Keeping Time: The Photographs of Don Hunstein
By (Author) Jon Pareles
With Art Garfunkel
With Leo Sacks
Insight Editions
Insight Editions
22nd October 2013
United States
General
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Composers and songwriters
779.9781640922
Commended for Independent Publisher Book Awards (Photography) 2014
Hardback
224
Width 235mm, Height 324mm, Spine 28mm
1830g
From journalist and Grammy-nominated music producer Leo Sacks, and New York Times chief popular music critic Jon Pareles, Keeping Time places Hunsteins photos in the context of musical and social change, adding an untold chapter to the cultural history
Don Hunsteins images of musics most influential artists are unforgettable. As Columbia Records staff photographer for more than four decades, Hunstein earned the trust and confidence of the most celebrated singers, songwriters, composers, and musicians of our time, including Bob Dylan, Miles Davis, Johnny Cash, Simon & Garfunkel, Aretha Franklin, Leonard Bernstein, Dave Brubeck, Tony Bennett, and Thelonious Monk, to name a few. Hunstein photographed these greats with noticeable informality, demonstrating a perpetual ease with his subjects. With his relaxed approach, he was able to glean private moments from public lives filled with fascinating, telling, and intimate details. Logging his daily assignments, Hunstein created an archive of profound images that parallel the soundtracks to our lives. To this day, his work exists as a unique record chronicling the creative efforts and energies of the worlds greatest musicians. Edited by journalist and Grammy-nominated music producer Leo Sacks and with text by New York Times chief popular music critic Jon Pareles, Keeping Time places Hunsteins photos in the context of musical and social change, adding an untold chapter to the cultural history of the second half of the twentieth century.
IBPA Ben Franklin Awards: Art/Photography, Gold Medal
IBPA Ben Franklin Awards: Coffee Table books, Gold Medal
IPPY Awards 2014: Photography, tied for Bronze
A collection of gorgeous, never-before-seen photos from the Columbia Records archive, "Keeping Time" illustrates Hunstein s ability to capture artists relaxing and being themselves. "BookPage"
an irresistible and thrilling retrospective collection of black-and-white photographs documenting performances and historic recording sessions and capturing unique glimpses into the personalities of original and influential musiciansAs for Hunstein, he modestly shrugs off the aesthetic, psychological, even metaphorical dimensions of his keenly observant and strongly composed photographs, explaining "I just did my job." Well said. But these portraits of artists at work are, without question, works of art. "Booklist"
In today's celebrity-obsessed world, most images of stars tend to be contrived, taken in controlled environments. The paparazzi would love the access Don Hunstein enjoyed for decades "Keeping Time" is a trove of mostly unseen and intimate black and white images of jazz, rock, soul, and classical greats who recorded on the Columbia label. "BBC News Magazine"
when I pick up a photo book, I want the images to do the lifting "Keeping Time: The Photographs of Don Hunstein," a wonderful new retrospective from Insight Editions, accomplishes exactly that this coffee table must-have is all meat and potatoes, showcasing the mostly unseen and intimate images of Hunstein, who spent three decades as Columbia Records' official photographer. "Mother Jones"
"
"A collection of gorgeous, never-before-seen photos from the Columbia Records archive, "Keeping Time" illustrates Hunstein's ability to capture artists relaxing and being themselves."--"BookPage"
."..an irresistible and thrilling retrospective collection of black-and-white photographs documenting performances and historic recording sessions and capturing unique glimpses into the personalities of original and influential musicians...As for Hunstein, he modestly shrugs off the aesthetic, psychological, even metaphorical dimensions of his keenly observant and strongly composed photographs, explaining "I just did my job." Well said. But these portraits of artists at work are, without question, works of art."--"Booklist"
"In today's celebrity-obsessed world, most images of stars tend to be contrived, taken in controlled environments. The paparazzi would love the access Don Hunstein enjoyed for decades ... "Keeping Time" is a trove of mostly unseen and intimate black and white images of jazz, rock, soul, and classical greats who recorded on the Columbia label." --"BBC News Magazine"
."..when I pick up a photo book, I want the images to do the lifting ... "Keeping Time: The Photographs of Don Hunstein", a wonderful new retrospective from Insight Editions, accomplishes exactly that ... this coffee table must-have is all meat and potatoes, showcasing the mostly unseen and intimate images of Hunstein, who spent three decades as Columbia Records' official photographer."--"Mother Jones"
Jon Pareles is the chief popular music critic of the New York Times, a former music editor at Rolling Stone and the Village Voice, and the consulting editor of the Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll. He lives in New York, New York.