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KELLY STARBUCK Photography

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910-367-5720

WILMINGTON, NC
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NC

© 2003 - 2022
KELLY STARBUCK Photography

Author Archives: Kelly Starbuck

Abstract Art, Abstract Photography, Architecture and Interiors, art, Art gallery, Editorial, Headshots, Live Music, Musician photography, musician portrait, musician portraits, News, portrait |

September 24, 2021

| Kelly Starbuck

Kelly Starbuck Artist Profile in Wilmington Magazine

Reaching for Her Stars!

September 7, 2021

Talented, local photographer Kelly Starbuck showcases traditional wall prints and textile pieces in her latest exhibition.

By KIM HENRY

Photography by KELLY STARBUCK

Photo by Dan Pierce
Starbuck with sister and nieces in front of artist & musician portraits at her previous fine art photography gallery, Salt Studio

Like so many artists before her, local photographer Kelly Starbuck arrived at the crossroads where she had to decide whether to continue on her secure but crushing career path, or take the leap and follow her true calling. It’s never easy to make that shift when the road is less traveled, and there’s no obvious map to follow, but it’s never easy living with regret either. Well, certainly not for this courageous photographer. Starbuck seized the moment and has since navigated her way to a more deeply fulfilling creative life as a full time working photographer. September sees Wilmington Magazine’s very own freelance photographer of eight years, hosting an exhibit of her personal work at Art in Bloom, and we’re excited to celebrate her accomplishments.

Having moved from Wilmington, NC at 26 to take her own bite of the Big Apple, Starbuck began producing major corporate events and was thriving on the adrenaline of the fast pace and glamorous veneer. “I loved it for a while, and then one morning after another 18 hour work day, I realized I had surrounded myself with people who were actually doing what I wanted to be doing, while I managed budgets and logistics,” remembers Starbuck. Listening to her ‘inner voice’ and drawing on her innate resourcefulness, her aim was to become a full time photographer, crafting professional shoots and exploring her own fine art projects, without going into a ton of debt.

Consequently in 2003, Starbuck began her transition into the photographic industry. Her singular focus led her to being a photo assistant and studio manager to the iconic Fernando Bengoechea and simultaneously working as a teaching assistant at the International Center of Photography in NYC. “I threw myself into the fire in all the areas I was interested in and learnt that way. I was helping teachers and gaining knowledge at the same time,” smiles Starbuck, surrounded by her eclectic body of photographic work. Abstract prints exploring light and dark sit next to assignment based headshots and editorial shoots.

Deeply inspired by memories, documentation and the feeling of a specific moment, Starbuck’s personal work seeks to capture a sense of time and space by playing with light and shadow. Growing up in Wrightsville Beach, then experiencing the intensity of New York City, her latest collection honors her relationship with both nature and city life. “New York is where I became a photographer. This exhibit is all about utilizing the energy of the city, the bright lights and connecting it to where I am now, back at my roots, back at the beach,” explains Starbuck.

Seapath, new Full Circle abstract photography series

In an age of endless filters and infinite editing possibilities, what does Starbuck’s creative process involve? “I started photography with film, so it’s ingrained in me to get the picture right with the camera. I don’t do a whole lot of manipulation in post-production. I don’t want to sit at a desk editing for endless hours, I want to work with what’s there in terms of location and light and create something unique,” says Starbuck.

Abstract photography of Water Street

Revisiting her childhood and finding ways to express the memories with soft focus and blurred edges, Starbuck refers to her first creative outlet, which was music. Unable to have music lessons, Starbuck always loved to sing and was in multiple choirs, ensembles and even had a few solo parts during high school. “This is why I have been building a portrait series of musicians that I connect with and who inspired me for the last ten years,” says Starbuck about a vast body of work dedicated to visually recording the spirit of music and the musicians who make it.

A Place to Bury Strangers, Brooklyn, NY

In addition to her own creative process, Starbuck has a vibrant assignment based aspect to her work, shooting for commercial and private clients and specializing in headshots, particularly for women. “I love helping my clients feel comfortable. I don’t stop until we get the image that they love,” smiles Starbuck who can roll between the immediacy of the moment and the precision of a more controlled photographic experience with ease.

