Simon & Garfunkel's 1968 album Bookends features a portrait by Richard Avedon. Over the years the great photographer has been responsible for some great album covers.
The Dave Brubeck Quartet's Red Hot & Cool was recorded at the Basin Street East club in New York at three sessions in 1954 and 1955. Richard Avedon's favourite model (and mine), Suzy Parker, is wonderful here, connecting with Brubeck at the piano. Paul Desmond, Bob Bates & Joe Dodge are all there, even if they're out of focus.
The Yellow Shark, with the Ensemble Modern, 1993. This was Frank Zappa's last album; it was released a month before his death. One of Richard Avedon's greatest portraits.
Richard Avedon died in 2004. I'm not sure when this Mitsuko Uchida portrait was made, but this Beethoven album was released in 2006, so this is likely from late in Avedon's own career.
From 1960: Igor Stravinsky conducts The Rite of Spring. Stravinsky was photographed by all the greats over the years, but this shot by Richard Avedon is as good as any.
Lenny by Dick Avedon, 1976
Muddy Waters by Richard Avedon. Hard Again, 1977. What a great portrait!
Two more great portraits by Richard Avedon, for Johnny Winter's Second Winter, from 1969.
Avedon invited them to his Park Avenue apartment for a brainstorming session. Nichols and May walked in, sat down on what he described as “a big white couch covered in a field-of-poppies fabric,” and started batting ideas back and forth with him. “At the end of the visit,” Nichols said, “he put his arm around me and walked me to the elevator. He said, ‘I have the feeling we’re going to be friends for life.’”
One of their first projects together was this cover for An Evening With Mike Nichols and Elaine May, from 1961.
And Avedon delivers an even better shot for the back cover:
In the following year, these three came up with another great cover, for Nichols and May Examine Doctors. They're obviously having fun!
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