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24 Hours With The Leica M Monochrom

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 29, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Not quite three years ago, the Leica M9 was released, and we joyously greeted this full-frame digital Leica M, which enabled us to use Leica’s legendary M lenses at the focal length for which they were designed.  We loved the M8, but it was a compromise — not a full-frame 35mm equivalent, even if a “digital M” — and using it came with both teething pains and some genuine flaws (most notably, pretty mediocre high ISO performance.)  We await with trepidation the announcement next month at Photokina about what Leica has up its sleeve for what is expected to be called the M10.  But in the meantime, on May 10th, Leica announced the M Monochrom, an 18 megapixel camera housed within the M9’s form factor, but which only takes black and white images.  Yesterday, ours arrived, and our initial impressions are that this camera is absolutely stunning.

Leica M Monochrom, ISO 3200, Noctilux wide open, yellow filter (22)

Click on the picture above.  As a composition, it’s nothing special, maybe, as we were rushed to take some photos before night fell. But that’s the point: night really had fallen when we took it, and the ISO 3200 performance, with what noise exists to our eyes looking more like film grain than anything horrific, is pretty amazing.  Notably, this image took virtually no time in post-processing.  The files that come out of the SD card seek only some contrast.

You see, the removal of the Bayer filter that converts what is recorded as black and white into the color images that all other digital cameras produce enables the Monochrom to record images with a degree of clean resolution that effectively renders this 18 megapixel camera into a 36 megapixel medium format camera.  We really look forward to pushing that particular envelope; for now, let us simply say we are amazed at the low levels of noise at ISO 3200, and we haven’t even taken it up to its 10000 ISO limits.

Leica M Monochrom, ISO 320, 35mm Summilux FLE, orange filter

We took it for a spin just before and after lunch today, in bright sunlight.  Of course, the Monochrom is ruthless when it comes to overexposure, so you have either to compensate for exposure or be very careful about managing highlights.  As a street camera, it has all the advantages of a Leica M: it is small, and thus discrete — even more discrete than usual, as there are literally no markings anyone can see, no red dot, no Leica insignia.

Leica M Monochrom, 35mm Summilux FLE, ISO 320, orange filter

In 2006, when we switched from a film M7 to the digital wonders of the M8, we ceased thinking in terms of what film is in the camera.  Digital outputs could be in black and white or color, whichever worked.  It is a strange, almost perverse wonder once again to think in terms of luminance, not chroma, as Ming Thein has pointed out.  Knowing you are capturing forms and shapes, not color data, is like listening to music without paying attention to the lyrics.  The lyrics (colors) are still there, but the data they hold is transformed into rhythms, not content.  And so it is with the Monochrom, which liberates us to think purely in terms of composition and light.

Leica M Monochrom, ISO 320, 35mm Summilux, orange filter

We are really looking forward to taking it out again at night.  Still, daylight scenes in DC are plenty interesting, to us at least.

Leica M Monochrom, ISO 320, 35mm Summilux FLE, orange filter

The Leica M Monochrom exists in a niche within a niche, a black and white (only) rangefinder.  When one thinks about the historical output from Leica Ms loaded with black and white film, this back to the future moment fills us with delight.

Prayer For New Orleans Today

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 29, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Leica Monochrom, ISO 320, Noctilux f/0.95, wide open. Click on photo to judge full resolution, albeit down rezzed for Internet posting.

The Arrival Of The Leica Monochrom

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 29, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Leica M Monochrom, ISO 3200, Noctilux wide open, the sun having set maybe 30 minutes earlier.  Virtually no post processing in Lightroom.  Utilized a Silver Efex Pro2 preset.  National Cathedral Bishop’s Garden.  Click on the image to get a sense of the resolution. Think this is going to be fun.

“The West Is On Fire!”

Posted in Uncategorized on August 16, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Smoke settles upon Western valleys.  Leica M9, 50mm Summilux.  Earlier than sunset is supposed to be.

Devo’s “Don’t Roof Rack Me, Bro” Is Campaign 2012 Anthem Of The Year

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 15, 2012 by johnbuckley100

So Devo is alive and well, and have managed to write a paean to Seamus, the mutt Gail Collins has brought to global attention.

“Don’t Roof Rack Me, Bro” enlivens this dispiriting campaign.  Our bet is it will provide the margin of victory needed by the incumbent.

Who possibly could vote for someone who would put his dog in a crate on the roof of his car?

As Jerry Casale says,”This isn’t a red-state thing or Devo stumping for Obama. But I think any animal lover that hears the story will learn so much about the character flaw of Romney. It’s just a deal-breaker about the man. My God, the world is a scary place with seven billion people. What you want in a leader is a guy with some humanity at his core. I just don’t feel that Mitt does.”

What It Feels Like To Listen To Olivia Tremor Control

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 9, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 35mm Summilux FLE.

Wonderful Remembrances Of Olivia Tremor Control’s Bill Doss

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 8, 2012 by johnbuckley100

From Flagpole Magazine, the Athens, Georgia arts’n’entertainment weekly, we have this way cool series of remembrances of the late Bill Doss. Worth reading, and not just for Olivia Tremor Control fans.  Not just a musical genius.  Sounds like a really wonderful fellow.

