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Author Topic: Pink Floyd album designer Storm Thorgerson dies
Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."

Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001


 - posted 04-19-2013 11:36 AM      Profile for Bobby Henderson   Email Bobby Henderson   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Pink Floyd album designer Storm Thorgerson dies

quote: Raphael Satter, Associated Press
LONDON (AP) -- English graphic designer Storm Thorgerson, whose eye-popping album art for Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin encapsulated the spirit of 1970s psychedelia, died Thursday. He was 69.

In a statement, Thorgerson's family said that his death "was peaceful and he was surrounded by family and friends." The statement gave few further details but said that the artist, who suffered a stroke in 2003, had been ill for some time.

Even those who not familiar with Thorgerson's name will have seen his work gracing vinyl collections and CD racks. He was best known for his surreal Pink Floyd covers, which guitarist David Gilmour said had long been "an inseparable part of our work."

Some of Thorgerson's covers — the disturbing image of burning man in a business suit featured on Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here" or the stark prism on the band's "Dark Side of the Moon" — have become icons in their own right.

Thorgerson also made covers for Led Zeppelin, Peter Gabriel, Phish, Styx, and Muse. His art tended toward the unsettling or the bizarre. One particularly weird CD front for The Cranberries' "Bury The Hatchet" featured a monstrous, disembodied eye staring at a crouching, naked figure in a desert. Another Pink Floyd album cover — which Thorgerson said had left the record company "completely berserk" — featured nothing more than a picture of a cow staring out from a field.

Thorgerson described his work as a kind of fantasy job — in both senses of the word.

"People pay me for my thoughts and my dreams," Thorgerson told the BBC in 2010. "I think in that sense I'm very fortunate."
Thorgerson is survived by his mother Vanji, his son Bill, his wife Barbie Antonis, and her two children Adam and Georgia.
____
Jill Lawless contributed to this report.

I have at least a dozen or so albums in my music collection whose covers were designed by Thorgerson. There's the obligatory Pink Floyd discs, Houses of the Holy by Led Zeppelin or Audioslave's first album.

His album cover designs were often simple and direct with a clean, sterile feel to them. Add in disturbing elements and it's something that would fit in with a Stanley Kubrick movie.

A documentary about Thorgerson was made a couple years ago: Taken by Storm: The Art of Storm Thorgerson and Hipgnosis. There is a web site that goes into further detail about the documentary. It has the somewhat outlandish tagline: "this man designed 80% of your record collection." That's not really true. Many great illustrators and graphic designers have created awesome album covers -many of the best created in the 1970's when the big 12" LP offered such a huge canvas. Thorgerson was at his peak then. Music has become far more tiny, first with CD cases and then lately with tiny thumbnail images displayed in a fucking iPod screen.

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Jock Blakley
Expert Film Handler

Posts: 218
From: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Registered: Oct 2011


 - posted 04-19-2013 07:16 PM      Profile for Jock Blakley   Email Jock Blakley   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Vale.

I agree it's a shame too that the 12" LP has mostly been lost to designers. While Mr Thorgerson had that very rare quality of being prolific AND a good designer, there were many men and women who made magic as good as the music on those cardboard canvases.

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Mike Blakesley
Film God

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From: Forsyth, Montana
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 04-19-2013 11:10 PM      Profile for Mike Blakesley   Author's Homepage   Email Mike Blakesley   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
It's probably too late now, but for a while I thought it would be cool if they made CD packages in the 12x12 size as an option.

CD booklets can be cool, but there is no experience quite like opening up a really cool gatefold album cover for the first time and just looking it over while the music plays. Bigger is definitely better in this case.

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