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Baron Wolman. In 1967 he was a 30 years old and a freelance photojournalist in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury He was approached by Jann Wenner she had an Idea of staring a rock magazine. He became chief photographer for the magazine Rolling Stone
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In 1967 he was a 30 years old and a freelance photojournalist in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury • He was approached by Jann Wenner she had an Idea of staring a rock magazine. • He became chief photographer for the magazine Rolling Stone • He got the opportunity of a life time shooting some of the biggest names in rock-and-roll. • His photos are exhibited in fine art galleries around the world.
The Grateful Dead playing in Golden Gate park "Those Dead shows in the park would draw few hundred people, You could climb up on the back of the bandstand and you could hang out with the band afterwards." Date:1967
The Grateful Dead at 710 Ashbury Street Wolman's first shoot for Rolling Stone was with the Grateful Dead, just after the band had been busted on marijuana charges. Wolman followed the band as they posted bail then held a press conference, but ended up shooting them at the Dead's house in Haight-Ashbury Date: 1967
Young man selling copies of the Oracle "Tourists were coming to Haight Street to see hippies, During the Summer of Love kids would make any money by buying these [counterculture] newspapers from whoever was publishing them for a quarter. Then they'd sell them for a dollar, because the tourists wanted some kind of hippie memento."
Jimi Hendrix Date: February of 1968 Jimi Hendrix came to San Francisco for his first gig at the legendary Fillmore auditorium. Wolman was there, and the result was one of the greatest rock and roll photos of all time. "I was onstage and the music was so loud I put Kleenex in my ears," Wolman said. "In order to get a great live shot of a band, you have to be completely in-tune with them .You have to anticipate their moves. I was so in touch with the band that night. I felt like I was playing my Nikon while they were playing their Fenders or their Gibsons."
Pamela Des Barres Pamela was shot for the Rolling Stone's "Groupie Issue" in1968. She wrote a tell-all book, I'm With the Band, she's hugely intelligent, a really interesting woman."
This shot of Jerry Garcia taken for a Rolling Stone cover story on the Grateful Dead in 1969. It marked the first time most people noticed the guitarist was missing a digit, the result of a childhood accident. The shot became the official logo for the Jerry Garcia estate "I thought he was doing something with his finger to blow me off or something or give me the finger in some weird way," Wolman said. "For years I tried to do what he did and I couldn't. And then I heard the story of how he lost the finger."
References • http://www.baronwolman.com/index.php?images • http://www.rollingstone.com/photos/gallery/15288250/baron_wolman • http://www.fotobaron.com/?content_id=15§ion_id=24