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Trust Dinithi Fernando Photography for newborn photography Edmonton, maternity photography, baby photography, milestone & family photography.
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Little One Photo: Capturing Edmonton Newborn Moments
Little One Photo is an establishment that focuses on delivering premium Edmonton newborn photography. We aim to exquisitely capture the innocence, beauty, and wonder of your child during their initial days of life.
Our proficient and seasoned photography staff recognizes the significance of producing enduring and heartfelt images that you will cherish to share with your loved ones and exhibit in your home. We diligently execute each session with meticulousness, patience, and consciousness of detail to guarantee that each photograph authentically captures the distinct character and essence of your invaluable infant.
We make every effort to capture the unique personality of your newborn through candid moments of joy and sweetness as well as adorable posed shots. We will collaborate with you to design a photography session that precisely embodies your style and inclinations, whether you favor timeless black-and-white portraiture or dynamic, animated compositions.
Little One Photo is committed to the notion that each family ought to possess exquisite, high-quality photographs that encapsulate the affection, delight, and intimacy that characterize their distinct bond. By utilizing our proficient photography services, you can have confidence that your cherished memories will be meticulously preserved, enabling future generations to relive those momentous occasions.
Little One Photo is therefore your only option if you're seeking a skilled and seasoned Edmonton family photographer or maternity photographer to immortalize the enchantment of your expanding family. Contact us immediately to arrange your session and allow us to assist you in creating enduring memories.
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Family Photography Service In Victoria
If you want to capture the love and togetherness that you share with your family, get in touch with Bebe Films. Offering services for family photography in Victoria, Bebe Films is your gateway to a family album that is simply unforgettable.
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Best Newborn Photography Edmonton
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Breastmilk in baby's hair.
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Get the Best Newborn Photography Service In Edmonton
Are you Searching for the best photographers in Edmonton for Photography? If Yes, stop your search here at Dinithi Fernando Photography Studio. We are professional photographers, specializing in Newborn photography, and provide full service with everything included – costumes, props, apparel forming, photo taking, photo retouching, photo designing, and a wide selection of customized products such as photo albums and frames. Our focus is always on capturing timeless, high-quality images that you can cherish for a lifetime. We love to create a variety of setups for every photography session for each of our clients. Come on and Hire us now at a cost-effective price!
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Looking for the Best Newborn Photography in River Valley Riverside? Then contact Lily Laidlaw Photography are a wedding portraiture service based in Edmonton, Alberta.
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edmonton-newborn-photography-knphoto https://ift.tt/32HrCyz
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Edmonton Newborn Photography - redwagon photography | Edmonton Family Photographer https://cstu.io/751abb
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Coogee Beach, Perth, Western Australia
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Hyperallergic: Chuck Berry and the Modernist Fable of “Johnny B. Goode”
Chuck Berry performing at the “Biggest Show of Stars For ’57” concert in Edmonton, Alberta (Richard G. Proctor Photography Limited fonds, Provincial Archives of Alberta, via Wikimedia Commons)
“Johnny B. Goode” is Chuck Berry’s two-and-a-half minute essay on the Machine in the Garden.
In The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America, the cultural historian Leo Marx explores the philosophical tension between colonists’ visions of America as paradise regained — the Edenic idyll familiar from Edward Hicks’s folk painting, “Peaceable Kingdom” (ca 1833) — and the America of the Technological Sublime, a humming dynamo of technological progress and gadget worship.
For Marx, this dialectic is neatly summed up by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s encounter with industrial modernity on the morning of July 27, 1844. Hawthorne is musing idly in the Concord woods, where “sunshine glimmers through shadow, and shadow effaces sunshine, imaging that pleasant mood of mind where gaiety and pensiveness intermingle,” when the bucolic peace is shattered by the whistle of a nearby locomotive, a “long shriek, harsh, above all other harshness” that reminds the writer that civilization’s swarming anthill is not far off. With historical hindsight, we can hear it, too, as the annunciatory trumpet of the 20th century, just around the bend.
In “Johnny B. Goode” (1958), Berry zooms in with a camera eye, taking us “Deep down in Louisiana close to New Orleans / way back up in the woods among the evergreens,” a setting that, if not exactly Arcadian, is at least rural. But the jackhammer chatter of the song’s opening riff lets us know the pastoral is past. Dragging the blues out of its “log cabin made of earth and wood,” Berry hitches it to the chugging of a steam engine’s driving wheels, leaving the languorous rhythms of Delta blues in the rear-view mirror. Unlike another African-American folk hero, John Henry, the steel-driving martyr to Luddism who beat the steam hammer but died of exhaustion, Johnny keeps pace with the passing locomotives, “strumming with the rhythm that the drivers made.”