Send Me Dead Flowers By The U.S. Mail

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on August 5, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Leica M9, 50mm Summilux

The Delights Of Jim Marshall’s “The Rolling Stones 1972”

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on August 5, 2012 by johnbuckley100

It was the greatest tour, by the greatest band, backing the release of perhaps the greatest album in the history of rock’n’roll.  Purists point to the Stones’ ’69 tour as the apogee of the art form, noting that it was the band in its naked glory, with only Ian Stewart to radiate the 88 on just a song or two.  But the Stones in ’72 were at their absolute peak, and with Nicky Hopkins looking at the mirror installed on his piano so he could see what the boys were up to behind him, with Jim Price and Bobby Keys filling in on horns, with Mick and Keith standing on that dragon-painted stage that had to be washed with a combination of water and 7Up, with all those songs from Exile On Main Street to be played to huge audiences, this was the pinnacle.  We don’t just say this because we were there, at Boston Garden (on the good night when they played on time), or that first night at Madison Square Garden.  We say it because it is true.

Jim Marshall was a tough, Leica-wielding pro on an assignment for Life, and he was embedded in the early hours, the pre-tour studio wrap up, the West Coast swing.  The only pictures he took from this period that really ever saw the day were what was in that Life published right around the end of the tour.  To see the remaining 80-plus pictures, in one place at one time, you had to wait until now, as The Rolling Stones 1972 was published by Chronicle Books.  Though in the text there is a swipe taken at the great Ethan Russell — they dismiss him as an amateur who hooked up with the Stones for the ’69 tour — this is a nice companion piece to Russell’s fantastic photographic chronicle of that period.

And it’s a reminder that the Stones need to do the right thing and finally release a live album from that magical moment, the ’72 tour.  Keith seems finally to have stopped blocking what for all of us, if not him, was the highlight of the band — the period when Mick Taylor played lead — and last year allowed “Brussels Affair” to be released as an official album.  A few years ago, they allowed new songs to be released from the Exile sessions. They’ve let Ladies and Gentlemen, The Rolling Stones to be rereleased as a DVD.  Now comes Marshall’s book.  It is time the Stones stepped up and allowed tapes from the ’72 tour to come out as an official album.

We’ve always surmised that the reason they didn’t was that it would reveal too clearly that the nearly 40 years since Ron Wood joined the band were substandard.  But with a live album from Mick Taylor’s final tour (’73 Europe) already released, and with the movie made in ’72 available, what’s the point of keeping under wraps that live album recorded in Ft. Worth?  Jim Marshall’s fine book of photograph merely whets the appetite.

Reflections On The Passing Of Bill Doss

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on August 4, 2012 by johnbuckley100

We found out early in the week that Olivia Tremor Control founder Bill Doss had died at 43.  To date, there has been no front-page New York Times obit,  but there should have been.   We expect figures from rural Louisiana to have an influence on Delta blues, but Doss was a revivalist, not of American idioms, unless you consider psychedelic rock as such, but of the trippy weirdness that came when the Beatles and Stones hit their “Tomorrow Never Knows”/”Citadel” late ’60s form.

The Olivia Tremor Control came out of nowhere in 1996 with Music From The Unrealized Film Script “Dusk At Cubist Castle”, and today, 16 years after its release, it holds up as the finest psychedelic rock album since the Summer o’ Luv.  We say this with all due respect to our faves, First Communion Afterparty, and any of the mushroom swallowing young ‘uns who emerged in the OTC’s immense wake.  Dusk At Cubist Castle was a first album that  sounded like a marriage of Sgt. Pepper’s, the second side of  Abbey Road, and Badfinger — it was melodic and pure and surpassingly straightforward for all the weirdness, an accomplishment of a mature band with a big label’s budget.  And yet this first album was recorded for a pittance on a four track, albeit by a cast of musical geniuses that apparently included Doss’s Ruston (LA) High School classmate Robert Schneider, the George Martin of indy rock.

Doss and Olivia Tremor Control spawned The Elephant 6 Collective, which never had a major impact on the mainstream, but in those divots and caves where real rock’n’roll reproduces in mutant cell division, their impact was legion.  Bands like Elf Power, Neutral Milk Hotel, and Of Montreal may have gotten airplay and sold songs to Madison Avenue but they never played Madison Square Garden.  Schneider’s Apples in Stereo may have sent a mighty arrow through red fruit with their theme song for The Powerpuff Girls, but none of the Elephant 6 bands were ever featured on the cover of the Rolling Stone.  If Beulah had stayed together, they might have gone all the way.  But they didn’t.

And still, on the occasion of his early passing,  we come back to Bill Doss, and Dusk at Cubist Castle, and Olivia Tremor Control.  Last year, right around this time, came word that the reformed OTC was releasing some new material, and sure enough, the magical release of their first new music since 1999 sent the entire staff of Tulip Frenzy out in search of  celebratory lysergic mead snow cones.  And word spread, even as the band toured and were featured on NPR, that a new album was in the offing.

And then last week came the bitter rejoinder: Bill Doss had died, which leaves us approximately nowhere. Singer, guitarist, dreamer, entrepreneur, front man and inspiration,  Doss is dead.  Long live Music From The Unrealized Script “Dusk At Cubist Castle”.