Smithsonian Rock and Roll the Peoples Pictures Book Review

Information technology'southward often been asked of us, for a vinyl-centric and certainly record store-centric website, what's with all the alive photography? Simply stated, it's the beating heart of the artistry that puts those vinyl records in the record shops, and information technology's besides the live performance circuit where the artists are making the bulk of their banking concern these days. So, from such various points as San Francisco, Chicago, Washington, DC, and London among others, we're at that place upward front for the first 3, and so out.

To underscore the marriage betwixt alive operation and the photographers who capture each high spring, guitar thrust, and hip hinge comes Smithsonian Books' Smithsonian Rock and Ringlet, a stunning and exquisitely designed coffee table-sized ode to the same artistry—whose timing is apt given that there are some who perhaps lose sight of the celebrated nature of the still paradigm to document and amplify live performance.

Nosotros have a copy ofSmithsonian Stone and Ringletto give abroad to i of you, but first some official background on the dazzling decade by decade photographic overview that Smithsonian Books has assembled:

Prince at the Greensboro Coliseum in North Carolina, Nov. 14, 1984. (John Rottet / Smithsonian Books)

Smithsonian Books has published Smithsonian Stone and Roll, a "gorgeous" (Parade) collection of mostly crowd-sourced rock and roll photography that features photos of some of stone's most iconic artists—including Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin, Chuck Drupe, The Who, Rolling Stones, and Metallica—along with accompanying write-ups from music industry veteran Nib Bentley.

It has received praise from the Washington Mail, Parade, AARP, Mashable, Dangerous Minds and more, with the LA Times calling it "gritty, raw and uncensored…a candid compendium of musical history marked past the trapped-in-fourth dimension moments that moved a concert-goer to raise photographic camera to eye, or cellphone to air."

Joni Mitchell at Kleinhans Music Hall, Buffalo, N.Y., Feb. xi, 1974. (Amy Jaffe / Smithsonian Books)

In December 2015, the Smithsonian called on rock and roll lovers around the earth to collect photos and stories of their favorite moments in music. Fans dug through attics, basements, closets, shoeboxes, digital cameras, and photo albums to upload neat rock shots to rockandroll.si.edu. As a result, the book features 142 artists spanning more than six decades of music history that, presented together, create a kaleidoscopic history of the music, the concerts, and the fans.

Says Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips: "If rock and roll were a planet, Nib Bentley would exist the head astronaut and Smithsonian Rock and Roll would be the operator's manual."

Zac Cockrell, Brittany Howard, Steve Johnson (drums), and Heath Fogg performing as the Shakes for the first time at Egan's Bar, Tuscaloosa, AL, July x, 2010. (David A. Smith / Smithsonian Books)

Blondie at CBGB, New York City, 1976. (Roberta Bayley / Smithsonian Books)

The Grateful Expressionless at the Chicago Coliseum, Nov. 27, 1970. (Marshall Bohlin / Smithsonian Books)

The White Stripes at the Cantos Music Foundation in Calgary on June 29, 2007. (Daryl-Anne Thomson / Smithsonian Books)

Johnny, Joey, and Dee Dee Ramone at Dooley's, Tempe, Arizona, 1978. (Dorian Boese / Smithsonian Books)

Bill Bentley is a musical Zelig and "legendary tape human being" (Philadelphia Inquirer) who has spent over 4 decades in the industry, most recently every bit A&R Managing director at Hold Music Grouping and Vice President of Warner Bros. Records. He has been a drummer, record store clerk, DJ, concert promoter, music producer, and record characterization publicist. Through information technology all he'due south also been a author, and in 2007 he was given the ASCAP Deems Taylor award.

Enter to win by citing in the comments beneath your personal favorite concert lensman from any decade—and briefly why. We'll choose one entrant with a swell eye and a North American mailing address a week from today, December vii, 2017. Our winner will be notified direct via email.

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Source: https://www.thevinyldistrict.com/storefront/2017/11/tvd-giveaway-smithsonian-rock-and-roll-live-and-unseen-by-bill-bentley/

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