Iggy Pop, Detroit 1970, by Thomas Copi. The original Leper Messiah!

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Iggy Pop, Detroit 1970, by Thomas Copi. The original Leper Messiah!
Keith Richards + Mick Jagger abord the stones’ airplane, 1972
© Ethan Russell
David Bowie, ad for his first US TV appearance, November 16, 1973, via davidbowie.com. (Fantastic Justin de Villeneuve photo of Bowie and Twiggy from the Pin Ups sessions.)
David Bowie, ★
My alone feels so good, I’ll only have you if you’re sweeter than my solitude.
Warsan Shire (via luciecamp)
Wardrobe test for Flaming Star.
Mick Jagger stepping out of his Aston Martin in Milman Road, Reading in 1967 to visit his girlfriend at the time Marianne Faithfull.
Source: GetReading.co.uk
George Harrison on The Dick Cavett Show, 23 November 1971
Photos: ABC Photo Archives/Getty Images
“I’m probably the biggest bore you’ve ever had on the show.” - George Harrison
Dick Cavett: “Well, are you in any sense in contact with each other, I mean…” George Harrison: “Yeah, I saw him [John] last night, actually, at the premiere of Raga, which is what we should talk about, maybe.” DC: “Okay. But I mean, what did you say?” GH: “I said, ‘Hi, hello.’” DC: “Do you have writers who think of these things, or do you just have them ready and you can just snap them right out?” GH: “Yeah, we have writers at home. Rooms full of them.” DC: “What did he come back with right away?” GH: “With ‘Hi.’”
Dick Cavett: “You don’t like to talk, then.” George Harrison: “Well, not really. Sometimes, if there’s something to say, but there’s really nothing to say these days.” […] “You just talk, and I’ll watch.”
The show, on YouTube: here.
The Rolling Stones in New York 5th Avenue 1 May 1975
Tired bear is tired…
Lillian Gish, Robert Mitchum and Sally Jane Bruce Night of the Hunter | 1955
iggy iggy iggy
Wonderful picture of George !
‘Here’s What I’ve Seen’: The Photos of My Morning Jacket’s Jim James
To see more of Jim’s photography, check out @removador on Instagram. For more music stories, head to @music.
Jim James (@removador) is tired of talking. “I feel like in today’s world, everybody wants to talk and nobody wants to listen. So I’m trying to be a better listener,” he says. His preferred method of communication is (no surprises here) music. But if he had to pick a close second, the My Morning Jacket frontman would go with photography.
“You know, I’m lucky enough to get to travel the world and see all these really cool things,” he says. “And I feel like this is the perfect way for me to be able to communicate and say, ‘Here’s what I’ve seen,’ or ‘Here’s what I’m feeling,’ without any words.”
Right now, he’s feeling a Super Mario Bros.-themed totem pole, which is staring back at him on the waterfront in Seattle. But that pole could just as easily be an old faded record with a ripped sleeve, or the inside of a piano, or a dusty room with light shining through the curtains.
Jim is the first to point out that he isn’t trying to make a career of taking pictures (“For me, it’s always been more of a fleeting pleasure. I just see something and take a picture of it, and it’s just a fun way to be artistic”). But when you shoot photos over a long period of time, patterns start to develop and inform other creative avenues. That’s how he came up with the cover of his band’s latest record, The Waterfall.
It all came together during a trip to Portland, Oregon, when My Morning Jacket was mixing their album. Not only did Jim visit Multnomah Falls while he was there, he had also written a song for the record called “In Its Infancy (The Waterfall).” The next logical move was to just use a waterfall photo as the cover art — which was easy since the singer had already built up his own collection.
“I don’t even know why, but I just kind of got obsessed with old black-and-white pictures of waterfalls,” he says.
Sifting through used pictures, you begin to wonder where they originated and why no one claimed them. Jim had been thinking about this a lot recently, after the death of his great aunt.
“If somebody passes away, and they were alone or didn’t have any family or anything, all those photos just eventually go to the Goodwill or go in the trash or some antique collector,” says Jim. “But it’s kind of cool because it’s like, there’s another life for all those things, and people like me kind of walk through an antique mall and get into it, you know?”
Turns out taking photos isn’t the only way to communicate without talking — so is finding them.
—Instagram @music