Jam "Setting Sons" Album Cover

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Setting sons Color.jpg File metadata

Jam "Setting Sons" Album Cover

NoAI
Owner: Andy Rosen

Digital fingerprint: ab2a12fc 02a24b14 ade13722 b1e3d566 ea210291 5a46f09a 5de1731d 21e60b22

Title: Jam "Setting Sons" Album Cover

Creator: Andy Rosen

Owner: Andy Rosen

Registered by: Andy Rosen

Credit line: Andy Rosen

Copyright status: Copyrighted

Copyright notice: All Rights Reserved.

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Web statement of rights: https://www.fileprotected.com/explore/registration/r-GXsgl2Js812D

Licensor URL: https://www.fileprotected.com/explore/registration/r-GXsgl2Js812D

Work type: Visual Arts/Photography

Submitted at: 6/4/2020 5:30PM

Available for: Licensing/sales

 

Published date: 1979-02-03

Hashtags: #thejam #settingsons #brightonbeach

Rights Usage Terms: No rights have been granted in any capacity.

Licensor: Andy Rosen

Rep/Agency/Sales: Andy Rosen

Rep/Agency/Sales contact: getreel1@gmail.com

Name: AndyR

Email: getreel1@gmail.com

Address: Los Angeles

State/Province: CA

Nationality: British

Country: USA

This FileProtected registration provides certified proof that on 6/4/2020 7:31PM, the 1 files and the metadata listed here were digitally fingerprinted, timestamped and recorded in the Blockchain by Andy Rosen. It provides a tamper proof record of the date of creation, ownership, attribution, and the authenticity of the content with verifiable proof for courts of law.
 
Registration: Bitcoin Block 633057

Submitted at: 6/4/2020 5:30PM

Copyright status: Copyrighted

Copyright notice: All Rights Reserved.

Digital fingerprint: ab2a12fc 02a24b14 ade13722 b1e3d566 ea210291 5a46f09a 5de1731d 21e60b22
© 2024 All Rights Reserved. All images, files and information appearing in this FileProtected registration, unless noted otherwise, are the exclusive property of Andy Rosen and are protected under the United States and International Copyright laws.
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The main thing I remember is that the dog got paid more than I did!

Robin Richards, the art director and I had booked a handsome British Bull Dog for the day and a few friends to help out. We arranged to meet at my place on Castle Rd, Kentish Town early Sunday morning. The dog never showed up. This was before cell phones so we couldn't ring them or text. We had no house phone either. After waiting for two hours, we decided to try and find another dog. Not so easy on a Sunday morning. But a friend of a friend had a friend who had BullDog. We rushed to a call box and woke them up. I explained the situation. All was cool, except for one tiny detail the dog was not a bulldog. It was a boxer. It would be a bit like if you replaced the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer lion with a tiger. Not the same deal but we had to roll with it. We also had to pay the owner a ridiculous fee to get him out of bed for an away day to Brighton at such short notice. To this day many people have no idea it's a Boxer. They just assume it is because it fits the iconic reference we set out to capture with Brighton Beach and a Bulldog. If you check it out though it definitely looks like a Boxer… once you know.

This was just one of many setbacks that day. When we finally arrived in Brighton, the first thing we had to do was staple the Union Jack we had silkscreen-printed to the public deckchair. The moment the dog hit the beach, it was off. The next hour was spent chasing it down. This was going to be a problem as we needed the dog to sit still in an exact position on the beach. In the end, after many attempts, we got some rope and tied him down so he couldn't run off. We also had to hide it under the pebbles. If you look carefully, you can see a tiny bit of rope hanging from his neck. After a few hours, the dog went on strike and refused to stand up. So we called it a day and began to pack up our stuff. As we ripped the Union Jack off the deck chair an angry snotty-nosed policeman appeared. To cut a long story short, we got done for defacing public property for stapling a Union Jack to a weather-beaten deckchair. Go figure. But in the punk days, the young and rebellious were treated like terrorists. Any chance the establishment had to knock us, they took with pride. All ended well in the end. The image has over the years become an iconic and recognised image, evoking memories of the Jam and of England, a time gone by. I banged off colour (used for the cover) and black and white film. The black and white shot to me is the one that works. Unfortunately, Polygram didn't agree. 

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Media dimensions: 1152x860px
Media type: JPEG