Mar 13, 2009

Carl Zeiss Jena f 2.8 / 50mm Tessar "Sunken-Mount" - Photo Gear (4)

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This version of the Tessar, is probably a relatively seldom-encountered lens. It was designed exclusively for use on a bellows. It is a deeply recessed unit, so you don't need a lens hood.
The Macro Tessar is also extremely light and compact. The aperture blades form a very nice round shape, what, according to some, should help deliver a nicer bokeh.

Although you can achieve infinity focus with this lens, it is better suited for close-up photography. It is not that practical to walk around with a belows in your hand looking for nice cityscapes or interesting street scenes...

I would recommend the use of a tripod...






I will admit that to find some fun by using such awkward equipment borders a certain state of madness. In these days of modern stuff, you gotta be some kind of crazy guy to even contemplate loading a film in such a beast...

Well, I am that kind of guy!



The same lens some twenty years younger, fitting a Varex IIa. Everything was still shining bright. Now the IIa could need some serious restoration.

New shutter curtains, new mirror, new knob for opening the camera back, etc.

It was stupid that I didn't take care for so long... Shame on me!








I made these photographs with the "Sunken-Mount" Tessar last month, just shooting some of the plants we have in the balcony of our living room.

I think that it is never too much to stress the amazingly good optical quality of some of this old timers.

I know why I keep on the flame!

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Mar 7, 2009

Carl Zeiss Flektogon 2,8 / 35mm - The first photographs on the 19th February 2009 (Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal)

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I start getting kind of worried: it is a little harder everyday to focus my Rollei TLR from the sixties, or even my Hasselblad. I don't like to photograph with glasses on, but if I don't wear them, I can barely see the camera...
I know that it is very normal after a certain age, but I used to see very well and it kind of makes me feel mentally confused.
Besides, I like to compose an image till the edges, and the glasses are not very much helpful at that.

Trying to focus my Exakta Varex IIb is still much worse.
One of these days I remembered that I must have another focusing screen somewhere (yes, in the Exakta you can change them) and I was lucky to find it (I am not that kind of organized soul...).

Et voilà: I could see much better!

So I thought that it was time to finally try my "new" Carl Zeiss Flektogon 35mm, the one I talked about and showed in my previous posts about photo gear.

(Please, don't bother to tell me that in the meantime we are in the 21th century, and that we can buy auto-focus cameras... I know that! I even use some such things sometimes, but I can't help keeping on loving this old stuff.
Yes, I like to focus myself. Let me have my little joys, please don't take away my jewels...).



Now you probably start understanding why they call it the Macro - Flektogon...



I already posted a similar image in 8x10 inches. Good for you to compare.

It was a nice afternoon, the clouds were rolling across the blue skies and the sun felt good on my aching back. I found it a good idea to dust away my bones and my brain...

So I just packed the Flek and the Exakta, my Gossen light meter, some filters and a couple of Agfapan 100 rolls. I thought about bringing a tripod, but my back pain made me change my mind.



We don't need to walk very far away from home to get to the castle of Montemor. We are lucky, because it is a nice place, so we can have a cheap walk... Well, at least as long as they don't tax our feet...

Remember that old George Harrison / Beatles song "Taxman"?
I believe George won't mind...

"1,2,3,4,1,2

Let me tell you how it will be,
There’s one for you, nineteen for me,
‘Cos I’m the Taxman,
Yeah, I’m the Taxman.
Should five per cent appear too small,
Be thankful I don’t take it all.
‘Cos I’m the Taxman,
Yeah yeah, I’m the Taxman.

(If you drive a car car), I’ll tax the street,
(If you try to sit sit), I’ll tax your seat,
(If you get too cold cold), I’ll tax the heat,
(If you take a walk walk), I’ll tax your feet.
Taxman.

‘Cos I’m the Taxman,
Yeah, I’m the Taxman.
Don’t ask me what I want it for
(Ah Ah! Mister Wilson!)
If you don’t want to pay some more
(Ah Ah! Mister Heath!),
‘Cos I’m the Taxman,
Yeeeah, I’m the Taxman.

Now my advice for those who die, (Taxman!)
Declare the pennies on your eyes, (Taxman!)
‘Cos I’m the Taxman,
Yeah, I’m the Taxman.
And you’re working for no-one but me,
(Taxman)."

