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Bad Bunny, Through STILLZ's Lens

Bad Bunny, Through STILLZ's Lens

Hypebeast4 days ago
Summary
AsBad Bunnycontinues his Puerto Rico residency, photographer STILLZ has lifted the veil on his photobook chronicling the rise of the global superstar.
Shot on rare, expired Polaroid film from the 1970s,Bad Bunny by STILLZspans glimpses of backstage moments, on-stage performances, and authentic tour life from the years 2019 through 2025. STILLZ is also a close friend of Benito's, making for an even more intimate and raw collection of photos.
With the pair's close friendship as a guiding sentiment of the art book, the book offers as close to an 'unfiltered' look as we can get at Benito's life on the road.
As of now, the book is exclusively available to purchase in Puerto Rico, through the remainder of theNo Me Quiero Ir de Aquíresidency at both Plaza las Americas and Coliseo de Puerto Rico.
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Bad Bunny, Through STILLZ's Lens
Bad Bunny, Through STILLZ's Lens

Hypebeast

time4 days ago

  • Hypebeast

Bad Bunny, Through STILLZ's Lens

Summary AsBad Bunnycontinues his Puerto Rico residency, photographer STILLZ has lifted the veil on his photobook chronicling the rise of the global superstar. Shot on rare, expired Polaroid film from the 1970s,Bad Bunny by STILLZspans glimpses of backstage moments, on-stage performances, and authentic tour life from the years 2019 through 2025. STILLZ is also a close friend of Benito's, making for an even more intimate and raw collection of photos. With the pair's close friendship as a guiding sentiment of the art book, the book offers as close to an 'unfiltered' look as we can get at Benito's life on the road. As of now, the book is exclusively available to purchase in Puerto Rico, through the remainder of theNo Me Quiero Ir de Aquíresidency at both Plaza las Americas and Coliseo de Puerto Rico.

Review: Guerrero and the Grant Park Music Festival close the season with a rousing ‘Carmina Burana'
Review: Guerrero and the Grant Park Music Festival close the season with a rousing ‘Carmina Burana'

Chicago Tribune

time5 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Review: Guerrero and the Grant Park Music Festival close the season with a rousing ‘Carmina Burana'

Highbrow and lowbrow. Sacred and profane. Closing its 2025 season on Aug. 15 and 16, the Grant Park Music Festival argued that the distance between those two poles is rarely as great as it appears. The festival would know that better than most, juxtaposing classical music—and its expectation of monkish silence—with the heart of Chicago's downtown, and the human mix therein. Where else must a soprano nobly compete with police sirens zooming down Lake Shore Drive? The public face of such an organization needs to understand that — someone who marries musical excellence with a come-as-you-are approachability, so that classical music's audience base grows rather than grays. In his first season as Grant Park artistic director and principal conductor, Giancarlo Guerrero has proved he's that person. He's drawn remarkable precision and luster from festival musicians in a range of repertoire, from Mendelssohn's lacy violin concerto to bold new works. He's able to succinctly elucidate the 'why' behind a program — like the holy/unholy dichotomy tying together the finale program, with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's 'Russian Easter Overture' and Carl Orff's 'Carmina Burana.' And he whirrs through it all with an infectious, Energizer-Bunny enthusiasm, practically bouncing through Friday's concert in a pair of white-soled sneakers. Sometimes that translated to a certain restlessness in still moments. Alan Hovhaness's Symphony No. 2, 'Mysterious Mountain,' was once ubiquitous in midcentury concert halls; today, it's the only one of the Armenian-American composer's 67 completed symphonies to get meaningful airtime. Per its nickname, 'Mysterious Mountain' is less a symphony than a 20-minute panorama, which Guerrero more or less strode through. But it was an Olympic feat in ensemble playing, gears large and small clicking into perfect place in the second movement's double fugue, and the violins taking their running lines in lockstep. The orchestra demonstrated the same massed virtuosity in the 'Russian Easter Overture.' Rimsky-Korsakov wrote in his autobiography that he sought to reference pagan as well as Christian spirituality in the piece, resulting in a work that is at once vivacious and big-boned. From the podium, Guerrero allayed the overture's bombastic writing with a buoyant, supple spirit. The musicians even sounded relaxed, as though they were cruising over, rather than sprinting through, Rimsky-Korsakov's most demanding passages. The various solo spotlights were seized by the Grant Parkers with passion and originality: concertmaster Jeremy Black, principal cellist Walter Haman, acting principal flute Jennifer Lawson, and acting principal trombonist Jeremy Moeller. With all the choral-orchestral showstoppers out there, Grant Park ending its season with Carl Orff's 'Carmina Burana' when it did the same in 2018 could seem a little close for comfort. This time, however, Guerrero is the one putting his mark on the blockbuster work, set to an irreverent set of poems by medieval clergy. It's no wonder Guerrero was so eager to show Chicago his 'Carmina Burana.' Friday's performance—with Guerrero conducting from memory and mouthing along with the chorus — sounded as dotingly prepared as the rest of the program, but with an unbridled emotional palette. The pacing here also felt just right: driven, but not hurried. One of Grant Park's great gifts is its platform for artists whose careers are right on the precipice, so we can all say 'I heard her when…' On Friday, that artist was the California-born Jana McIntyre, the same singer who went head-to-head with sirens in 'Dulcissime.' It's been a while since I heard a high soprano with so much poise and control, from her crisp articulations in 'Amor volat undique' to her lofted upper extension in 'Stetit puella.' I'm eager to watch her career continue to unfold. Orff doesn't let any solo singer off easy in 'Carmina Burana.' Baritone Troy Cook was less adroit in his own sky-high passages, but in the sweet spot of his register — as in his purring 'Omni sol temperat' and elastic 'Estuans interius' — his voice was richly textured and full-bodied. Modern performances are still split over whether to feature a tenor or countertenor for 'Olim lacus colueram,' the swan's aria. Orff originally wrote it for tenor, that soloist's single appearance in the cantata. But might he have written it for countertenor, had he had the option? ('Carmina Burana' premiered in 1937, with the countertenor renaissance still a couple decades off.) Reginald Mobley made the countertenor argument compellingly on Friday. Where the strain required for a tenor to hit that upper register lends these verses an acerbic, explosive edge, a countertenor can approach the same lines with lamblike lyricism, as Mobley did. His swan was lachrymose rather than embittered, his aria mounting in urgency as it went on. Much like last year's Mahler blowout, Friday's performance could be hair-raisingly loud. But even atop those peaks, the orchestra and chorus remained well-balanced, and the chorus's diction impeccable. Slicing sibilances in the choruses' first whispered chant chilled to the bone, as did the low voices' declamations against the swan in 'Olim lacus colueram.' Uniting Voices Chicago (formerly the Chicago Children's Choir) joined them in the risers, a ghostly and almost ethereal presence against the fullness of the Grant Park choristers. Already Guerrero seems to be able to convey of-the-moment phrasings and character directions with a few emphatic motions—a roller-coaster swoop here, a waggle of the fingers there—and get an immediate response from the choristers. That's a credit to Guerrero, surely, but also to this nonpareil ensemble and their thorough preparation by chorus director Christopher Bell. As the festival opens a new chapter with Guerrero, five retiring musicians closed theirs. On Friday, the festival sent off Mary Stolper, the orchestra's ever-distinguished principal flute, assistant principal percussionist Joel Cohen, violist Patrick Brennan, cellist and frequent CSO sub Linc Smelser, and chorus bass Jan Jarvis, leaving after a remarkable 52 years with the ensemble. When his name was called, the chorus terrace responded with deafening cheers. Yes, fortune is fickle and the years are long. But if this season is a harbinger of things to come with Guerrero, Grant Park has hit the jackpot.

