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Back in March of this year, my friend Ahmed Klink - a photographer I met on Nostr in the Bitcoin community, though I think he was initially acquainted with me through my photography publication, NOICE Magazine - reached out asking if I wanted to be his production assistant for a shoot with David Byrne for his new album, “Who is the Sky?”.
I wasn't too familiar with David before Ahmed asked, but I knew him from the Talking Heads, so obviously I said yes. Then came the logistics of actually making it happen - scheduling everything around and figuring out if I could pull off the trip from South Carolina all the way up to Manhattan.
The drive involved coordinating between Airbnbs and making strategic stops along the way. I stayed at my dad's house for a few days in Charlotte, which I tend to do whenever I travel north. It's always a good stop to see my dad since I don't get to see him very often. From there, I scheduled a couple Airbnbs in Jersey City, where I was able to see my friend Raf - always nice to catch up with him and drop off some rolls of film (watch our interview together here). The next day I got another Airbnb in a different city, then drove the following morning to a parking garage in Manhattan that was a block or two from Ahmed's studio.
The studio is called Sunday Afternoon Studios, and of course I was the first one there - I'm always early to things. I find it better to be early than late, and it's never a problem for me because I usually just end up walking around, taking pictures, and being able to relax without worrying about rushing to get somewhere.
When I told my dad about how this shoot was going to happen, he said, "Make sure to get a picture of him on his bike" - apparently David rides his bike around the city quite often. I kept that in mind, and when David came in, sure enough, he came up the elevator with his bike. I thought of my dad and took a quick picture and sent it to him. He appreciated that, so that was cool.
The shoot took a few hours, starting at 10 AM and wrapping up around 4:30 PM with cleanup. It was a gread day - I had a lot of fun and was able to learn more on lighting and setting up things I'd never worked with before in a professional environment. But I was also doing some documentary work with my Leica M262, so that's what these photos were taken with.
David's outfit, by the way, was extremely heavy - must've been at least 50 pounds or something like that. When I had to put it back in the box to ship it back to wherever it came from, I really noticed how heavy this thing actually was. It was made out of plastic tubing and zip ties and bungee cords and stuff. Actually really cool design work.
I had a great time. Big thanks to Ahmed and crew for this opportunity to help out, meet David, and take some pictures. Really great experience. I feel very grateful for everything.
Thanks for reading.
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This is fantastic. Those are classic David Byrne photos. I was a big Talking Heads fan back in the day.
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Thank you. He's a nice guy. We had to actually postpone his shoot by a day because we accidently walked into a glass window and chipped his tooth. When I met him I asked him "so hows your tooth?" lol
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 7h
Years ago I went to buy tickets for the LA Pantages Theatre shows that were filmed and became the concert film "Stop Making Sense." It was a few days before the first show and I walked into the theatre. There was no one in the box office, so I walked into the theater, calling out to ask if someone could sell me tickets. David Byrne was alone in the theater, setting up the staging. He came out and said "I'm not sure. Wait here, I'll ask when the box office will be open." I was shocked. He couldn't have been nicer. I got tickets.
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Haha, love that. Yeah he's very grounded. He'd be a good bitcoiner.
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That outfit is bizarre! Neat effect on video. Cool to see the behind the scenes photos.
"Like Humans Do" has lived rent-free in my brain since I heard it on Media Player in Windows XP. My siblings and I must have danced and listened to it hundreds of times on loop.
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Yeah, that outfit was incredibly heavy.
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