::Weekly Street Photography - march 8th part II::

We're a family of professional musicians (Boston Symphony, Toronto Symphony and I am also a Juilliard graduate).....so I am painfully aware of how tough it is for young musicians.....well, young artists in any field.

You had another great batch today. I'm going to have to jump on the train and head for your area one of these days. I could use a little overload for a few hours.

Sal
Frank, your taxi dancer series is just pricelss! In addition to
those, you sure had a productive weekend!
It is sure fortunate that I am lazy and hard to get out of the house.
With my equipment (1DS MkIII, 70-200/4 IS), shooting style, and
location ('mere steps from' Soho, the Village and Tribeca) I could
easily shoot more keepers in a day (until burnout) than I could
possibly PP (Chris was right to call me on this) or anyone but maybe
Quercy and Peter would ever be willing to look at.

Maybe I'll do a dump later (have to work today) of the unposted
keepers from this weekend. I'm working harder at raising my
standards and dumping shots right now than anything else.

Of course, there is a downside. You and bughunter put more into
each shot and learn more from it. I get emotionally exhausted just
from the parade of life that I'm in the middle of. I often just
pause, and close my eyes, and get centered, for it is such a circus
that one can literally lose one's self in the spectacle.
About NYC musicians: When my daughter was a Juilliard student, she
and two friends worked their way up the street musician hierarchy to
the spot in front of Zabars. This little trio was joined one day by a
violinist with the Chicago Symphony, which was in town at the time.
He played with them all afternoon. I learned about it because the
woman who was in charge of the Carnegie Hall Playbill (or whatever it
was called) happened to take the scene in, took some photos, and was
kind enough to track down this Mom and mail them to me. New York! New
York!
Great story. As you know, Julliard is the hardest school in the
country to get admitted to, half the students never graduate, and
still most of the graduates perforce cannot count on splendid careers
as performers. A sweet young thing at church bowls me over as a
celllist, but she has already been turned down by Yale Music School,
and although she has studied at Juilliard for years, the betting is
she won't get in there either. Given the wicked odds against a solo
career, a part of me would almost rather she gets into a great,
well-balanced regional university like Northwestern or Rice. You
and I can do as we like, but the arts for young people is kind of
heart-breaking today.
--
Frank
http://www.sidewalkshadows.com
 
...this hardly counts as a rhythm - just a collection of lined up objects; actually the whole notion of rhythms in pictorial representation is a bit suspect a concept - all rhythms present, if any, are purely imaginatory, and grounded in our CNS neuronal high, and low wiring; rhythms as seen by a multifaceted insect's eye, and esp. after being filtered through their CNS network must be a completely different perception:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/8497177@N03/3341253645/

jpr2
--
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wildlife, macro, B&W, and 'interactive' street:
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/qmusaget/sets/72157600341377106/
street candids (non-interactive):
http://www.flickriver.com/photos/qmusaget/sets/72157609618638319/
Comments and critique are always welcome!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
I have been trying to get a good shot of this guy for a long time. Eventually I got it when he was chatting and joking with a customer. He sells military uniforms and memorabilia at the local market.
Peter
 

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