May I be damned! Now I feel like listening to "Revolver"...

I love the Beatles!!!






On most photographs I used a polarizing filter from Nikon with a step up ring. On some other occasions I put on a Rollei yellow filter. I love those filters from Rollei. I think that I never got one stuck.

Although not exactly small, the Flek uses relatively small 49mm filters.









That nice lady trying to come across my photograph on the lower left corner is my girlfriend.

If you watch attentively, you will see one of that auto-everything marvels I just mentioned before around her neck... See that I am well aware of their existence?



I Shot An Arrow To The Sky (Jimmy Reed 1967)

(As it seems, making this post turns my memories into songs)

I believe that the Flektogon must have cursed me on this one: "you just don't do that to an old lens, have you ever heard about flare?".

I can't blame her, and somehow I think that we are going to get along well, both of us, me and my "Fleky" (just got baptized!).

If I only knew a little better how to scan...

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Mar 2, 2009

Leica Galerie Wetzlar + Leica Galerie Solms - 1988

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In 1988 my long taxi-driver nights were finally a memory from the past: I was working as a photographer at the Kunsthistorisches Institut der Universität Heidelberg (Art History Institut).

The nightmare of driving ten, twelve, fourteen hours each night was over!

No more small-talk drunkards to drive home, no more lonely hours sitting in the dark waiting for a stranger to come in, no more CB radio beeps, no more rushing like mad for my Pfennigs, no more cold, rain and snow...

Saving for my Leicas behind the wheel belonged to the past!



Leica IIIc+Summitar 5cm, Portugal, Espinho (Feb. 1984)

Don't ask me the month because I can't remember, it got lost somewhere in my brain, but I know that in 1988 I managed to get an exhibition in the Leica Galerie in Wetzlar.

For some months I dove in my darkroom making print after print, rejecting this, accepting that, trying to get a cohesive and meaningful selection of images to display.

My self-appointed theme was Iberia, and the photographs needed to be made with a Leica camera. No one imposed that on me, I decided it like that.
So all the images, with the only exception beeing shown above, were shot with Leica M equipment.
For authenticity's sake, I also refused some "nice" photographs that could easily fall in the touristic style of pictures.

I wanted "raw" stuff!

(On FILM of course!!!)



Leica M2+50mm, Portugal, Castelo Rodrigo (Jan. 1984)

You are actually looking at the "vintage" prints that hung on the wall.
As they were too large for my scanner and I didn't want to stitch or scan the negatives, I reprophotographed the original prints with a digital camera. I didn't even use a repro lens, but just a consumer zoom.

Yes, shame on me, but my repro lenses only fit my analog cameras, and that would have been too much trouble for me.

I apologise, I know (and now you know it too) that I could do better...



Leica M2+28mm, España, Santiago de Compostela (Aug.1981)

In those days I had a Belfort 4x5 inches (very similar to Omega) fitted with a Cold Light tube.

That's the enlarger I used to make the prints.
The enlarging lens was a 60mm Rodagon from Rodenstock.
Most prints were made using Ilford Galerie paper developed in Kodak Dektol.
I also used some then new Ilford Multigrade FB to give it a try.
I think that all the prints were made shortly before the exhibition, that is in 1988.
They are mounted in acid free Museumskarton and I cut the matboards myself.

You are watching a lot of work, but I am going to shut my mouth and let you take a look in peace...



Leica M2+28mm, Portugal, Amareleja (Jan.1984)



Leica M2+35mm, Portugal, Coimbra (Aug. 1981)



Leica M2+35mm, España, Salamanca (Aug. 1981)



Leica M2+50mm, Portugal, Lisboa (Aug. 1984)



Leica M2+90mm, España, Toledo (May 1983)



Leica M3+90mm, Portugal, Lisboa (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3, Portugal, Aveiro (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3, Portugal, Mourão (Feb. 1984)



Leica M3+21mm, Portugal, Lisboa (Jul. 1987)



Leica M3+50mm, Portugal, Lisboa (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3+50mm, Portugal, Aveiro (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3+50mm, Portugal, Braga (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3+50mm, Portugal, Braga (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3+90mm, Portugal, Lisboa (Aug. 1987)



Leica M3+90mm, Portugal, Praia de Mira (Aug. 1985)



