Monday, September 08, 2008
new Crooked Fingers album artwork + photography + music videos!!
The new Crooked Fingers album is about to be released with my photograph as the cover image. I believe you can order the album October 7th from any independent music store only.
Here's a screen capture of the new CF website.

I also took the background photo there during my music video shoot for Eric's solo song outing "Man O' War" which is now available online at my NEW WEBSITE! You can also check out the music video for his new song "Let's Not Pretend (To Be New Men)".
Here's a full quality image of the CD cover. What a great photo shoot! Can't wait to see this whole project in vinyl sitting in my living room.
Here's a screen capture of the new CF website.

I also took the background photo there during my music video shoot for Eric's solo song outing "Man O' War" which is now available online at my NEW WEBSITE! You can also check out the music video for his new song "Let's Not Pretend (To Be New Men)".
Here's a full quality image of the CD cover. What a great photo shoot! Can't wait to see this whole project in vinyl sitting in my living room.
Saturday, September 06, 2008
Monday, September 01, 2008
Rod Richardson + His Poy Boys
Whilst shooting some acoustic music videos up at the studio Rod Richardson + His Poy Boys got together for a one off recording session. We churned out a radio edit of Dylan's classic "Knockin On Heaven's Door" in record time, one take.


Rod "Moonshine" Blackhurst on Vox and Keys
Kelly "Boxcar" Magelky on Six String
Aaron "Slowhand" Johnson on Skins


Rod "Moonshine" Blackhurst on Vox and Keys
Kelly "Boxcar" Magelky on Six String
Aaron "Slowhand" Johnson on Skins
Sunday, August 31, 2008
The Craziest Week Ever: private show, photo shoot, music video in Chicago, DNC
Last week was busy. The whole touring crew flew into town Sunday afternoon for band rehearsals so of course I had to go chat with Lavery and Maher, always great to see those guys. Monday morning brought the cover photo shoot for Denver Magazine followed by an afternoon running errands for gear rentals and photo downloads. Monday night was a pro-hang at the private DNC show. Tuesday at the crack of dawn I flew to Chicago to shoot a VH1 Making Of The Music Video for the band's new music video. After landing we had some time to kill before shooting from 6PM till 5AM. Managed to get some sleep, woke up at noon and checked out, killed time before heading to day 2 of the shoot on the south side of Chicago from 6PM till 7AM. After wrapping drove right to the airport Thursday morning, crashed hard, runway to runway, for 2.5 hours before arriving back in Denver. Exhausted I met FBI Agent Crenshaw downtown for tickets to the closing night of the DNC to see Obama on his way to becoming our nation's president. Met Josh in the highlands and we rode bikes down to the DNC.
This is what we saw when we go there.

It was like playing Where's Waldo or that old computer game where the worm eats the food pellets. There were times where you'd be standing in a line to nowhere only to end up in a circle. Sometimes lines merged sometimes they just dead ended and nobody knew where to go next. After 3 hours of standing in line we were in.

My friend Josh had the hook up on the tickets. We took photographs like nerds.


By this point I hadn't slept in 32 hours. I was so tired but so excited to be there, being part of one of the most important political events of my life. Since I was in middle school I've always been fired up about being involved. In Mr. Hill's 9th grade social studies class I once administered a questionnaire test to show my classmates that just because their parents were Republicans that that didn't mean they were as well. All but one person realized trough the multiple choice test that they would all be Democrats could they actually register to vote. In fact most of them would have been Socialists. The feeling of being in Invesco Field was unlike anything I've ever experience in my life. I was surrounded by thousands of people I didn't know all of whom had the same goal in mind of changing the future.


We found our seats in time to see Al Gore speak. Soon we were caught up in listening to Joe Biden talk and then it was time for Obama.





I'm more concerned now for the future of my country than I've ever been (although I still get a sick feeling in my stomach thinking about the past two elections). But once again, just like with Al Gore and John Kerry before him I am proud to support Barack Obama for President. Its time to let individuals be individuals and let each live according to his or her own rules and ways.
This is what we saw when we go there.

It was like playing Where's Waldo or that old computer game where the worm eats the food pellets. There were times where you'd be standing in a line to nowhere only to end up in a circle. Sometimes lines merged sometimes they just dead ended and nobody knew where to go next. After 3 hours of standing in line we were in.

My friend Josh had the hook up on the tickets. We took photographs like nerds.


By this point I hadn't slept in 32 hours. I was so tired but so excited to be there, being part of one of the most important political events of my life. Since I was in middle school I've always been fired up about being involved. In Mr. Hill's 9th grade social studies class I once administered a questionnaire test to show my classmates that just because their parents were Republicans that that didn't mean they were as well. All but one person realized trough the multiple choice test that they would all be Democrats could they actually register to vote. In fact most of them would have been Socialists. The feeling of being in Invesco Field was unlike anything I've ever experience in my life. I was surrounded by thousands of people I didn't know all of whom had the same goal in mind of changing the future.


