Afrika Bambaataa 2013

Trying to reach Afrika Bambaataa for a cover story for Jocks & Nerds in November was a difficult task. Everyone that knows him loves him but he can be a little elusive. Finally, we arranged to meet at 5pm at the National Black Theater on 126th St in Harlem where he was going to meet members of the Zulu Nation. Sitting outside the theatre at 5pm with writer Sara Rosen I was nervous that somehow he would not turn up. I wanted to shoot his portrait in daylight and had scouted an appropriate spot. The sun was starting to go down when we spotted him rolling down the street with a couple of friends. People were coming up to him to hug him and talk. He greets everyone with love. I introduced myself and gave him some photos that I had taken when I first met him back in 1982. Just as the sun was starting to sink below the Harlem skyline Bam posed for me for maybe 10 minutes, he politely refused to take off his wrap around sunglasses –  if that is the way he wants to look that is how I will photograph him, documentary style. He made the cover with a great interview by my girl Ms Rosen.

Pictured above : Bambaataa Harlem 2013 – below: Bambaataa London 1982 with members of the Rock Steady Crew

John Cougar Mellancamp

Photographed John Cougar Mellencamp with Meg Ryan strolling in Soho for Frye boots.John is a cool dude and found out when I gave Meg my card, she is a Slick Rick fan. Impressive.

Leaders of the New School


I photographed the group Leaders of the New School in 1989 in my studio. We had artist friends the ‘ThunderJockeys’ paint a crazy backdrop for the shoot.Check out the video clip I made at the studio. The group : Busta Rhymes, Cut Monitor Milo, Charlie Brown and Dinco D were from Uniondale Long Island. Next day we went to Uniondale and photographed them at their school.The group went on tour with Public Enemy and Busta Rhymes became famous.

Grand Mixer D.ST

Grand Mixer D.ST in London 1982 on the first hip hop tour to Paris and London traveling with the Rock Steady Crew , Afrika Bambaataa , Futura 2000 , Dondi , Fab 5 Freddy , Infinity 4 Emcees , Double Dutch Girls , Phase 2. D.ST started spinning around 1975 and got the name D.ST.from D Street which is what they called Delancey St. where he used to hang out. He was the house DJ at the Roxy and spins on Herbie Hancocks ‘Rock It ‘.

Nelson Mandela and Jerry Dammers

In 1984 Jerry Dammers’ song ‘Free Nelson Mandela’ was released, it became a global hit and an anti-apartheid anthem. I shot this photo of Jerry (above) on the Specials’ Seaside Tour.  We were staying in a b&b and I heard organ music coming from the dining room – there was Jerry was playing in the empty room.

Jerry talks about writing the song : “When I was a schoolkid in Coventry, I used to put up anti-apartheid stickers. And when I was 14, I demonstrated against the Springboks rugby tour [South Africa’s whites-only team]. But funnily enough, I hadn’t actually heard of Mandela until I went to a concert at Alexandra Palaceto celebrate his 65th birthday. I picked up lots of leaflets at the concert and started learning about Mandela. At that point, he’d been imprisoned for 21 years and the leaflets said the shoes he had in jail were too small for his feet, so I put that in the lyrics. At the time, the Specials were in chaos. Terry Hall, Lynval Golding and Neville Staple had left to form the Fun Boy Three, but I’d carried on with the name the Special AKA and a fluctuating lineup. There were lots of arguments so I asked Elvis Costello to produce the song, because I thought he’d bring everyone together. The track felt very important: trying to get it done before the whole thing fell apart was exceedingly stressful.

So I had Elvis there, as well as Dave Wakeling and Ranking Roger from the Beat, and I invited Lynval back as a gesture of goodwill. The chorus was sung by three top session singers including Caron Wheeler, who went on to join Soul II Soul.We shot the video in a church hall with these kids doing crazy jazz dancing, and we used the sleeve to give people information about the Anti-Apartheid Movement.