Leica M3+90mm, Portugal, Amareleja (Jan.1984)



Leica M4-2, España, Segovia (Dez. 1983)



Leica M4-2+35mm, España, El Escorial (Dez. 1983)



Leica M4-2+50mm, Portugal, Nazaré (Sep. 1980)



Leica M4-2+50mm, Portugal, Peniche/Cruz dos Remédios (Mar. 1980)



Leica M4-2+90mm, Portugal, Sesimbra (Feb. 1984)



Leica M4-2+90mm, España, Segovia (Dez. 1983)



Leica M4-2+90mm, Portugal, Fátima (May 1983)



Leica M4-2+135mm, Portugal, Fátima (May 1983)



Leica M4-2+W+35mm, Portugal, Lisboa Jan. 1984)


SOLMS:

Now try to figure out how amazed I was, when someone called asking me if I would agree that the photographs would stay for one more month...

They should make the small trip to Solms, to hang on the walls of the new plant (that's when I knew about Solms) that was going to be officially inagurated soon.

Of course, I could only say yes! And it felt so rewarding...

Can you imagine my photographs hanging on the walls in Wetzlar and Solms for two months? Me, the cab driver who had to save his little coins for his Summicrons and Elmarits?
Me, who had to drive endless miles to buy my rolls and my soup (meaning my developer)?

In that little moment in time I understood that somehow all the struggle was worthing it, in that little instant I could see a light shining somewhere down the road...

Maybe it would not shine forever, but it shone then...

The images below are from Solms. It was Tag der offenen Tür (open house), and the public was invited to visit the plant.

I drove to Solms with my friend Jorge Gomes, and we had a very nice and interesting day.

Not only the atmosphere was very relaxed and easy-going, with Bier, Bratwürst und Luftballons, but it also was a very good chance to take a look inside The Sanctuary of 35mm photography.

Had the exhibited images belonged to someone else, I wouldn't have forgotten that day anyway...

We made some pictures for the posterity...



I think it was the only time that I saw the 800mm Telyt! Nice "little" camera attached...



As you see, I didn't lie...




Yes, that was me...




And those were my photographs...




The next generation of Leica users?




That is the poster Leica made for the occasion...


I guess that I can proudly say:"NOT BAD FOR A CAB DRIVER...". Cheers !


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Feb 28, 2009

Electric Blues

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Hello everybody!

Looking through some negatives and transparencies, I came across these funny images of my sun Luís. He just had decided to paint his hair blue and I got the chance to invite him to come over in the studio, to make some images to perpetuate such a nice look.

After all, you don't get a blue haired model around the corner each day.

We gotta take our chances!



In those times my studio was still located in Olivais, Lisbon. I didn't like it that much...

The shots were made with a Hasselblad camera and the Zeiss Sonnar 150mm, in the year 1997.

Light, as usual in my studio, was made by Hensel Studiotechnik from Würzburg, Germany.



Looking at these photographs, made me think almost instinctively about another passion of mine: the Blues, electric blues in this particular case...

Watching the name of my blog, you quickly understand that I intended to talk about, or think and share about, some other stuff but only Photography.

At least I would like to relate Photography with some other things I also care about.

If Mother Earth would have given me the gift of some good ears, I probably would not be a photographer. I always had the dream of beeing a musician...
(It seems that I always had some attraction for lost causes...).

As I can't make the distintion between an A and a C, I had to content myself with some visual matter. Hopefully I can be a little better at that...

Nevertheless, I am glad to share with you some of the most important records I listened to, when I was a kid. I think that they were very important in my education has a human beeing.
After all these years, I still listen to and enjoy each and everyone of them.

Great, really great music!
Much better than my Photography...




It is hard to find a blues singer more authentic than the old John Lee Hooker. His music was absolutely unique. He was the Real Thing! Period.

You couldn't mistake his beat, his sound was second to none. Sometimes his music was so intense that I feel that I could cut it with a knife!

Listen to records like "Live at Sugar Hill", and you will effortlessly see my point.

When I bought "Live at Cafe Au Go-Go" after Christmas 1973 (I was eighteen), I already was a deep aficionado of his voice and guitar. On this recordings John Lee was supported by Muddy Waters, Otis Spann and George Smith, among others.

