Danny
Clinch by Anthony DeCurtis — March 2002
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source :
www.greengalactic.com
Over the past 15 years, Danny Clinch has established himself
as one of the premiere photographers on the popular music
scene. He has defined a highly distinctive documentary style
that combines raw immediacy and elegance of composition.
While all photographs by definition capture a moment, Clinch’s
work communicates the restlessness that is so much a part
of the world of music. Despite their stillness and rough-hewn
beauty, his pictures are almost eerily informed by the motion
that preceded their creation and that, it sometimes seems,
will instantly resume the moment the viewer turns away.
They are not so much energy made visible, as some paintings
have been described, but evocations of the energy rippling
under the surface of momentary tranquility, a kind of storm
within the calm. That tension lends his photographs a complex
emotional texture that makes them both riveting and rewarding
every time you encounter them.
A New Jersey native, Clinch began his professional career
working as an intern for Annie Liebowitz, one of his initial
inspirations. “The first music images I really loved
were Annie’s early work,” he says. “In
particular, there was a shot of the Allman Brothers, of
Duane and Gregg asleep on a bus or a plane that really stood
out for me. Annie was clearly someone who was getting beyond
the obvious portrait.” Working for Leibowitz for a
year provided priceless insights into the world of major-league
photography.
Clinch absorbed other important lessons while assisting
Steven Meisel, Timothy White and Mary Ellen Mark. “From
her I learned about responding to a situation, having to
think on your feet really quickly,” he says. “She
was a huge influence.”
That ability to work spontaneously within unforeseen circumstances
is a hallmark of Clinch’s approach. It is also why
musicians who don’t ordinarily trust photographers
trust Clinch. “I try to make people comfortable, and
I try to take an honest photograph,” he says. He has
shot everyone from Radiohead to Public Enemy, from Phish
to John Lee Hooker. And his work has appeared in Vanity
Fair, Spin, Rolling Stone, GQ, Esquire, the New Yorker,
New York Times Magazine, Mojo and Q.
“I like shooting in real situations, when people are
doing things that they ordinarily do,” he explains.
“I love going into the studio while people are actually
recording, or being backstage while musicians are trying
to work out a song. And I love location best of all –
I’m always going to respond to a setting with beautiful
light. I also thrive on situations where someone says to
me, ‘You’ve got to go in and photograph this
person, and you’ve got five minutes.’ As much
as that sucks – five minutes! – it’s also
a great challenge.” As the marquee sign in one of
Clinch’s photographs reads, “If you’re
not living on the edge, you’re taking up too much
space.”
In addition to his frequent work for magazines and album
covers, Clinch has also published two books of photographs:
Discovery Inn (1998), which is a collection of work shot
over a ten-year period, and When the Iron Bird Flies (2000),
which documents the Tibetan Freedom Concerts, where Clinch
was the official photographer. His work has been the subject
of a September 2001 exhibition at the Govinda Gallery in
Washington, D.C. He has also completed “Pleasure and
Pain,” a documentary film about Ben Harper, a young
roots-rock musician with a passionate following. “I
shot the movie the same way I shoot photographs,”
Clinch says, “just trying to be there, not be in the
way, shoot with some funky cameras using funky film, get
some nice compositions, have fun, have a great life experience.”
As for the future, Clinch wants to keep on doing it all
– shooting for magazines, putting together books,
making films. “I’m known as a music photographer,
and I’m very proud of that,” he says. “But
I want to continue doing films and photo essays -- personal
projects that are good for the soul. The photographers I
most admire – like Robert Frank or Irving Penn –
never allowed themselves to be pigeonholed. My goal is really
to photograph not only musicians, but many types of people
that are interesting and have integrity.”“Still,
I’ve never been very good at making a plan, either
in my work or my life,” he concludes. “I just
wing it.”
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DVD - Pleasure and Pain