Country blues is rubato, speeding up and slowing down in defiance of the metronome’s tick. Its elastic sense of time accommodates a song’s changing moods, but it also reflects the pace of life in the pre-industrial South, before the coming of the time clock and the assembly line, when most labor meant farm work, tied to the seasons and the rising and setting of the sun. By contrast, Berry’s machinelike rhythms are products of postwar America. His machine-gunned double stops — two strings played at once, slurred from one fret to the next — give revving engines a run for their money. His rhythm parts — the deathless “Chuck Berry chord,” a barre chord with a major sixth (and sometimes a flatted seventh) on top — hammer home their point with the staccato insistence of a locomotive piston. Spat out with rivet-gun speed and uniformity, Chuck Berry licks sound mass-produced, as if they were turned out on a Detroit assembly line.
Chuck Berry circa 1958 (via Wikimedia Commons)
As important, the masses can produce them: for decades, mastering the intro to “Johnny B. Goode” was a rite of passage for any aspiring guitar hero. And, in keeping with the Fordist logic of postwar manufacturing, Berry’s musical vocabulary is a kit of parts. His little widgets are modular, easily recombined into a seemingly endless series of musical assemblages, as Keith Richards and a wave of British invaders soon discovered.
“Someday your name will be in lights,” Johnny’s mother prophesies; we assume he’s bound for the big city, a trajectory Berry himself followed when he drove from St. Louis to Chicago, in 1955, to land a record deal with the legendary Chess label. “Johnny B. Goode” is rock’s earliest exercise in self-mythologization, a thinly veiled autobiographical fiction whose first draft starred “a colored boy named ‘Johnny B. Goode” who was “more or less myself,” admitted Berry, in his 1987 memoir, The Autobiography. Ever mindful of his crossover potential, Berry changed the lyric to “a country boy” because, he later claimed, “I thought it would seem biased to my white fans to say ‘colored boy.’” But his alter ego was still Berry, by any other name, and therefore still black, if only subtextually: Johnny owes his surname to Goode Avenue in St. Louis, the site of Berry’s childhood home.
At the same time, Johnny stands in for every African American who embarked on the Great Migration — the exodus, beginning in 1915, of millions of blacks from the rural, agrarian, Jim Crow South to the urban, industrial North, specifically to Chicago. The opening scene of “Johnny B. Goode” isn’t just a cinematic zoom-in on some backwoods Dogpatch; it’s a trip back in time as well, a fade-in on the antebellum South. “The gateway from freedom, I was led to understand, was somewhere ‘close to New Orleans’ where most Africans were sorted through and sold” into slavery, wrote Berry, in The Autobiography. “I’d been told my grandfather lived ‘back up in the woods among the evergreens’ in a log cabin. I revived the era with a story about a ‘colored boy named Johnny B. Goode.’”
At once exuberant and slyly ironizing, Berry’s songs are road trips through the American mythos. He saw things through W.E.B. Du Bois’s dark veil of race as it’s lived, and from the illusionless perspective of a sensitive, intensely private black man who grew up in a time when the threat of violence shadowed even the most mundane interactions between the races. Yet he lived to see his name in lights on the Fox Theater on Grand Avenue, in St. Louis, where the ticket-seller had told him, as an 11-year-old, that he couldn’t see A Tale of Two Cities because the Fox was a whites-only movie house. “You know you people can’t come in here,” he recalled her saying, in the documentary Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll. (Was the irony of the title lost on the lady in the ticket booth? We’ll never know. It’s hard to imagine it was lost on someone who loved wordplay as much as Berry.)
He duck-walked the always fine and fraught line between black and white Americas with winking aplomb; his Trickster guile is on display in “Johnny,” in allusions that flew past white ears. In Brown Eyed Handsome Man: The Life and Hard Times of Chuck Berry, Bruce Pegg wonders if Johnny was another incarnation of the archetypal “man of the black masses with provincial concerns” who served, in Langston Hughes’s “Here to Yonder” column in the Chicago Defender, as a philosophical foil to the “educated black man with a more global perspective.” In a suggestive coincidence, Hughes’s countrified Everyman was named Jesse B. Simple.
As well, there are resonances, in the lyrics of “Johnny B. Goode,” with African-American history. In The Autobiography, Berry claims, in one of several versions of the song’s origin story, that it was inspired by his first visit, in 1955, to New Orleans, “a place I’d longed to visit ever since hearing Muddy Waters’s lyrics, ‘Going down in Louisiana, way down behind the sun.’ That inspiration, combined with little bits of Dad’s stories and the thrill of seeing my black name posted all over town in one of the cities they brought the slaves through, turned into the song ‘Johnny B. Goode.’”
Chuck Berry performing at the Long Beach Blues Festival in 1997 (photo by Masahiro Sumori, via Wikimedia Commons)
But we can hear echoes, too, in that opening line, of the African-American folktale of the Signifying Monkey, an irreverent mischief-maker based on Esu, the Trickster figure of Yoruba myth. Like Berry himself, the Monkey is a master of signification, manipulating language to his own, wily ends. One rhyming version of the Signifying Monkey tale begins, “Deep down in the jungle so they say / there’s a signifying motherfucker down the way / There hadn’t been no disturbin’ in the jungle for quite a bit / For up jumped the monkey in the tree one day and laughed / ‘I guess I’ll start some shit.’” Not coincidentally, Berry knew that version, and thought it “naughty and funny” but too obscene, obviously, for 1950s America.