The first LP I ever bought from John Lee Hooker started with an incredible song called "I Need Love So Bad". It took me many years to find a CD showcasing that song.
I found it at last, in a compilation made by Tony McPhee, the guitar player from the british band "The Groundhogs", that have accompanied Mr. Hooker on various UK dates.

I remember having a Groundhogs LP called "Split". Never managed to get it on CD...

The Groundhogs also recorded with other great blues artists, such as Champion Jack Dupree , Eddy Boyd and Big Joe Williams.




In the end of the year 1970 (I was fifteen!), I came across this recordings by B.B. King.
To this day, and after many records I got from B.B. King, this is my best!

Particularly the "Live" performance sounds absolute outstanding, with B.B. mastering his guitar in incredible top form.

All the recording sounds phantastic and the interaction with the audience is awesome.

B.B. King later on started playing more commercial stuff, but this is pure blues at it's best!

In my opinion, this is, together with the "Completely Well" sessions, the best B.B. King you can get!




Another gem in my collection!
Sadly the cover was changed. The old LP had a photograph of Taj Mahal.

I find the music on this recordings to have a very special kind of energy and a certain kind of compactness: each note seems to be in the right place, everything is very tasteful, the voice is strong.

It is a recording that breathes youth. It didn't get dated to my ears, still sounds fresh.

And we can wonder at the great guitar playing of the late Jesse Ed Davis. So good that I can even forget the absence of Ry Cooder...

Al Kooper sits at the piano and the rhythm section doesn't miss a beat.

They don't make records like that anymore!

As Taj sings "You Don't Miss Your Water ('til Your Well Runs Dry)...




I always had deep admiration for John Mayall, the man who, together with Alexis Korner, deserves the title of Father of the British Blues Boom in the 60's.

You can find lots of musicians who served on the several formations of John Mayall's Bluesbreakers who got famous on later years: Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, Peter Green, John Mc Vie, Mick Fleetwood, Andy Fraser, Keef Hartley, etc., etc.
The list could go on and on. As Clapton said, "John Mayall has run an incredibly great school for musicians".

I also very much like the records where John plays in small combos like in the "USA Union" album, featuring Harvey Mandel (gt), Don "Sugarcane" Harris (violin) and Larry Taylor, (b) recorded in 1970.

I prefer instead to show the cover of one of my all time favorites, the album "Bare Wires", from 1968. It features the work of Mick Taylor, Jon Hiseman, Dick Heckstall-Smith, etc., and was a highly successful project.

The "Bare Wires - Suite", that made the entire A Side of the original LP, is just unbelievable!

The existence of people like John Mayall is a blessing for the world!




Talking about Larry Taylor and Harvey Mandel, I must talk about another important white blues band of the 60's and 70's: Canned Heat.

Both musicians are in top form through the entire recording made live in Europe. Bob Hite also showcases a great voice and the whole atmosphere is relaxed and loaded with energy. Even on some slow numbers sang by Alan Wilson, you can feel the vibe and intensity of the moment.

If you close your eyes and let go, you can easily feel like beeing in the first row.

Closing a little more, you even can ear Bob "The Bear" Hite shouting "don't forget to boogie!".

(As I write these lines. I read that Tony de la Barreda, former bass player for Canned Heat, passed away February 19th, 2009, of a heart attack. May he rest in peace...).




The voice and piano playing of Sunnyland Slim are accompanied by loads of good musicians on this one.
Not the kind of nice sweet duets you see nowadays en vogue, but real musicians doing real blues.

This recording is the proof, if that needed to be, that the blues has nothing to do with the colour of your skin.

The blues is a feeling!

Recorded in 1968, this LP delivers great guitar work by Mick Taylor, Luther Allison, Henry Vestine, Alan Wilson and Randy Fullerton.
Harmonica blowing by George Smith. Bass by Larry Taylor. Drums by Paul Lagos and Francis Clay...

The list is not complete.

You even got Big Mama Thornton guesting in one track.

No, she doesn't sing, she plays the drums...




Another wonderful voice and piano playing of top quality, paired with european white musicians.

It is amazing, how many great black musicians had to come to Europe to get the recognition they long deserved!

Memphis Slim was one of them, and I remember seeing him performing in a Jazz-Club in Heidelberg (or was it in the Stadthalle?), together with a french drummer.

