Bob Gruen's iconic images of rock
The history of rock and roll couldn't be documented without Bob Gruen's photographs; he has taken some of music's most iconic images.
Gruen, who has photographed thousands of bands over nearly five decades, become friends with many of his subjects. He says he has never seen it as a job: "Yeah, I wasn't there on assignment. I was there 'cause I wanted to be there," he told Anthony Mason.
His new book, "Rock Seen," is not just a collection of his work - he says it's also "a family album of my life."
"It was kind of a snapshot," Gruen said. "But it turned out to be one of the most iconic pictures that, you know, really sums up the excess of the '70s. The plane's so big it doesn't even fit in the picture."
"I had to kind of talk my way into it, 'cause when I first got there they said no," Gruen recalled for Anthony Mason. He said his mother had taught him that "No" is not an answer to accept, "but it can be the beginning of an interesting conversation."
Gruen became Lennon's photographer after he moved to New York. He told Mason he had given Lennon a New York City T-shirt, and photographed him on a rooftop. "We had no idea it was going to become such a well-known, iconic picture," he said.
Or one so often copied. "I think this image is in every souvenir shop in New York City," Mason said.
"Yeah, it gets around," mused Gruen, who wished he were getting percentages of the sales. "Actually, I feel complimented, you know, 'cause these people can steal anything from anybody. So I kind of take it as a compliment that they like my picture so much they continually steal it over and over again!"
"The government was trying to throw John out of the country," Gruen explained, "and I thought, being the Statue of Liberty would be a really good symbol of 'Welcome to America,' that we should be welcoming people like John Lennon." "It is one of my favorite pictures," he said, " 'cause it has so much meaning. Because it is about peace and freedom. And I think those are the most important things we can talk about."
"This is one picture while the strobe light was flashing - so this is what Tina does in one second," Gruen said.
For more info:
bobgruen.com
"Rock Seen" by Bob Gruen; Introduction by Deborah Harry (Abrams Books)
By CBSNews.com senior editor David Morgan