Amanda Kramer of The Psychedelic Furs

Ever prolific, Starbuck’s photography has been displayed in countless magazines, galleries and even on Larry King Live, The Sundance Channel and in The New York Times. Starbuck had her own gallery between 2013-2015, SALT Studio Photography featured both national and local photographers during countless Fourth Friday Gallery nights and partnered with The Brooklyn Arts Center to produce and curate Wilmington’s first large-scale photography show featuring over 35 artists. She is thrilled to be exhibiting a collection of abstract pieces for the first time in her upcoming exhibit at Art in Bloom Gallery, which opens on September 24th. Delving into various themes of nostalgia, memory, beauty and dreams, through land and seascapes, Starbuck’s creativity is fueled from a deep place within herself. Blending different photography techniques and formats, the exhibit will showcase traditional wall prints and a limited edition of textile pieces. Wilmington is just as excited to receive this new work as Starbuck is to present it.

Custom printed home goods with Starbuck’s photography

+++

“FULL CIRCLE” Abstract Photography Exhibition
Opening Reception – Friday, September 24, 2021 from 6-9pm
Fourth Friday – Friday, October 22, 2021 from 6-9pm
Showing through – November 7, 2021

Art in Bloom Gallery
210 Princess Street
Wilmington, NC 28401
https://aibgallery.com

Appointments available upon request.
I’d love to meet you and talk about the work. Please reach out and we can set a time by calling 910-367-5720.

2004 Indonesian Tsunami, abstract art, abstract photography, art event, Bokeh Nights, Fernando Bengoechea, fine art photographer, Full Circle Series, ICP, Indonesian Tsunami, International Center of Photography, Kelly Starbuck, kelly starbuck photography, NYC, portrait photographer, Wilmington NC, Wrightsville Beach
Family and Children Portraits, family portraits, Fashion, Holiday Portraits, kids portaits, News, Pet Photography, pet portrait, Photography Studio wilmington NC, portrait |

November 18, 2020

| Kelly Starbuck

Holiday 2020 Portrait Sessions

Word around town is – “We are ready for some holiday cheer!”
What better way to get in the spirit than getting your annual – or not so annual – family holiday portrait made?!

Book your Covid-safe Holiday porch, park or yard mini sessions with Kelly Starbuck Photography !

NOW booking Holiday porch, park or yard sessions for your family! Both 2 and 4 legged kids!

Mini-sessions of 20 minutes and full 1-hour sessions available.

– Print products and digital image packages are available to purchase from Kelly Starbuck.

Spots will fill up fast so book your session TODAY by CALLING  910-367-5720!
*Note: texts can not be received*

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!!

+ Covid safety and responsibility is practiced and of the utmost importance to me +

Hope you will join in this safe and fun moment with me!

child portraits, family portrait, holiday portraits, kid photography, mini sessions, pandemic portrait, pet photography, pet portraits, porch portrait, portrait, portrait photographer, portrait sessions, Wilmington, Wilmington NC, Wrightsville Beach
Family and Children Portraits, family portraits, halloween, Holiday Portraits, kids portaits, News, Pet Photography, pet portrait, portrait |

October 23, 2020

| Kelly Starbuck

Halloween 2020 Portrait Sessions

A pandemic?  Halloween doesn’t have to be scary this year!
Here’s a great reason to don your spooky suit and have some fun with your family and kids – 2 legged and 4 legged!

Halloween porch and yard mini sessions with
Kelly Starbuck Photography !

Most friends know I LOVE Halloween!
Hope you will join in this safe and fun moment with me!
Booking Halloween porch and yard sessions NOW through Saturday, October 31st at 4:00pm

Mini-sessions of 20 minutes and full 1-hour sessions available.

– Print products and digital image packages are available to purchase from Kelly Starbuck.

Spots will fill up fast so book your session TODAY by CALLING  910-367-5720!
*Note: texts can not be received*

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!!

+ Covid safety and responsibility is practiced and of the utmost importance to me +

Scroll down for more fun Halloween portraits!

child portraits, family-portraits, halloween, halloween costume, Halloween Portraits, holiday portraits, kids-portaits, mini sessions, pandemic portrait, pet photography, pet portraits, porch portrait, portrait, portrait photographer, portrait sessions, spooky, Wilmington, Wilmington NC
Architecture and Interiors, Editorial, News, Product |

November 10, 2017

| Kelly Starbuck

Holiday Decorating – Wilmington Magazine

Holiday Decorating Cover Story – Wilmington Magazine
November/December 2017

I am always excited to photograph this holiday decorating cover story for Wilmington Magazine. This was my third year shooting the assignment and I was looking forward to what the talented interior designers had prepared for their shoot. This year there was a holiday mantle and living room expertly decorated with greenery & gold by Big Sky Design. A festive Thanksgiving tablescape was designed by LouAnne Liverman of Nest Fine Gifts & Interiors and Debby Gomulka offered a French country Christmas tablescape. Lastly, an elegant holiday table set for dinner with custom designed napkins, runner and gift wrapped presents by multi-talented Liz Carroll Interiors. These shoots are so fun and I enjoy collaborating and styling with designers on the shots. It definitely gets me in the holiday spirit early and I hope it does you too!
Happy Holidays!