The song was banned in South Africa, but they played it at football matches, which were communal black gatherings. It was an international hit and helped build momentum against apartheid. Dali Tambo [son of exiled ANC president Oliver] approached me to form a British wing of Artists Against Apartheid, and we did loads of concerts, leading up to a huge event on Clapham Common in 1986 that attracted a quarter of a million people. That was the proudest day of my life.”

Nelson Mandela was finally released in 1990, he told an audience in Trafalgar Square “Like slavery and apartheid, poverty is not natural. It is man-made and can be overcome and eradicated by the actions of human beings.” He saw that the ending of apartheid iwas only the beginning – and that’s as true now as it ever has been. RIP Nelson Mandela.

Style Wars 2

Style Wars 2 is a homage to Henry Chalfont’s 1983 movie Style Wars. The directors Velli and Amos who hail from Slovenia and Switzerland say when they saw Style Wars for the first time they fell in love with the movie and the artists : “We watched it so many times we were quoting it constantly – it started getting bigger and bigger.The artists were our idols. Then we made the movie with our pocket money. It took us five years”

Devi (above) is a contemporary graffiti artist who represents the artist Skeme from the original movie.

It is a mystery who’ bombed’  the train painted with the name ‘Style Wars’ we see in ‘SW2” Devi says it wasn’t him but we think he may be undercover …. In any case SW2 is a hilarious tribute to the original.

Graffiti : ‘The uninvited appropriation of public space. The public expression of an individual for others to enjoy’

Ben Sherman

A shoot for Ben Sherman at The Box in NYC. The three British bands Duologue, Morning Parade and Prides were dressed by Ben Sherman. The event, part of CMJ, was presented by  Her Majesty’s Government no less

Happy Halloween

Couple in the East Village

Ghost on the West Side

NYPD after the parade

The Go Hard Boyz

In 1999 Shea Evans and Don Villnueva, both Harlem dirt bike ‘warriors’, decided to form the movement they called the Go Hard Boyz (GHB). The GHB quickly grew and now has members all over the world – dirt bike and ATV riders and extreme sports specialists  – living a lifestyle in urban communities and rural suburbs Their unique riding style and attitude has spread far and wide The logo a mask with a backward baseball cap represents ‘their mantra “Do It With Style’ which is how they ride. Dirt bike riding is illegal in NYC and riders often get harassed and chased by the NYPD,

One summer afternoon I met Shea in Harlem – he introduced me to some of the GHB posse – they seemed like a family (above GHB on the stoop in Harlem).  Shea took me me to the Bronx to take photos of the GHB, we rode in the flat bed  of his cousin’s F150 pick up truck on the Bruckner expressway shooting the Go Hard Boyz doing wheelies, showing their skills through Harlem and the Bronx on a hot summers day. Shea tells me “It’s Bigger than Bikes”.

GHB riding on the Bruckner Expressway, the Bronx

Bike Life

Riding in the Bronx

Youngster riding in the Bronx in front of Cope mural

GHB posse on 158th Street Harlem

Brooklyn Girls Fight Club

One night I went to photograph the illegal girl fight scene in Brownsville.Legendary fighters from Mike Tyson to Riddick Bowe all grew up in the Brownsville public housing projects like Marcus Garvey and Tilden.

The girl fights are organized by the local ‘boys from the hood’ and publicized by word of mouth, the location is kept secret up to the day of the fight. Held in a huge windowless garage on a dark industrial street, pit bulls chained up in the back room, a boxing ring assembled in the middle of the space, security guards searching everyone as they come in.  The place is jam packed, people of all ages, folks with babies, local youth, and the girls who are going to fight, some as young as 14 years old. There is no admission charge and the fighters are paid with proceeds from gambling on the fights.

The brawlers are recruited from the street, they fight at the club to further establish their rep in the neighborhood and to get a shot at the prize money.The girls have to fight hard or no one gets paid, the winner gets $1000. The rules are “No grabbing. No kicking. No scratching. No hair pulling. No biting. Three rounds. Ninety seconds a round.”.

‘Boys from the hood’ take bets on the fight

Girls fight and the crowd goes crazy