I remember shooting some black & white photographs of that session. It was actually one of the first rolls that I developed myself. I must look for it, and I will post some images when I find it.

I wish to point out the guitar playing of Peter Green on this record. Superb as usual!

Oh, don't you agree that that blue chicken looks appetitive?

Nice cover shot!



You couldn't find a better name for this record...

Yes, it is a Colossus!

Everything! The voice and piano playing of Otis Spann, the back up of Fleetwood Mac, the drums of S.P. Leary, the production of Mike Vernon!

Peter Green plays some of the best blues guitar solos I ever heard. Period!

According to Mike Vernon, the whole album was recorded in a day - no overdubs and straight to two track stereo: January 9th, 1969. Tempo Sound Studios, New York.

Can you believe it?

Yes, those were the days... They don't make them like that no more!

Like Mike states:"Truly a blues summit to savour".




Another great name for another great record of a great harmonica player!

Yes, George Smith has no time for jive on this one, and the whole band is exceptional too.

Even the double exposure on the cover shot looks good.

One more extraordinary Blue Horizon production by Mike Vernon, recorded at The Eldorado Studios, LA, 17th/18th November, 1969 (Two days!).

Phenomenal guitar interplay by Buddy Reed, Greg Schaefer, Marschall Hooks and Pee Wee Crayton.

I find the slow tempo tunes absolutely delightful.

The last tune, "No Time For Jive", couldn't be better!

(This LP was originally bought by my close friend António Relvas Pires, who also owned Canned Heat - Live In Europe.
I only got my copy some years later.
In those times you couldn't just go out and buy a record. You had to look for it, suffer for it, struggle for it. And when you were lucky and finally got it, you would treasure it. More on that later...).




I very much like Arhoolie Records, but this isn't the original presentation.

With the advent of the CD, many recording companies reissued their back catalogue taking the chance of exploring the longer playing times that the CD allows. So here you have, so to say, two records in one. So far so fine!

What I dislike is that Arhoolie, and others, don't publish the original covers of the time. They usually were much nicer, showing nice 60's type of black & white images.

This particular one is not that bad, but some records just look awful!

I am thinking about some stuff by Fred McDowell and some recordings by Earl Hooker, where Arhoolie just destroyed some great covers.
Don't they wish to sell records?

It also makes very hard for long time fans to find out what is what, when we want to update our collection to CD.
Having played in miserable record players, some of my LP's are no more audible...
Some I had the chance of finding a second time as LP, and now a third time as CD...

I guess that I am a lucky man sometimes!

On this reissue, I prefer our "original" LP, starting on track 13 on the CD.

It showcases the harmonica playing of Walter Horton, the piano of Lafayette Leake and the solo guitar of Jimmy Dawkins.

The voice of Johnny Young is sometimes so sad that it really hurts: "Sometimes I cry and I cry darling, tears keep on rolling from my eyes...".
I am not listening, I am remembering, so please allow me a possible mistake...

Produced by Chris Strachwitz & Willie Dixon, it was also recorded in one day, on November 27, 1967, at Stereosonic Studios in Chicago.



I just can't talk about electric blues without mentioning T-Bone Walker!

Walker was one of the first guitarists to use electrical amplification, and was in the possession of a distintive voice and great technique, as well as a great flair for showmanship.

On this session, recorded in LA, 1967, he is backed up by another great guitar man, by the name of Mel Brown. Production is by veteran Bob Thiele.
The horns sound a little Motown style, but the music and sound quality are very good.

These are relatively "up-to-date" recordings of T-Bone Walker, considered by many to be the father of the modern blues.

Mr. Walker died on March 15, 1975.



I decided to finish for today with the record of Muddy Waters that I like the most in my collection.
It was also the first Muddy Waters record I ever bought!

Maybe the reason why I like it so much? Who knows and who cares?

It is one of these live recordings full of that special energy that fills up a room and bounces back and forth between the audience and the performers.

The band is in top condition, and Muddy himself isn't shy of showing his slide skills.
Pinetop Perkins masters the piano, Calvin Jones is on bass, Willie Smith on drums.
Pee Wee Madison and Sam Lawhorn share guitar duties, while Paul Osher blows the harmonica.

On three numbers the group is joined by harmonica player James Cotton.

I think Muddy must have felt at home.

After all it was in Chicago that he built his reputation!

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