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Gems of the AMRC collections: Dan Fong

Photos: Dan Fong
To request permission to reproduce these photos, please email sabine.kortals@colorado.edu.

President Eisenhower shaking hands in a crowd

Among the American Music Research Center (AMRC) collections, hidden gems exist around every corner: Colorado history, music legends, big band ephemera, silent film scores, letters from 91¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder founders and more. In our new seriesā€”Gems of the AMRC collectionsā€”we aim to spotlight their content, and the stories of the people behind them. Ģż

Our first deep dive explores the , comprising folders of photos captured by the legendary Colorado rock 'n' roll and folk music photographer.

President Eisenhower exiting a plane

wasnā€™t music at all, but a chance to capture the president at the time: Dwight D. Eisenhower. ā€œSince I was such a little kid, all the photographers let me stand in the front. To me, those photos are amazing because at 14, I could tell that I already had the eye and the way to compose the picturesā€”plus they were really sharp and in focus.ā€

From there, Fong (Mktg. ā€™70) continued to take photos of everything and started his own photography business after graduating from 91¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder. ā€œI did everything from bar mitzvah photographs to portraits to weddings,ā€ he recalls. ā€œThe biggest break came when KFMLā€”the underground radio stationā€”ended up three blocks from my studio. I went down there and made a deal with them: ā€˜Iā€™ll come take photographs of the artists and give them to you for your advertising, and you do radio commercials for me.ā€™ That was a big deal because thatā€™s when I met all of the record guys.ā€

Fongā€™s photography is highly variedā€”from family portraits to posed album covers to current events photojournalism. But what heā€™s best known for is his 1970s concert photography. In his career, Fong photographed the Doobie Brothers, the Grateful Dead, Zephyr, The Who, Firefall, Fleetwood Mac and many more.

Stars of the collection include concert photos captured on the 91¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder campus. There are shots of Otis Taylor performing with Zephyr on the steps of Norlin Library. Thereā€™s also a series of photos taken in Folsom stadium featuring Firefall and a very familiar horizon.

Firefall performing at Folsom Field. The frame looks out onto a crowd of people and the Flatirons are visible in the background.

Firefall at Folsom Field.

ā€œI climbed up in the scaffolding to take all of those pictures of the people in the background and that teaches you not to be embarrassedā€”because, you know, 50,000 people are looking at you!ā€

A few years ago, Fong began thinking about how to ensure his collection outlived him, and welcomed the opportunity to house his collection at 91¶ĢŹÓʵ Boulder. ā€œIā€™ve known a lot of photographers who didnā€™t think about archiving their workā€”and then something would happen, people would throw their work away or it wouldnā€™t go to the same place,ā€ he says.

ā€œMy collection is huge and I had been thinking about what to do with it, so I asked Megan [Lead Archivist Megan Friedel] whether she was interested in archiving my entire collection. Had Megan and the university not said yes, so many of these imagesā€¦you'd never see them.ā€

Otis Taylor and Zephyr perform on the steps of Norlin Library

Otis Taylor and Zephyr on the steps of Norlin Library.

Even the Eisenhower photographs were nearly lost to time. ā€œI lost that film in a moving box in my parentsā€™ basement for 50 yearsā€”but when my mom died, I found the box. The university has a bunch of those photographs now.ā€

Through the years, Fong has changed cameras, gone from film to digital photography and evolved editing strategiesā€”but he says the main change to his photography is how comfortable he has gotten behind the lens.

ā€œBeing a photographer is like being a basketball player,ā€ he shares. ā€œItā€™s like Caitlin Clarkā€”you practice it and itā€™s muscle memory. Thatā€™s what happens after years of being a photographer.ā€

Coming up, the AMRC will host an exhibit with photographs from the Dan Fong Collection in Aprilā€”stay tuned for details. Ongoing, the Dan Fong Collection is available to researchers and the publicĢżby appointment.Ģż