“Johnny B. Goode” also testifies to black folks’ embrace of newborn technologies such as the electric guitar and amplifier, not to mention special effects like distortion, reverb, and electronic tremolo (taken to B-movie extremes by Bo Diddley, an inveterate tinkerer who designed his own jaw-dropping guitars — think Russian Constructivism with tail fins — and souped them up with homemade electronics). Berry was “completely fascinated,” he said, in his autobiography, by the reel-to-reel magnetic wire recorder he bought, early on. Hearing his playing mechanically reproduced profoundly altered his sense of his sound. “Historians of technology have usually characterized technological enthusiasm as a white male pastime,” Steve Waksman observes, in Instruments of Desire: The Electric Guitar and the Shaping of Musical Experience. Berry’s “acquisition of the means to record himself and his professed fascination with these means certainly demonstrates a high level of interest in ways of shaping sound through electric technology.” “Johnny B. Goode,” Waksman speculates, may be the first song by an African-American guitarist to feature overdubbed guitar tracks.
In a broader sense, “Johnny” speaks to black artists’ appropriation of the Modernist aesthetic, and their ability to drive flaming donuts around it, signifying the shit out of it, as the Monkey might say. In The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism, Henry Louis Gates defines signifying, in the black vernacular sense, as the art of moving “freely between two discursive universes” — “the white linguistic realm,” Eurocentric and self-consciously literary, and a parallel black dimension that wrests the tool of language from the master’s hand and turns it to its own uses, be they political, playful, subversive, or outright seditious. Berry was a peerless Signifier, reveling in rhyme, alliteration, double entendre, mock grandiloquence, and playful neologisms (“As I was motorvatin’ over the hill…”).
Conceptually, his songs are wry snapshots of the American Scene in the 1950s; harmonized with Kerouac’s On the Road (1957) and Robert Frank’s The Americans (1958), they make interesting historical music. Berry was Pop before Warhol, Johns, and Rauschenberg were Pop. (When I hear “Back in the USA,” I always imagine it as the soundtrack to James Rosenquist’s “F-111.”). Later, in 1970, Jimi Hendrix would deconstruct “Johnny B. Goode” as he had “The Star-Spangled Banner,” reimagining Berry’s masterpiece of Pop miniaturism as an Abstract-Expressionist explosion of drips, smears, and lashes of sound.
In its moment, Berry’s music was thoroughly modern: jump-cutting, hyperkinetic, ironic, intertextual, infatuated with the bright, shiny surfaces of consumer culture, giddy with the pedal-to-the-metal acceleration of postwar America. Taken together, his ‘50s classics are a brown-eyed man’s road trip through a nation being transformed by technology and consumer culture — a psychogeography of a cultural landscape defined by the Mercury launches and the mushroom cloud, jet airliners and the Interstate Highway System, the arrival of TV and the invention of teen culture (which had Berry’s fingerprints all over it). “Johnny”’s refrain, “Go! Go!” is what Ezra Pound’s Modernist battle cry, “Make it new!” sounds like when it’s blown down the wind, the gleeful shout of a black man in a “yellow convertible four-door De Ville” with “a powerful motor with a jet off-take,” flooring it for the Promised Land.
The post Chuck Berry and the Modernist Fable of “Johnny B. Goode” appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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Kindly read this blog post by Dinithi Fernando, your professional Edmonton newborn photographer. In this post, she shares valuable tips on how to prepare your little one for a smooth and enjoyable newborn photography session. From the best timing for the shoot to packing essential items, these tips will help ensure that your baby is comfortable and ready for their big moment in front of the camera.
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RT https://t.co/IYzOrK1fYu #yeg #newbornphotos #newbornphotographer #love #edmonton #newbornp… https://t.co/ACPYUeaT59
RT https://t.co/IYzOrK1fYu #yeg #newbornphotos #newbornphotographer #love #edmonton #newbornphotography #newbornp… https://t.co/ACPYUeaT59
— Newborn Photography (@newbornphotgrph) February 25, 2017
Source: @newbornphotgrph February 25, 2017 at 03:59PM More info Newborn Photography Gold Coast
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Hire Toronto Newborn Photographer
Do you want to create a stunning family album without going overboard in terms of expenses? If yes, then get in touch with Bebe Films and Hire top rated Toronto Newborn Photographer at very low cost.
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Rachel Melnychuk of Then Now & Forever Photography is a premier Newborn & Baby Photographer, specializing in Baby/Newborn photography Edmonton and surrounding areas including but not limited to Parkland County, Stony Plain, and Spruce Grove.
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Read this article by Dinithi Fernando explaining the importance of capturing those fleeting moments in newborn photography in Edmonton. She shares valuable insights on how to create beautiful, timeless images that reflect the unique bond between parents and their newborns.
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