• David Corio recalls: "Julian Cope has had an unconventional career. He first achieved fame and success when his band Teardrop Explodes’ single ‘Reward’ reached the top ten in 1981 but after three years and three albums they were to split up with Cope starting off on a solo career. His strong political and religious views along with hallucinogenic experimentations have caused friction with various labels over the years and he now mainly records and promotes his own releases independently. He has become a successful author writing books on the history of German and Japanese rock music (‘Krautrocksampler’ & ‘Japrocksampler’) but has probably become best known as an acclaimed archeologist with his two books ‘The Modern Antiquarian’ and ‘The Megalithic European’ – a subject close to my heart. The photo session was done in conjunction with his ‘St Julian’ release in a bland executive boardroom. The only light was a single strip light and to get more atmospheric lighting we both stood on the table for a better vantage point. He was very easy to photograph as every time I took a shot he automatically moved into a different pose – mugging for the camera one minute or looking vulnerable the next."
  • David Corio recalls: "One-two-three-faww! I think this picture captured the persona of Johnny Ramone – requisite Ramones T-shirt, guitar slung impossibly low, drainpipe jeans plastered on skinny long legs splayed wide and all capped by a contemptuous sneer. Johnny Ramone’s super-fast buzzsaw guitar had a huge impact on the punk scene and he could make a two-minute song sound like an epic." The Ramones were synonymous with CBGB’s, the legendary New York club on The Bowery that kickstarted the careers of many US punk bands. Johnny died of prostate cancer in 2004.
  • David Corio recalls: "The Nashville Room was a big grotty room on the corner of Cromwell Road and North End Row in West Kensington. It was a music mecca for about five years where many bands including the Sex Pistols, The Police, U2 and Joy Division got some of their first shows. This was an early gig for The Pretenders. I hadn’t been commissioned but I was curious about the band as there had been so much buzz about them. I like this photo for its structure and light as much as for Chrissie’s pose. The photo was recently published again by a US magazine accompanied by Chrissie’s memories. Although she could no longer remember where her Gibson SG guitar had vanished to, she recalled that she was wearing her plastic Fiorucci trousers that night. Sadly the two guitarists in the photo Pete Farndon and guitarist James Honeyman-Scott died from drug overdoses a few years after The Pretenders 1979 debut hit single ‘Stop Your Sobbing’."
  • David Corio recalls: "The former 19th century steam engine repair shed was a circular venue that had been previously known for hosting acts like Jimi Hendrix and Pink Floyd with psychedelic light shows in the 1960s and it still had an alternative hippy feel even when punk was in full force. The Roundhouse had unusual line-ups and this show featured Dire Straits opening the bill followed by Slaughter & The Dogs and Talking Heads headlining." Talking Heads’ debut album ‘Talking Heads 77’ was one of the early new wave albums that was quite different and more sophisticated than most of the punk music coming out at the time. This would later be labelled post-punk. Their first single ‘Psycho Killer’ was a hit and featured Tina Weymouth’s distinctive heavy bass line and David Byrne’s jagged guitar sound. They later developed a heavier rhythm using a mix of funk and world music influences and Tina Weymouth also formed the more hip hop –influenced Tom Tom Club with Talking Heads’ drummer Chris Frantz. Talking Heads finally split up in the late 1980s. Although they reformed briefly when they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Tina Weymouth was quoted as saying that David Byrne was ‘a man incapable of returning friendship’. Don’t expect any reunions in the near future!
  • David Corio recalls: "This was Public Enemy's first day in London on their debut European tour. They were plugging their first album Yo! Bum Rush The Show. Due to massive press interest and their very crowded schedule I was allocated a session with them on a foggy November morning. Their gangsta poses and Black Power salutes for the camera seemed incongruous in a Hyde Park criss-crossed by suited men striding to work, dog walkers and early morning joggers. What concerned them most that morning was the dearth of McDonalds en route from the airport. They wanted reassurance that there was at least one somewhere in England. I told them in my most reassuring voice that I thought Id heard of a branch up north but I wasnt certain where, which they naturally refused to believe. Over the years the magnitude of Flavor Flavs clock increased in proportion to his fame. When I took this photo, his present incarnation as a reality TV star was unimaginable. It is as well he didnt become as celebrated as Michael Jackson or hed have Big Ben hanging around his neck."
  • David Corio recalls: "When I photographed Richard Butler in the lift of his record label CBS his band The Psychedelic Furs were in a musical transition from being an arty new wave band with punk overtones to creating a straightforward rock sound that was less pretentious and would give them mainstream success particularly in the US.The Psychedelic Furs album Talk Talk Talk was just released at this time and creating a buzz. I wasn't a fan of their music and that can sometimes make it difficult to be inspired when it comes to taking photographs. I would sometimes get musicians to collaborate in the photo shoot by getting them to produce their own lighting. I had the flash gun attached to a long lead and gave it to Richard to point at himself or wherever he wanted to. It can create interesting shapes and shadows although as this was done in pre-digital days I didn't know what I was getting until I developed the film. Highlights can get burnt out, flare can be a problem and the angles may not always be particularly flattering but that is part of the fun of it. He was a willing participant striking different poses and tugging his shirt and hair. I don't think we said a word to each other during the whole shoot."
  • David Corio recalls: "Orange Juice were a quintessential indie band signed to Postcard Records hailing from Glasgow. They seemed somehow out of place in London wearing shorts on a summers day so I took them to the canal which seemed to be more fitting for their image. They had a post-punk sound but combined jangly guitars reminiscent of disco band Chic with funky bass lines. Rip It Up released in 1983 was their only top forty hit but along with label stablemates Josef K they have been regarded as a big influence on a host of more recent guitar-driven bands like Franz Ferdinand and The Drums." In 2005 lead singer and songwriter Edwyn Collins suffered a double brain haemorrhage. He has undergone a lengthy programme of neurological rehabilitation and has recently gone back to recording and occasional live performances.
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