#25 popular music
At the end of the 19th Century, the emergence of sound recording liberated music from the context of a unique concert performance, and together with the advent of photography, radio and television, this new technology helped to give rise to modern popular music. The recipients of its message were never strictly only listeners, as it was always an audiovisual project, one in which – apart from the relatively short period of the predominance of radio as a “blind medium“ – no single component ever dramatically overshadowed the others (think of the meanings of the word image). The structure of the music issue is built on the basis of a contemporary concert, raising questions in regard to photography in documentary, art, journalistic, commercial, or personal domains. The focus of the figurative performance is the star on stage (the role of photography in star construction; musicians as photographers) and the moving audience before or under it (photography communicating music-related social and cultural changes; the establishing of subcultures, fan identities and their reflection), symbolically separated from the backstage area (the production; the backstage as a mythical space of both creativity and hedonism). More or less in parallel with these themes runs a dynamic, evolving and always charged contact with the world of fine arts.
Björk, Michael Schmelling, Jan Ságl, Stefan Ruiz, Christian Patterson, Jan Tvarůžka, Jason Evans, Petr Hlaváček, Radek Brousil, dis magazine, Andrew Thomas Huang, Dušan Tománek, Mardoša, interwiev with Thurston Moore, interwiev with Roger Ballen, rewiev of Anton Corbijn’s exhibition in Haag, rewievs, theory and moore.
Content
- ––– Audience
- Stefan Ruiz
- ––– Backstage
- Petr Hlaváček
- Václav Tvarůžka
- ––– Musicians as Photographers
- Mardoša
- ––– The Role of Photography in the Construction of Stars
- Anton Corbijn
- Jan Ságl
- Björk, Evolution
- ––– Project
- Chaos is the World's Dominant Force
- Necessary Evil
- Some Incriminating Photographs
- Groupe Guma Guar
- ––– Discoveries
- Kamila Stehlik
- Marija Mandić
- Tanya Traboulsi
- ––– Theory
- I Shoot What I Hear
- Photography and Phonography: Roots of an Indexical Paradigm
- ––– Events
- The AIPAD Photography Show New York 2015
- The New Philosophy of Photography
- ––– Fotograf Gallery
- Jesper Alvaer, Isabela Grosseová
- Marianne Vierø
- Martin Vongrej
- Filip and Matěj Smetana
- ––– Reviews
- This Place
- The Discrete Charm of Theory
- Local and Global: Avant-Garde in Brno
- The Relation of Photography and Art in Practice
- Joan Fontcuberta
- ––– Behind the stage
- Dušan Tománek
- Radek Brousil
- Christian Patterson
- Michael Schmelling
- Andrew Thomas Huang
- Jason Evans
- Petr Hlaváček
- Václav Tvarůžka
- ––– In Front of the Stage
- Stefan Ruiz
- ––– On Stage
- Mardoša
- Anton Corbijn
- Jan Ságl
- Björk, Evolution
Archive
- #45 hypertension
- #44 empathy
- #43 collecting
- #42 food
- #41 postdigital photography
- #40 earthlings
- #39 delight, pain
- #38 death, when you think about it
- #37 uneven ground
- #36 new utopias
- #35 living with humans
- #34 archaeology of euphoria
- #33 investigation
- #32 Non-work
- #31 Body
- #30 Eye In The Sky
- #29 Contemplation
- #28 Cultura / Natura
- #27 Cars
- #26 Documentary Strategies
- #25 Popular Music
- #24 Seeing Is Believing
- #23 Artificial Worlds
- #22 Image and Text
- #21 On Photography
- #20 Public Art
- #19 Film
- #18 80'
- #17 Amateur Photography
- #16 Photography and Painting
- #15 Prague
- #14 Commerce
- #13 Family
- #12 Reconstruction
- #11 Performance
- #10 Eroticon
- #9 Architecture
- #8 Landscape
- #7 New Staged Photography
- #6 The Recycle Image
- #5 Borders Of Documentary
- #4 Intimacy
- #3 Transforming Of Symbol
- #2 Collective Authorship
- #1 Face