Los Angeles Times

He shot Beatles album covers

- associated press

British photograph­er Robert Freeman, who helped define the image of the Fab Four, dies at 82.

Photograph­er Robert Freeman, who helped define the image of the Beatles with some of the band’s bestknown album covers, has died. He was 82.

The Beatles’ official website announced Freeman’s death Friday but didn’t give a cause.

Born in 1936, Freeman began his career as a photojourn­alist for London’s Sunday Times and captured portraits of leading jazz musicians before working with the Beatles.

He shot the black-andwhite cover for the 1963 album “With the Beatles,” picturing the Fab Four’s faces in part-shadow.

It became a defining image of the group and was used for the 1964 U.S. album “Meet the Beatles.” In an online tribute, Paul McCartney said, “People often think that the cover shot for ‘Meet The Beatles’ of our foreheads in half shadow was a carefully arranged studio shot.”

“In fact it was taken quite quickly by Robert in the corridor of a hotel we were staying in where natural light came from the windows,” McCartney wrote.

Freeman went on to photograph the covers of “Beatles for Sale,” “Help!” — with its image of the band members holding semaphore-style flags — and 1965’s “Rubber Soul.” For that cover, Freeman subtly stretched the Beatles’ faces, suggesting the psychedeli­c experiment­s to come.

McCartney said Freeman “was one of our favorite photograph­ers during the Beatles years who came up with some of our most iconic album covers.”

He was “imaginativ­e and a true original thinker,” McCartney said.

Ringo Starr, the other surviving Beatle, tweeted: “God bless Robert Freeman peace and love to all his family.”

John Lennon was killed in 1980 and George Harrison died in 2001.

Freeman ‘was one of our favorite photograph­ers during the Beatles years who came up with some of our most iconic album covers.’ — Paul McCartney

 ?? Manuel Bruque EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? HELPING DEFINE THE FAB FOUR Freeman, here at a George Harrison exhibit, did jazz portraits before working with the Beatles.
Manuel Bruque EPA/Shuttersto­ck HELPING DEFINE THE FAB FOUR Freeman, here at a George Harrison exhibit, did jazz portraits before working with the Beatles.

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