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Michael Jerome had been drumming in a post-industrial metal band when he auditioned for Richard Thompson in 1999, little knowing he would be this brilliant guitarist's percussive foil for the next 25 years and counting. Jerome also has played with Charlie Musselwhite, the Blind Boys of Alabama and, for several years, John Cale. He's been Better Than Ezra's drummer since 2009 and played and toured with Slash for his latest album—and what started as an experimental side project is now moving center stage: The Third Mind, the improvisatory psychedelic band assembled by Dave Alvin and Victor Krummenacher. As thoughtful in conversation as he is dazzling behind his kit, Jerome tells how he developed his unique style and adapts it for each project—and he relates what it's like to be in Los Angeles now as he tries to help friends and others who have lost almost everything in the catastrophic wildfires. (Photo by Robby Klein.)
In this episode of the Beautiful Failures podcast, Andy Reale and Stephen Keech sit down with photographer Robby Klein at Taylor House Studio in East Nashville. Robby shares his journey from being an art-obsessed kid with a camera to becoming a photographer who has worked with numerous celebrities including Aubrey Plaza, Anthony Hopkins, Donald Glover and many more. He discusses the pivotal moments that shaped his career, including early inspirations and the realization that he could make a living from his passion. Robby also talks about the challenges and successes of building his own studio and how his optimistic approach has helped him navigate his career. This is an insightful conversation about creativity, resilience, and the unexpected paths that lead to success. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beautifulfailures/support
Celebrity photographer Robby Klein was behind the lens for our Most Fascinating Issue. We talk to him about some of his favorite moments from the shoot, career highlights, and which celebs are on his professional bucket list.
Look who’s just crawled out of the sea - it’s only Michael bloody Malarkey, the British-American actor and singer probably best known for his role as Enzo in the television series The Vampire Diaries but also starring in loads of hit US TV shows when he’s not touring all over the world with his band.Malarkey was born in Beirut, Lebanon to an Irish American father and a British mother of Arab/Italian origin. Malarkey had his beginnings on the London stage appearing in theatre productions such as Spring Storm and Beyond the Horizon at The National Theatre and an adaptation of The Great Gatsby and in the musical Million Dollar Quartet in the role of Elvis Presley in the West End.He spent almost a decade living and working in the UK before landing his role in The Vampire Diaries which caused him to move back to the States to focus more on TV and Film work.Michael currently has just finished work on his second season of TV series The Oath and through a mouthful of crisps he talks to us here about his next role in the forthcoming series Project Blue Book where he stars alongside Aidan Gillen.Let’s hope they don’t need him back anytime soon…Image credit: Robby Klein - www.robbyklein.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 260 of the PetaPixel Photography Podcast. Download MP3 - Subscribe via iTunes, Google Play, email or RSS! Featured: Entertainment and advertising photographer, Robby Klein In This Episode If you subscribe to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast in iTunes, please take a moment to rate and review us and help us move up in the rankings so others interested in photography may find us. Show Opener: Entertainment and advertising photographer, Robby Klein opens the show. Thanks Robby! Sponsors: - Get FreshBooks cloud accounting FREE for 30 DAYS by entering PetaPixel in the "How Did You Hear About Us?" section at FreshBooks.com/PetaPixel - Get 20% off at Tenba.com with offer code PetaPixel20 - More at LensShark.com/deals. Stories: Why Canon is willing to lose DSLR sales in the future. (#) Elinchrom introduces its ELB 500TTL. (#) Canon introduces what appears to be its cheapest DSLR ever. (#) IKEA LADDA AA batteries may outperform Eneloop Pro batteries. (#) The Nikon D500 appears to report batteries dead sooner than it could. (#) Tokina introduces it's 50mm f/1.4 Opera series lens. (#) ImageBrief shutters. (#) A Canadian bride attacks her photographer and pays the price. (#) Outtake My other podcast with Brian Matiash, the No Name Photo Show. Connect With Us Thank you for listening to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast! Connect with me, Sharky James on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook (all @LensShark) as we build this community. We’d love to answer your question on the show. Leave us an audio question through our voicemail widget, comment below or via social media. But audio questions are awesome! You can also cut a show opener for us to play on the show! As an example: “Hi, this is Matt Smith with Double Heart Photography in Chicago, Illinois, and you’re listening to the PetaPixel Photography Podcast with Sharky James!”
On this episode 'm joined by entertainment, editorial, and advertising photographer Robby Klein is to dissect one of the shots he did of The Band Perry during a Billboard Magazine cover story shoot.
On this episode 'm joined by entertainment, editorial, and advertising photographer Robby Klein is to dissect one of the shots he did of The Band Perry during a Billboard Magazine cover story shoot.
Join entertainment, editorial, and advertising photographer Robby Klein and me on this episode of Behind the Shot as we dissect one of the shots he did of The Band Perry during a Billboard Magazine cover story shoot.
Robby Klein is an entertainment and advertising photographer hailing from New Orleans, LA, currently based in Nashville, TN. Often found surfing in Los Angeles or eating bagels in NYC, Robby has widely become recognized as the photographer to the stars!
Robby Klein is an entertainment photographer who works with bands and record labels from Nashville. In the podcast he talks about the difference between comments on Instagram versus the comments of a real art buyer. See his work at www.robbyklein.com