Bad Bunny by Stillz Captures Six Years of Portraits of the Puerto Rican Artist
Bad Bunny by Stillz Captures Six Years of Portraits of the Puerto Rican Artist

Vogue

time14-08-2025

  • Vogue

Bad Bunny by Stillz Captures Six Years of Portraits of the Puerto Rican Artist

Everyone loves a Polaroid picture, the immediacy and materiality of it seeming to convey more feeling—and more of a sense of the real—than anything captured with our camera phones can. That, at least, is the kind of thing that people like to say. But looking through the pages of Bad Bunny by Stillz, which gathers 84 portraits of the Puerto Rican artist taken by his friend and frequent collaborator, those suggestions begin to ring true. 'I've always collected images of friends and family—even before I met Benito,' Stillz explains on a recent phone call. 'It was not a thing he asked me to do, or anything; it was kind of this secret side project I was doing the whole time.' The pair first met in Las Vegas, not long after the then 18-year old Colombian-American photographer and director had dropped out of high school and moved from Miami to New York. 'We became really good friends right away,' Stillz says. 'He asked me to go on tour with him, so I've been with him for the last six or seven years.' Bad Bunny photographed by Stillz in 2020. Courtesy of Stillz Bad Bunny in Puerto Rico, 2020 Courtesy of Stillz Their trust and closeness is evident in the images—laid out in chronological order, from 2019 to 2025—which see Benito dressed up for music videos, after awards shows, or simply hanging out during their down time together. Not only does the collection trace the many eras (and hairstyles) of Bad Bunny, but it also shows an artist growing into himself. 'It was important for it to feel archival—this is every photo I have ever taken of him, except for the ones I shot after making the book,' Stillz says. 'Benito and I were looking at the book from the beginning yesterday, and it was funny because we saw some outfits and he would be like, 'I have no idea why I was wearing that.'' The process also inspired a few more reflective moments: 'He stopped at the photos of him as a vampire in 'Baticano,' and he was like, 'This is the best video we've done together!' And I was like, wow! Because we work collaboratively all the time, but afterwards we don't really celebrate or anything, so it was really nice to be able to look at the images and talk about them together.' Stillz has directed at least 23 of Bad Bunny's music videos, plus videos for the likes of Rosalia, Rauw, and Omar Apollo. His debut feature film, Barrio Triste, which he both wrote and directed, will premiere at the Venice Film Festival later this month, before traveling to festivals in Toronto and New York. 'My career has been very fast, so another reason why I like making books now is it gives me a physical thing to look at, to pause and remember the stories,' he says. 'This is the best video we've done together!' Bad Bunny photographed during the making of 'Baticano,' 2024. Courtesy of Stillz Bad Bunny, Palm Springs 2023 Courtesy of Stillz Stillz's personal favorite photo is the one he selected for the book's cover: a shot of Benito in San Juan, about to drink from a coffee cup. 'It was one of the first few days we had spent together, and he had his first-ever show at the Choli. I remember those were really important days for his career and it was a beautiful moment, just him with a coffee cup—though I think he was drinking tea—and his eyes are kind of closed. That was a good moment.'

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