Acoustic Sounds
Lyra
The Francis Wolff Collection
By: Tracking Angle

July 21st, 2023

Category:

News

For Those Who Actually Play Their Records, Something From Blue Note to Hang on the Wall

a new series of limited-edition Francis Wolff fine art photography collector’s pieces

Blue Note Records has announced The Francis Wolff Collection, a new series of limited-edition fine art photography collector’s pieces that celebrates the legacy of Blue Note co-founder and photographer Francis Wolff as well as the musicians he loved. The series launches today with a collection of one-of-a-kind pieces featuring Wolff’s iconic photographs of the legendary saxophonistJohn Coltrane at the 1957 recording session for his masterpiece Blue Train (BLP 1577). Items available in the inaugural drop were all produced from new highest-quality digital captures that reveal these images in stunning detail including a High-Definition Cradled Metal Print with Custom Acrylic Embossment, the Blue Train Framed Diptych, Archival Fine Art Prints in dynamic sizes, and aLithograph Print Set that comes in a Blue Train LP jacket. See below for more details. The Francis Wolff Collection is available exclusively on the Blue Note Store.

 

“Francis Wolff’s evocative photos have become the visual manifestation of the jazz milieu,” says Blue Note President Don Was. “We at Blue Note Records are thrilled to once again become the caretakers of this archive. This Blue Train collection launches our mission to make these photos available in the highest quality to fans and collectors.”

 

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Francis Wolff was a commercial photographer in his native Berlin before he escaped on the last boat out of Nazi-controlled Germany bound for America in late 1939. Arriving in New York City, he joined his childhood friend and fellow jazz enthusiast Alfred Lion who had just founded a small independent jazz label called Blue Note Records. Soon, Wolff was bringing his camera to recording sessions and jazz clubs where he’d capture intimate portraits of the musicians at work, and over the next three decades he steadily built one of the greatest collections of jazz photography of all-time.

 

Over his career Wolff photographed a true Who’s Who of Jazz history capturing iconic images of legends including Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Horace Silver, Art Blakey, Jimmy Smith, Dexter Gordon, Grant Green, Lou Donaldson, Donald Byrd, Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, McCoy Tyner, Ornette Coleman, and many more. His remarkable photographs were featured in countless Blue Note album cover designs by the visionary graphic designer Reid Miles who used Wolff’s images to striking effect.

 

In recent decades, thanks to the tireless dedication of the collection’s longtime caretaker Michael Cuscuna of Mosaic Images, Wolff’s photographs have begun to be recognized as works of art themselves. With the collection now owned once again by Blue Note Records, the label is working to preserve and reveal even more of this remarkable archive which includes more than 20,000 black & white and color images taken between 1940-1970. A new digitization of the entire collection using a 150MP overhead camera capture system shooting in a raw format at the highest possible resolution has ensured the preservation of these images as they’ve never been seen before.

 

Comments

  • 2023-07-21 04:07:17 PM

    Silk Dome Mid wrote:

    Digital captures? What? No way! I would only buy these if they were AAA.

    • 2023-07-21 07:10:11 PM

      Anton wrote:

      Awesome. You win the interwebs today.

      ;-D

  • 2023-07-22 03:44:49 PM

    Jim Shue wrote:

    Mosaic (Michael Cuscuna) offered a similar series back in the mid 90s. I had the Coltrane-Blue Train cover shot print. It came in a very nice Archival folder. Sadly I sold it off (a huge mistake!) a decade ago. Can't remember what they claimed at the time (ie was it a Gelatin Silver print - but given the era Digital prints were not a thing yet, so it was some type of analog print.