VU Photo Thread

For discussion of all aspects of the New York legends.
Sheila Klein
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by Sheila Klein »

Warhol in the gym with Cale
At the Gymnasium?
Sturgis
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by Sturgis »

bleach wrote:
> Two great photos by Paul Morrissey.
>
> [img]https://i.imgur.com/mj8UhRf.jpg[/img]
>
> At the Dom 66
>
> [img]https://i.imgur.com/jPO8Vkp.jpg[/img]

Hello

I wanted to ask where you found that photo of Andy and VU?
Never seen that image before and wanted to track it down.
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la219
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by la219 »

Image

Why Don't You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65

https://lightintheattic.net/products/wh ... U7txNlnYWH


• First official anthology of Lou Reed’s work for Pickwick Records 1964-1965

• Features rarities, cult classics (The Primitives’ “The Ostrich”), & previously unreleased material (The Beachnuts' "Sad, Lonely Orphan Boy")

• Produced in partnership with Laurie Anderson and the Lou Reed Archive

• 20-page LP book/40-page CD book featuring unseen photos and essays by Lenny Kaye & Richie Unterberger

• Remastered by GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin

• Art Direction & Design by multi-GRAMMY®-winning artist Masaki Koike at Phyx Design

• CD layout by Darryl Norsen at D.Norsen Design

• 2xLP pressed at Optimal

• Vinyl available in two 2xLP colorways: standard black vinyl or multicolor 'Oxblood' and 'Gold' vinyl

• Also, our friends at Red Lounge Records have a special 2xLP edition limited to 100 units


Light in the Attic, in cooperation with Laurie Anderson and the Lou Reed Archive, is thrilled to announce the forthcoming release of Why Don’t You Smile Now: Lou Reed at Pickwick Records 1964-65. Due out September 27th, the latest installment in LITA’s critically acclaimed Lou Reed Archive Series is a compilation of pop songs penned by Reed during his mid-60s stint as a staff songwriter for the long-defunct label Pickwick Records. The compilation follows on the heels of Lou Reed’s Hudson River Wind Meditations (2023) and Words & Music, May 1965 (2022).

One of the most original and innovative figures in music history, Reed (1942-2013) first gained recognition as co-founder and frontman of the massively influential Velvet Underground. Over the course of his five-decade career, the two-time Rock & Roll Hall of Famer brought his singular vision to an eclectic expanse of musical endeavors, including era-defining albums like 1972’s Transformer and wildly experimental works like the 1975 avant-garde noise classic Metal Machine Music. But before establishing himself as an enduringly iconic singer, songwriter, musician, and poet, Reed got his start as an in-house songwriter (and occasional session guitarist/vocalist) for Pickwick Records—a label specializing in sound-alike recordings that emulated the major pop hits of the day. Encompassing everything from garage-rock and girl-group pop to blue-eyed soul and teen-idol balladry, Reed’s output for Pickwick ultimately offers a fascinating early glimpse at his ever-evolving and truly limitless artistry.

The album has been restored and remastered by GRAMMY®-nominated mastering engineer John Baldwin. Both the 2xLP & CD editions feature in-depth booklets with unseen photos, liner notes by Richie Unterberger (renowned music journalist and author of such acclaimed titles as White Light/White Heat: The Velvet Underground day-by-day), and an essay by Lenny Kaye (the legendary guitarist, Patti Smith Group co-founder, writer, producer, and curator of seminal garage-rock anthology Nuggets). The double-LP package is designed by multi-GRAMMY®-winning artist Masaki Koike and pressed at world-renowned plant Optimal (Germany). A special color vinyl edition is pressed on “Oxblood” wax (A/B side) and “Gold” wax (C/D side). This release marks the first official anthology of Lou Reed’s work for Pickwick Records and features rarities, cult classics (The Primitives’ “The Ostrich”), & previously unreleased material (The Beachnuts’ “Sad, Lonely Orphan Boy”).
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la219
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by la219 »

Close-up photos of Reed wearing his Doscar sunglasses from Todd Hayne's VU documentary trailer, extracted using ffmpeg: https://www.yapfiles.ru/col/73930/

Image
gazatthebop
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by gazatthebop »

new to me

Image
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bleach
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by bleach »

Moe at the Castle, May 66 by Lisa Law or Steven Schapiro.

Image
alfredovu
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by alfredovu »

gazatthebop wrote: 02 Sep 2025 01:24 new to me

Image
Hey, may I know where did you get this picture? Thanks!
falconwhit
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by falconwhit »

Maybe made up?

The photo has a myheritage watermark, not a site known to host that sort of photos. (I couldn't find it there, but while there I stumbled upon a Cale Web Site maintained by Eden.)
According to Google Image Search, "The person in the image is Didier Lockwood, a renowned French jazz violinist. While the user suggested John Cale [...] the strong visual cues and associated information point to Didier Lockwood."
The light seems exaggerated for a BTP photo, the chin looks like a copy-paste job, the outline of the right arm and the hair also seem a bit weird.
but it's hard to tell considering the low res of the pic.
falconwhit
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Re: VU Photo Thread

Post by falconwhit »

Never mind - please ignore my previous post, which I'm not able to delete. It does look like https://themaninthegreenshirt.tumblr.co ... 7453071080
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