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Thursday, 31 July 2008 03:29 |
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According to The Guardian, they lived fast and they died young, at the age of 27 to be precise. And
now the most famous members of "the Forever 27 Club" - musicians who
all died at that age, often in circumstances never fully explained -
are to be remembered in a new exhibition.
BRIAN JONES, JIMI HENDRIX, JANIS JOPLIN, JIM MORRISON and KURT COBAIN
will feature in Forever 27, opening this September at London's Proud
Camden. The gallery has gathered together 60 photographs of the five
musicians, including Philip Townsend's first photoshoot of the Rolling
Stones and some of the last pictures of Brian Jones before he died;
Steve Double's iconic images of Kurt Cobain; and Jimi Hendrix and Janis
Joplin, shot by Elliott Landy, official photographer at Woodstock.
Our obsession with fast-living musicians is still strong, explains
curator Sam Talbot. "We feel that the 27 club still has a continuing
relevance. The celebrity spotlight was especially strong on these five
musicians. Through some of the greatest rock'n'roll photography of the
past century, this exhibition gives us an opportunity to examine how it
affected them."
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