Big Sky Design, Christmas, Debby Gomulka, decorating, dining, gifts, gold, holiday, holiday decorating, holiday dining, Interior Design, Interior photographer, Kelly Starbuck, kelly starbuck photography, Liz Carroll Interiors, mantle, Nest Fine Gifts & Interiors, ornaments, presents, reindeer, silver, sparkle, table setting, tablescape, tabletop, Thanksgiving, Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach
Architecture and Interiors, Editorial, Family and Children Portraits, Fashion, Travel |

August 1, 2017

| Kelly Starbuck

Bald Head Island – Cape Fear Living Magazine

Bald Head Island Cover Story – Cape Fear Living Magazine
August 2017

What a fun day this was to shoot the Bald Head Island lifestyle and travel cover story for Cape Fear Living Magazine! I got some fun shots of the models taking in views of Old Baldy. We rode golf carts around the island to each shoot location and then wrapped the day up with an interior shoot at a stylish modern beach house! Bald Head Island is just a short ferry ride from Southport, NC and no cars are allowed – all golf cart transportation! Truly an island getaway!

Cape Fear Living Magazine

Bald Head Island, beach, family vacation, ferry, golf carts, Interior Design, Interior Photography, Kelly Starbuck, kelly starbuck photography, kid photography, Lifestyle shoot, portrait photographer, Southport NC, Travel Photography, Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach
Family and Children Portraits, News, Photography Studio wilmington NC |

May 19, 2017

| Kelly Starbuck

Kids Portrait Day at Peanut Butter & Jelly

 


Join Kelly Starbuck Photography for a KIDS PORTRAIT DAY at Peanut Butter & Jelly!

Saturday, May 20, 2017 from 9:30am to 4:00pm

Mini-sessions of 15 minutes are $65.00*
Includes your 2 favorite images in high-res (5x7in) & low-res formats

-or-

Book a mini-session of 30 minutes for $130.00*
Includes your 4 favorite images in high-res (5x7in) & low-res formats
(suggested if you have more than 2 kids)

*Sales tax applicable

– Additional photos beyond the ones included in your session are available to purchase in digital format or print with Kelly Starbuck.

Spots are filling up so book your session by calling 910-256-4554!

child model, child photos, child portraits, family portrait, Kelly Starbuck, kelly starbuck photography, kid photography, kid portrait, kids clothes, kids clothing, kids clothing retail, peanut butter and jelly baby, photoshoot, portrait day, portrait photographer, retail store, studio shoot, suffed animals
News |

May 12, 2016

| Kelly Starbuck

Southern Exposure Photo Show in Encore Magazine

EXPOSING ARTISTRY: New photography show takes over Brooklyn Arts Center on Sunday

May 10 • Art, ARTSY SMARTSY, FEATURE MAIN

In the early aughts, Kelly Starbuck was living in New York City and working for international celebrity and interior photographer, Fernando Bengoechea. Managing his studio and assisting his shoots, while also assistant teaching at the International Center of Photography, was proof enough that Starbuck’s career as a photographer would be solidified.

 

BOKEH NIGHTS: Kelly Starbuck’s night photography, taken on the Cape Fear River, will be on display as part of Southern Exposure—a photography art show and sale at BAC on Sunday. Photo by Kelly Starbuck

BOKEH NIGHTS: Kelly Starbuck’s night photography, taken on the Cape Fear River, will be on display as part of Southern Exposure—a photography art show and sale at BAC on Sunday. Photo by Kelly Starbuck

 

“I grew up on Harbor Island, Wrightsville Beach, and got my first camera when I was 10,” Starbuck says. “Photography was always in my life, but I didn’t consider it as a career until after moving to New York. The city, the galleries and people inspired me.”

As fate would have it, Starbuck’s path would lead back to the southeastern coast. In 2004, Bengoechea and his partner, Nate Berkus (celebrity interior designer), traveled to Indonesia on vacation. During their trip Starbuck’s mentor lost his life in the fatal tsunami; Berkus survived.

“Bengoechea’s work inspired me and I began to focus on portraiture, interior, product, travel and lifestyle projects, as well as personal fine-art projects,” Starbuck says.

It wasn’t until late 2009 she moved home to be near family and embark on a continuous evolution behind the lens. In 2013 she opened SALT Studio Photography and Gallery in the Brooklyn Arts District, which featured national and international photographers. She also continued her own work, being published in national magazines, for TV segments and programs, and showed in group exhibits in the Chelsea Art District in NYC, as well as locally in the Cameron Art Museum and for the arts council.

