alocispepraluger102 Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 (edited) LINK "Diana Krall has collaborated with Academy Award winning costume designer, Colleen Atwood and acclaimed photographer, Mark Seliger to create a series of beautiful and striking images for Krall’s new album, “Glad Rag Doll”. They are inspired by Alfred Cheney Johnston’s pictures of the girls of the Ziegfeld Follies taken during the 1920s. Said Krall, “If there was an era to which I could choose to go back in time, it would be the 1920s, just because of the whole wildness of it all.”" Edited August 15, 2012 by alocispepraluger102 Quote
sonnymax Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 LINK "Diana Krall has collaborated with Academy Award winning costume designer, Colleen Atwood and acclaimed photographer, Mark Seliger to create a series of beautiful and striking images for Krall's new album, "Glad Rag Doll". They are inspired by Alfred Cheney Johnston's pictures of the girls of the Ziegfeld Follies taken during the 1920s. Said Krall, "If there was an era to which I could choose to go back in time, it would be the 1920s, just because of the whole wildness of it all."" It has been, and continues to be, a way of marketing female artists. I'm interested to see if any board members strongly object to this approach, given the fact that the "sexiest album covers" thread is currently 242 pages long, with 9,669 replies and 425,089 views. Quote
Lazaro Vega Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Caption contest? "Oh Elvis...take off that capo...." She looks NOT like the mother of twins. Quote
robertoart Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Will her live shows follow this theme. Quote
cih Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 (edited) Alfred Cheney Johnston’s pictures of the girls of the Ziegfeld Follies Edited August 15, 2012 by cih Quote
Mark Stryker Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Whether or not this is the way to market jazz is not the relevant question: More like: Is this the way to market Diana Krall? Quote
CraigP Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Whether or not this is the way to market jazz is not the relevant question: More like: Is this the way to market Diana Krall? Exactly. I've seen another shot from this session, and in neither one does she look comfortable. So to me it's coming across as awkward. Quote
cih Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 She looks great - whether or not it's right for jazz, or her own career, I've no idea. But it's not pornography.. Quote
robertoart Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 She looks great - whether or not it's right for jazz, or her own career, I've no idea. But it's not pornography.. No, it's not pornography. Quote
cih Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 what I mean is - there's no reason to believe she isn't happy with it, and as such - she looks great. Quote
jazzbo Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 She's really not all that. I'd rather see them market her playing a piano passionately. Quote
robertoart Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 what I mean is - there's no reason to believe she isn't happy with it, and as such - she looks great. I didn't mean to be facetious. It just read funny thats all. She looks good to me too. It's her decision in the end. Quote
Larry Kart Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Well, it's good way to market Krall. You can send one of those Krall dolls up to my room. Quote
cih Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 what I mean is - there's no reason to believe she isn't happy with it, and as such - she looks great. I didn't mean to be facetious. It just read funny thats all. She looks good to me too. It's her decision in the end. I know - I realised after I typed it... I'm not an aficionado or anything :eye: Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted August 15, 2012 Author Report Posted August 15, 2012 Well, it's good way to market Krall. You can send one of those Krall dolls up to my room. :party: Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 Krall's photo isn't a patch on Johnson's girls. Photographers of lightly clad ladies back in the day had a better eye for line - even for Betty Grable's legs. MG Quote
jazzbo Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 You mean like Tori Amos does? Don't follow what or how Tori Amos does. I just mean feature her playing piano and/or singing, not as a dubious sex object. Quote
robertoart Posted August 15, 2012 Report Posted August 15, 2012 what I mean is - there's no reason to believe she isn't happy with it, and as such - she looks great. I didn't mean to be facetious. It just read funny thats all. She looks good to me too. It's her decision in the end. I know - I realised after I typed it... I'm not an aficionado or anything :eye: Me too. I had to look up what you meant. Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted August 15, 2012 Author Report Posted August 15, 2012 Krall's photo isn't a patch on Johnson's girls. Photographers of lightly clad ladies back in the day had a better eye for line - even for Betty Grable's legs. MG :party: Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted August 16, 2012 Author Report Posted August 16, 2012 "The problem with Jazz is....that its Jazz. If you can fool people into thinking its not jazz then it can only improve sales." jazz certainly has a stigma with the vast majority. why??? Quote
sonnymax Posted August 16, 2012 Report Posted August 16, 2012 "The problem with Jazz is....that its Jazz. If you can fool people into thinking its not jazz then it can only improve sales." whom are you quoting? Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted August 16, 2012 Author Report Posted August 16, 2012 "The problem with Jazz is....that its Jazz. If you can fool people into thinking its not jazz then it can only improve sales." whom are you quoting? 2 younger fellows in another forum. Quote
Shawn Posted August 16, 2012 Report Posted August 16, 2012 Marketing jazz is a scary concept. A large number of people out there just think "music for old people" when they hear the term, many others think background music for dinner parties and restaurants. I was doing all the audio/visual for a wedding a few weeks ago and the client asked me to put on "some boring piano jazz while we eat". I played great stuff for them (Red Garland, Duke Pearson, Dave Brubeck, Ahmad Jamal) but they wouldn't have known the difference if I had used a generic production library disc instead. Quote
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