If not for an LSD ź§ trip he took in 1968, at age 19, photographer might never have snapped iconic photos of David Bowie, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, Mƶtley Crüe and a host of other musicians. At the time, he was attending Cambridge University in ĀEngland, majoring in šliterature and harboring no photographic ambitions.
But Rock told The Post that on that night, āI was at the hšome of a friend who had all the toys, including a great record player and camera. Sitting around his room, tripping on blotter acid, I picked up the camera and began playing with it. Every time I clicked, there was an explosion and I saw a ladyās faces in a million Āiterations.ā
Rock fell in love with photography and went from shooting girlfriends to capturing rockers š¦for London publications and Rolling Stone.
āIt was a different time,ā he said. āI picked up what I needed to know asąµ² I went along. I realized that you didnāt need to know much when it came to photography.ā
Still, Rock went on to become an image-maker of choice for stars from Freddie āMercury to Joey Ramone. The gallery in London is in the midst of a sale that includes a dozen of his favorite prints.
Heą“rš¼e are a few of his top shots and the stories behind them.
Debbie Harry of Blondie
In 1978, Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione wanted to start a womenās fashion magazine. Rock was commissioned to shoot a portrait of Blondie frontwoman He did it in his New York studio.
āDebbie and Bowie were the two most photogenic people to come down the pike,ā said Rock. āShe loved having her picture taken .ā.ā. I gave her some attitude with wild hand gestures, and she responded by āpulling on the scarf.ā Rock remembered that she told him, āIf you were a drag queen, your name would be Miss Direction.ā
As for the fashion mag, it never happened and Guccione ended up šputting the punk princess on the cover of Penš§øthouse. āShe didnāt mind,ā said Rock.
The Pointer Sisters
It was 1973, the Pointer Sisters were getting ready to play their first British gig and everybody was pumped. Rock went backstage to captuź§re the moment. š”He was ready ā but made to wait longer than expected.
āThe makeup artist was good but a pain in the neck,ā Rock remembered. āHe worked with me for [Bowieās] āLife on Marsā video [which Rock directed]. David called him Pierre Le Poof. I remember being mad at Pierre that night .ā.ā. He used all [the Pointersā] time with makeup. F–king Pierre.ā
But then Rock reconsidered: āą½§I only got one set of pictures done, but maybe the time constraint is what energ൩ized the whole thing. Look at them ā theyāre so brighš°t and cheerful.ā
Mötley Crüe
A 1986 conversation with bassist Nikki Sixx struck the perfect chord prior to a shoot with Mƶtley Crüe. āNikki said to me, āDo what yoāu want. Just make it glammy and dramaš·tic,āāā remembered Rock.
āThey were out of their f–king minds with Ācocaine. They made me look like an amateur ā and I was no amateur. At one point during the session, Vince Neil disappeared with some bird.ā
As for this image, Rock said, āThey were completely wild and fun and there happened to be a bathtub [in the studio]. Somebody told them to get in; so they did and poured in the bubble bath. I thought it was š¼the perfect photo, but for some reason their record label didnāt use it.ā
Iggy Pop
Iggy Pop came to London in 1972 to record the album āRaw Powerā at the behest of his pal David Bowie. āEverybody was telling me to go to Iggyās show at Kingās Cross Cinema. I was with Bowie and had free range [for photos] ā , charged up, but not quite drooling,ā said Rock, adding that Pop was unsuccessfully trying to avoid drugs at the time. āI wound up selling pictures from that show to his record ląµ²abel for the āRaw Powerā album cover. They paid me $200. Clearly, my photo didnāt help sell the album. It wound up in the bargain bin months after the release.ā
Miley Cyrus
Last year, in the thick of pandemic lockdown, Rock received a call from his friend who had produced Miley Cyrusā new record.
āHe wanted me to fly to LA so that I could shoot Miley for her āPlastic Heartsā album cover. But I had a kidney transplant in 2012 and I wasnāt going to f–king go there and get sick,ā said Rock. āThen, soon after, he called again and said he was in New York with Miley.ā
As is the norm for Rock, there was not a lot of advance plaš¤Ŗnning ā save for a pair of nurses to administer COVID tests ā but his pedigree went a long way. āMiley wanted to know about David Bowie. She asked me about the first time I met him,ā he said. āIt was backstage .ā.ā. We were both South London boys, he was charming and minded his manners even at his craziest; we got tight quickly.ā
As for Cyrus, āShe likes sticking out her tongue and I didnāt object. All of a sudden she beganā licking the statue. I made sure to get the shot.ā
Joan Jett
Some of Rockās best shoots took place with littį©į©į©į©į©į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©š±į©į©į©le in the way of advance notice. Such was the case in 1983 when he received a midnight call from Joan Jettās manager, Kenny Laguna.
āHe told me that Joan had done three or four photo shoots, hated the pictures and needed to get the album [art] in,ā recalled Rock. āSo she came up to the studio with a few changes of clothing and I shot her. I saw her in that jacket and thought that she looked like a female Elvis.ā It became the cover of her “I Love Rock ‘n Roll” album.
As for the late-hour vibe, Rock said, āIām sure there were other things going on that night. I know there were for me.ā Asked if heās referring to illicit substances, š±Rock replied, āDrugs? I canāt talk about drugs, old boy. But I do have theš“ greatest collection of Ācocaine still-lifes. It was a different time, darling.ā
David Bowie and Lou Reed
Sheer lź¦ove of rock ānā roll paid off when the photographer got invited to a 1972 press gathering for David Bowie and Lou Reed in a suite at the Dorchester Hotel in London.
āI donāt even know if I got paid to take pictures there,ā Rock said. āBut getting paid was not the point. It was about hanging out with David, who was very ambitious. He talked to me about wanting the big time. Louā ā whose āTransformerā record Bowie was getting ready to produce ā āmight have been a bit out of it that afternoon. Between them, he and Davāid were very chatty but they did not talk to anyone else. Most of the time, David had a cigarette in hand .ā.ā. and Lou looked liāke he just stepped off the campus of Syracuse University [Reedās alma Āmater].ā
Bowie was something of a muse for the photographer. šSaid Rock: āBošwie was always dressing up. I shot him in 72 different outfits over 21 months.ā
Fin DAC collaboration
As far as Rock is concerned, a series of images he didź¦ with spray-paint artist are more about the content, artfulness and context than the photos themseꦫlves (which Fin DAC, not Rock, snapped).
āA monkey could take those pictures,ā he said. The photos show limited edition works depicting Rockās imagš¦es on T-shirts worn by a model. Fin DAC paints each piece.
āThe point was to make the T-shirts, put them on the person and do the art,” Rock said. “Theyāre cool. Plus we split the money, we split the publicity and we split the co-ownership.ā Iterations featuring David Bowie, Lou Reed and Debbie Harry are being auctioned off for charity.
All prints are available to see and purchase at .