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Benny Joseph made his living as a professional photographer in Houston's
black community during the crucial decades from the 1950s through the
early 1980s, when the amplified pulse of rhythm and blues underscored
the social changes sweeping the nation. Joseph photographed everything
from parades and teen hops to impassioned. Speeches by civil rights
leaders Martin Luther King, Jr., and Thurgood Marshall. Under contract
to the pioneering black entrepreneur Don Robey, owner of the Duke and
Peacock recording labels, Joseph photographed many of the popular
recording artists of the day, including B.B. King, Mahalia Jackson,
Buddy Ace, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, and Della Reese. With
over 120 unique black and white photographs, this is a must have for all
rhythm and blues enthusiasts, and a valuable historical resource for
photography collectors. Writer, photographer, and filmmaker Alan Govenar
met Joseph in 1984 when he was closing his studio in Houston's Third
Ward and worked with him over the next five years, sifting through
thousands of negatives to identify and contextualize his most compelling
images of this remarkable era.
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