The Guardian (USA)

Taylor Swift’s old apartment to Nirvana’s bathtub: the photo project following in musicians’ footsteps

- Daniel Dylan Wray

“Sometimes it’s just a case of going on Google Maps and losing my mind,” says Steve Birnbaum. “Just searching and searching until I see something recognisab­le.”

Birnbaum, a film director based in New York, is talking about his hobby: painstakin­gly tracking down locations of music photoshoot­s so he can find the exact location to re-photograph himself. Inspired by a project he saw that blended war photograph­y with modern-day locations, in 2010 he started doing the same with family photos, then film and TV locations, before homing in on his musical niche around 2017.

While it’s not an entirely original concept – photograph­er Alex Bartsch did the same for British reggae album covers – The Band Was Here now has a quarter of a million followers on Instagram. Here, you’ll find Birnbaum revisiting the exact table in a bar that Woody Guthrie sat at back in 1943 or the precise street location in the Bronx where a 14-year-old Tupac was photograph­ed on a moped back in 1985. “When I’m there, and I line it up, and it feels right … it’s a total buzz,” says Birnbaum.

He’s found locations from plenty of big albums. There’s the wall (now a garage) that Michael Jackson stood in front of on Off the Wall; the fire escape behind Prince on the cover of Purple Rain; the stoop Bob Dylan sat on for Highway 61 Revisited. He even got inside the apartment where all the photograph­s for Taylor Swift’s 1989 album were shot after getting a tip-off that it was for sale and arranging a viewing.

But it’s not just re-photograph­ing iconic imagery, it’s also celebratin­g lesser known shots that involve finding random buildings, car parks, tattoo parlours or pavements. And Birnbaum is not afraid to get nerdy. He has located the bathtub in the photo printed on the

CD of Nirvana’s In Utero from 30 years ago. And not only did he find the hotel that looked out on to the same view that features on Radiohead’s OK Computer cover but he gained access to the room Thom Yorke stayed in to take the same photo.

It’s become a massive undertakin­g. “I will spend hours on one image where I just can’t find anything,” he says. “So I’ll fall into this hole of trying to track it down.” He’s still fervently searching for album cover locations by Smashing Pumpkins and Violent Femmes, while he eagerly awaits a response from the building owner he tracked down where Wu-Tang Clan’s Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) was shot.

His research methods are meticulous: books, magazines, old interviews with photograph­ers – although he never approaches them for help; “I like the hunt,” he says – and finding contact sheets from original photoshoot­s. “A lot of clues are within contact sheets,” he says. “Because there will be photograph­s that were taken from sessions earlier in the day, so it tells me the path that people walked that day.”

However, sometimes he can put in all that work, find the location but when he gets there it’s a giant constructi­on site. “New York has become highrises and glass,” he says. “It’s sad knowing the history, and the people that once stood there, when it’s just completely gone.” Although it has given

 ?? ?? Beyoncé pictured in the Crazy in Love video shoot, 2003. Photograph: @thebandwas­here
Beyoncé pictured in the Crazy in Love video shoot, 2003. Photograph: @thebandwas­here
 ?? ?? US singer-songwriter John Mayer. Photograph: @thebandwas­here
US singer-songwriter John Mayer. Photograph: @thebandwas­here

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