Andre,

Nice to hear about your interest in music photography. Maybe we can keep in touch some 
way and share experiences.
Should we found a subdivision: Pentax Music Photographers? :)
I looked at your picture of David. It's good. (Personally I think I would have cropped 
some maybe 10% from the left, but you obviously have a very good eye for visually 
essential "musical" moments. Your approach sounds good. (I am mainly shooting in 
color, and could do a whole lot more of technical fine tuning.)

Thanks,
(being brief since rather busy at the moment)

Lasse
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Andre Langevin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I'm into jazz and world music but I find most music making inspiring 
> photographically (and musically).
> 
> I follow the local musical scene (in Quebec).  Yesterday, I tried a 
> newly acquired A85/1.4 in a low-light bar where three women were 
> singing, backed by a rhythm section.  Among them, the bartender who 
> has, as far as I'm concerned, a nicer voice than Celine Dion (whose 
> music is not my cup of tea).
> 
> On the technical side, yesterday I used TMZ at 1600, 1/60 on a 
> monopod, f1.4 or f2 depending on the position of the musician.  I've 
> done all my developping in D76 until now but I found an old can of 
> Microdol-X in my stuff and I'm thinking about trying it on yesterday 
> film.  Microphen will also be tried eventually.  But D76 is always 
> fine, of course.
> 
> I scan at 2700 dpi my very few good negs, go to Photoshop, transfer 
> to CMYK mode, and then play (in Image/Adjust/Selective color) with 
> the black and grey "colors" of the black layer to get rid of some 
> noise, grain and dust and reach an unperfect deep black around the 
> lighted musicians.  I finish the job with the Airbrush Tool in Burn 
> mode.  There, you sometimes have to be very carefull around the 
> lighted forms to "feel" where the form ends and where the 
> surroundings begin.  I begin with a big brush and get to smaller ones 
> to finish the job around the people.  This is easier to do in 
> Photoshop than in a darkroom, and I can peek at the window once in a 
> while...  An example is on the PUG:
> 
> http://pug.komkon.org/03mar/david.html
> 
> There, I had enough light to use Tri-X and 1/125 at f2.5, so no pod. 
> It is a lot easier to get nicely exposed photos in such great 
> lighting conditions.  Although musicians either move a lot or get 
> into more introspective improvisations and then it's hard to grab the 
> decisive moment out of subtle changes in posture and face 
> expressions. So I have to shoot a lot to get a few good ones.  And 
> the LX is too loud when the music is played at low volume so I 
> restrain my shooting then.  I have yet to finish a home-made blimp 
> case to address this problem.
> 
> I also jam once in a while on flute (chromatic panpipes, diatonic 
> notched flutes, transverse flute).  I'm very fond of scandinavian 
> melodic invention.  I love the Christmas album by the Kaasinen 
> sisters and dig high energy groups like Hedningarna, Groupa and 
> others.  So many groups out there.  And long winter nights...
> 
> Andre
> -- 
> 

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