We found our seats in time to see Al Gore speak. Soon we were caught up in listening to Joe Biden talk and then it was time for Obama.





I'm more concerned now for the future of my country than I've ever been (although I still get a sick feeling in my stomach thinking about the past two elections). But once again, just like with Al Gore and John Kerry before him I am proud to support Barack Obama for President. Its time to let individuals be individuals and let each live according to his or her own rules and ways.
Friday, August 15, 2008
My New Favorite Photo of GW and the US Women's Volleyball Team
Monday, August 11, 2008
my new Hasselblad Xpan
Sunday, August 10, 2008
The Predator: short film in progress
Tuesday, August 05, 2008
Monday, August 04, 2008
Trailer for "Choke, California"
Looks like someone over at Warner Brothers edited together a trailer for my short film "Choke, California" about Jacks Mannequin. The trailer doesn't do the piece justice really but this is what they've cooked up...
You can also order the disc from his website today: http://jacksmannequin.com/TGP/
You can also order the disc from his website today: http://jacksmannequin.com/TGP/
Monday, July 21, 2008
Holga Shots from the Jacks Mannequin Shoot
The Jack's Mannequin film, called "Choke, California" is finished and shipped. It will be coming out on a DVD with his album The Glass Passenger in early September. If would really make me happy if you all went out and purchased one, not only because of the film but because the album is awesome as well.
I just got some Holgas back that I managed to snap after we wrapped on day 2.







I just got some Holgas back that I managed to snap after we wrapped on day 2.







Friday, July 18, 2008
Brooklyn to Denver
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Sunnyside Drug & Market
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Bruised Bananas
I realized today that I've been eating the bruised bananas on top of my refrigerator for the past few days and those brown spots haven't bothered me one bit. This wasn't always the case and for years I refused to eat even the smallest brown spot on a piece of fruit. I still stay clear of mealy apples and soft spots on peaches, plums, nectarines, apricots and strawberries. But I feel like the bruised bananas situation is a step in the right direction. My friend Dave gives me a hard time for liking unripe fruit. And this is still true for most of the fruit in my life. I like unripened strawberries and the afore mentioned pitted fruits. I like the tartest, crunchiest ones in the supermarket. Because normal people like ripe fruit there is always a solid selection of unripe fruit. I once attributed this like of the unripe to having grown up in a small town with an even smaller grocery market where there weren't ripe options but I can also trace its roots to loving grapefruit and blackberries both notoriously sour fruit. But this whole bruised bananas is a big change.
Today marks my 105th day in the studio shooting this documentary about the band. There are four days left. Four days. This doesn't seem real. I can only equate this feeling with the feeling of an approaching last day of school. Will Wednesday July 2nd be the longest day of shooting?
I've shot around 180 hours of footage that will be cut down to the 30-45 min range for the documentary that will accompany the first 300,000 albums sold. This means that minimally 300,000 people will see my next film. This is hard to grasp. It is another feeling altogether to have worked this hard for something and have it inch closer and closer every day. I have so much to be thankful for; this film, the soon to be published book of photography, and then of course all the publicity, promotion, and marketing tools that I'll make the band for this record, website images, video blogs, press photographs.
James and I are editing the Jacks Mannequin short like you might run a long distance relationship. He's in the City of Angles and so we're about to get on a call together and talk through the first round of edits. I think this project will be released in early September with the new Jack's record titled "The Glass Passenger". Again, so crazy to think that this CD and DVD will be available everywhere, even my mother could go to Best Buy and pick one up.
You're all too beautiful. And I miss you all.
Today marks my 105th day in the studio shooting this documentary about the band. There are four days left. Four days. This doesn't seem real. I can only equate this feeling with the feeling of an approaching last day of school. Will Wednesday July 2nd be the longest day of shooting?
I've shot around 180 hours of footage that will be cut down to the 30-45 min range for the documentary that will accompany the first 300,000 albums sold. This means that minimally 300,000 people will see my next film. This is hard to grasp. It is another feeling altogether to have worked this hard for something and have it inch closer and closer every day. I have so much to be thankful for; this film, the soon to be published book of photography, and then of course all the publicity, promotion, and marketing tools that I'll make the band for this record, website images, video blogs, press photographs.
James and I are editing the Jacks Mannequin short like you might run a long distance relationship. He's in the City of Angles and so we're about to get on a call together and talk through the first round of edits. I think this project will be released in early September with the new Jack's record titled "The Glass Passenger". Again, so crazy to think that this CD and DVD will be available everywhere, even my mother could go to Best Buy and pick one up.
You're all too beautiful. And I miss you all.
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