the Summer Festival season winds down(don’t forget that Lollapalooza is tomorrow kids and steaming live on Youtube)  thoughts are scattered about like the field on the last night Glastonbury.

I don’t like the idea of super groups touring the world for a year earning money the size of a small nation’s GDP. As a music lover I also don’t like the financial commitment involved in sharing a field with a bunch of pasty hipsters for 2 days constantly worrying about going to the bathroom. These sums can start businesses or get your ass to a Mediterranean beach. The cost of regular gig tickets on any night of the week are also way too prohibitive for these shows not to be events. Events are tied more to the hospitality industry, they don’t intertwine with your life in the way a gig used to.

The Chalet/No to VIP area mentality of the likes of ATP are a breath of fresh air & you just hope the glut of small independent festivals can buck the trend of this article.

I’d say the innovation of the likes of Sixth Man is great as long as some principals hold up – getting fans closer to the point of creativity & closer to the artist. Boats & trips abroad are a few upgrades (so hospitality would say) away from straight up elitist BS at ridiculous prices– a bad marketer/Premier Package nightmare.

Great music should come out of the small venues & the clubs & I’d love to see innovation happening there. Day in day out. Now that’s aspiration I don’t need a brochure for.

To revisit tom foolery on the high seas go to Jackie Roman’s photos of The Bruise Cruise

The Death of Music Hagiography

Photo of the Biters by Jackie Roman/Hell Gate Exclusive- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission

Rarely a day goes by where The Hell Gate isn’t discussing the state & the craft of music photography. We are obviously vested in this very subject, as are the people we work with.

Yesterday we had the pleasure of seeing this in print… A Paul Natkin article The Shrinking World of Music Photography in Elmore ( tagline “Saving Music”) goes through some repeated truths: the rise of publicity & sometimes dumb publicity, the three song rule & the rise of “the contract” & how the bottom has fallen out of anyone ever actually getting paid to shoot a gig. All true, point well made.
But let’s talk about what is music photography, let us offer a couple of thoughts;

What is music photography when most artists we work with would never define themselves as music photographers?  They would not define themselves in such singular terms when they understand the landscape (& marketplace) they work in. Great photographers quite often shoot great musicians & frequently produce great, great work. The next week, they shoot great actors, fashion designers & architects. Check out a news stand – Is that Adele or Florence Welch cover from a “music photographer?” – All I know is that its great work.

The people who commission and the artists who seek out that photographer know that too. Lets separate great photography from hagiography & iconography. A great music photograph can be drawn from reportage (Kim Badawi) through to high end portraiture (Danny Clinch).

The volume of print media (yes, print media) covering music has exploded in recent years – As above, the lines have blurred between singular (fashion/design/women’s titles/ general pop culture) worlds.  There’s nothing singular about the guys taking advantage of that. Not to say that this democratization hasn’t had an effect on budget. This very pervasiveness (One in 6 Americans use Pandora etc) & an explosion in platforms & digital is, again, a huge opportunity. More artists have an opportunity to be heard & to be seen visually than ever before. Think of one break-out band from recent years & I can pinpoint the 1-3 great photographers who carry the content authority on that band- their “go to” photographer.

The guys at the front at the gig:  The world is full of live music material & guess what, the laws of supply & demand apply to photographers as well. If what we produce is produced for a wire, then guess what, it will be subject to wire pricing. If what we produce is no better than wire, then guess what, it will be subject to wire pricing.If that is music photography then I wish it would go away.

Record Store Owners & Label Founders Remain True Curators

Larry Hardy of In The Red Records in his office. Photo by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate. This image is copyrighted- not for use without permission

 

As we were editing Jackie Roman’s recent photo essay of her trip to LA to spend time with founder of In The Red Records and taste maker of all things garage punk, Larry Hardy, we were pleasantly surprised that Jackie’s trip coincided with the grand opening of Permanent Records LA outpost. We knew the photos of Larry’s office would be great- highlights include Hardy’s massive vinyl collection (natch), and a visit from In The Red artists Jared Swilley of the Black Lips and  Katy Goodman of  the Vivian Girls.

We also got to thinking that record store owners and label founders are curators by nature- it is something hardwired into their DNA- not some passing trend were everyone and everything is suddenly “curated”.  As there is infinite choice out there on what to listen to, it’s become a blessing and a curse- for those of us that are time-pressed, or just overwhelmed with sifting through crappy and/or boring releases to get to the good stuff, relying on someone with good taste/high standards and a vast knowledge of music (all hallmarks of label founders/ independent record store owners) is a relief. We still have our old standbys when in comes to labels and records stores– and have embraced new and exciting ones into the fold- one thing that hasn’t changed even though so many things have is that these guys continue to stand behind what they stock and who they sign. We hope this never changes.

This is yet another Hell Gate Exclusive and you can view all the images on The Hell Gate site here and Jackie Roman’s musings of her West Coast trip on her blog. We remain jealous that Jackie snagged The Spits LP and that really tasty tacos were consumed.

Jackie Roman’s Coverage of Atlanta Mess Around 2011

Paul Artiques & Guitar Lightnin’ Lee. photo by Jackie Roman/ The Hell Gate- image is copyrighted, not for use without permission.

New photos up on The Hell Gate site from April 19th’s Atlanta Mess Around. This is a must for garage rock aficionados… In- your-face live shots, some southern BBQ action and local heroes. Images are available for licensing. For Jackie’s most excellent blog post about her weekend go here.