• 4 months ago
Interview with the Photographer Joel Lambert at Rebellion Festival.
Transcript
00:00What brings you to the Rebellion Festival in Blackpool every year?
00:05Why did I come, you mean?
00:07Well, because I've been working in music for more than 40 years
00:13and I think I belong to the generation which really began to live with music during the 70s
00:23even at the end of the 60s, and it never stopped.
00:27And I just retired a few weeks ago and since a few years I was just thinking
00:34it would be nice to make the portrait of a generation,
00:39so those people who have been living now for almost 40 years
00:43with music but also connected to arts, literature and so on.
00:48And of course this is a punk festival and punk exploded in the 77 or something like that
00:55and all those people around me, some of them are young
00:58but a lot of people inside are 45, 50, 60 years old.
01:03So what I do is preparing a work because we travel a lot,
01:09we were in Germany a few weeks ago,
01:12as if I were commissioned to make the portrait of a generation, if you want.
01:19So what do you think makes this festival stand out from other ones during the year?
01:26Well, because the last concert I worked for was Rammstein,
01:33which was a huge concert in Belgium, 90,000 people.
01:37But if you pay attention to big festivals now, you have a line-up which is a mix of everything.
01:46You have headliners and from my point of view it doesn't make a lot of sense,
01:52but this festival in Blackpool has a real identity
01:58and from my point of view it is one of the last in Europe with such an identity.
02:03It's really a beautiful festival.
02:05The other one we went to was a gothic festival in Leipzig a few weeks ago,
02:11a wave gothic, same kind of festival.
02:14They are in a niche.
02:16We recognise people who come from France, from New Zealand.
02:21It's the third year we come and we just see it's a family, it's a huge family.
02:28It's a niche and it's really interesting.
02:31So you just feel a connection with everybody there, everyone's there for the same thing.
02:38They are in the same mood and they are ready to travel all over the world to see the same bands.
02:44So it's really interesting because you just have the idea that you can meet those people
02:50in another punk festival 2,000 kilometres away from here.
02:55But on top of it, the way the festival is organised, it is fantastic.
03:04You are really welcome.
03:06The city is really particular and people are nice.
03:12So we begin to know them.
03:14It's the third time and it's tricky because we want to come back each year now.
03:21So what bands are the most exciting to see?
03:28The Stranglers because I saw the Stranglers in the 70s
03:33but not only the Stranglers, Sham 69, Lydia Lange who is really a star.
03:39I think she lives in New York but she is present here this afternoon for literature
03:45and then she performs in the evening.
03:48Who else? Tom Robinson.
03:53Plenty of bands in fact.
03:55But even now we discover young bands which are playing punk music again.
04:03Even from China, Dummy Toys.
04:05The Dummy Toys, yeah.
04:08You have two bands, the Dummy Toys are Chinese I think
04:12and you've got the Rum Kick who are from South Korea.
04:18They were here last year and they are still back.
04:21It's really interesting.
04:23So what are you doing at the festival from a photography point of view?
04:28The idea is I'm preparing an exhibition
04:31and the idea should be to present that exhibition in museums or galleries
04:38which are close to a huge festival.
04:40So if you have for example the Hellfest in France which is close to Nantes
04:46the show would be presented in a gallery in Nantes.
04:49If you have another festival in Brussels, maybe in the Botanic or another gallery or museum
04:56and it would be really nice.
04:58I'm going to try to get some information to present the photographs here in Blackpool
05:04and try to have a connection between the contemporary art or the gallery and the festival.
05:12It's something I've got to speak about to the director of the festival
05:16because just to create one more synergy around the festival.
05:21And then secondly a book about all those people
05:27because it's really becoming important now.
05:30I have hundreds of pictures and make a selection
05:34just like as if it were a commission.
05:39The portrait of a generation if you will.
05:41As I said, you've got a studio at the event.
05:47Where can people find you if you come to that studio to get a photo taken?
05:50What did I say?
05:52Where can people find you?
05:55Well we are just at the entrance of the market.
05:59So it's not a studio, it's just a backdrop, a white backdrop against the wall.
06:06Two flashes and we stop people and we ask them if they want to be shot.
06:12And on top of it I take notes because I send them the pictures later.
06:18I always send the pictures and I ask them who is their favourite artist
06:25or who is their favourite band and who is their favourite writer
06:30or what is their favourite book.
06:32And it's really interesting because when you travel
06:35you see that there are some connections between people all over Europe.
06:40Especially in literature, it's surprising in fact.
06:45So the idea would be to have in the book on the right page the picture
06:51and just on the left page beneath the first name of the person
06:58and then the name of the band or the musician or the writer.
07:03That would be the idea.

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