“I opened and operated SALT Studio Gallery for about a year and a half and started to feel like I wanted to do a show that would feature local photographers on larger scale,” Starbuck tells. “Wilmington has so many talented photographers; there needed to be an event/platform to promote them.”

Though she shuttered SALT in 2015, beforehand she met Rich Leder, executive director of Brooklyn Arts Center (BAC), in the neighborhood as he dropped into the gallery to admire the work. Leder pitched a partnership group show, focusing solely on photography, something Starbuck, too, had been considering. “It couldn’t have been more serendipitous,” Starbuck says. This weekend they’ll open “Southern Exposure” on May 15 from noon to 6 p.m. at BAC. Starbuck curated the event, which will feature 22 local and regional photographic artists and photography-related businesses.

“Guests can expect to see variety and diversity: black and white, color, digitally captured and film-captured photography,” Starbuck says. “The Wilmington area yields a lot of nature and coastal photography, but that’s not all our photographers will have. There will be abstract photography, camera-less photography, glitch photography, rural photography, night photography, travel photography, still-life photography, car photography, and even photos used to create your own name!”

Works will be shown on various platforms, from canvas to wood, paper to metal and beyond. Starbuck, who worked with BAC’s Jessica Pham in choosing applicants, wanted to really highlight fine-art photographers. The hope is to introduce various interpretations of photography as an art form—not just a way to document time, place and events.

“I feel it’s often overlooked outside the metro areas,” Starbuck says. “Larger cities recognize [fine-art photography] and have whole galleries and museums dedicated solely to it. I want to bring a little of that to Wilmington.”

In our digital world, with every phone equipped with a camera, capturing a photo is as easy as breathing. But Starbuck wants to show how it’s not the camera that makes the photo great; it’s the person operating it, whose vision and understanding of tools punctuates and enlivens the imagery.

“For example, the chef makes a great meal, not the pots,” Starbuck uses as a metaphor. “I selected artists based on skill and the type of work they submitted, so the show wouldn’t end up with a lot of the same subject matter. This made the selection process a little challenging because I had to be selective with the amount of imagery accepted into the show that was similar in content.”

Starbuck became fascinated by UNCW student Halley Robbins’ stark black and whites. Though the European architecture Robbins captured was visually stunning, the dark profile of a white lily really struck Starbuck. As it turns out, Robbins is the youngest artist in the show, and she attended the teen academy at the same center of photography Starbuck once taught at in NYC.

“Robbins’ lily appears to have been positioned like a profile portrait in darkness with only one light allowing it to be seen,” Starbuck describes. “That explained my reaction to how the images were printed; ICP is an exceptional school.”

Also showing will be Kristen Crouch, whom assisted Starbuck on shoots. Crouch’s process is experimental, with digital manipulation and printing on alternative surfaces, like wood, sand dollars and glass to add texture. “Kristen’s more recent work with glitch and color-blocking turns the image into a whole new piece of photographic art and is modern and edgy,” Starbuck says.

Anna Marie Kennedy does camera-less photography, also called “cliché verre,” which combines drawing and painting with photography. “Artists paint an image on a glass plate and use the plate as if it were a negative in photographic printing,” Starbuck explains. “The end result is a colorful abstract photograph that was made without a camera.”

Starbuck’s work also will be on display. Specifically, she’s looking forward to showing her recent abstract night photos, called “Bokeh Nights.” She shot them on the Cape Fear Riverfront. Also on display will be macro abstracts of local flora, silver gelatin fibre prints of sea life, and more.

Sponsors will be on hand to help local photographers and photography-based businesses as well. Southeastern Camera will do free diagnosis on camera problems and sensor cleanings. Frame Masters will showcase their custom frames and offer discounts. Canvas Giclee Printing will give suggestions with printing on their fine art papers and canvas, plus they’ll raffle off a canvas print during the show.

Aside from attendees meeting and purchasing art directly from photographers, the $5 admission fee includes a raffle ticket to win artwork or a service by one of the artists; 20 or 30 items will raffled off throughout the day (winners do not need to be present to win). The Catch Food Truck will dish out eats, Lativa Coffee Co. will be selling coffee drinks, and there will be a full cash bar set up for Sunday spirits.

The show is about boosting an often-overlooked arts medium as a whole. “Its goal is to increase appreciation of the many different ways that photography is used to create art,” Starbuck says. “It’s about support for local photographers and collecting unique artwork instead of buying a cheap, mass-produced poster print or canvas at Target.”

DETAILS:
Southern Exposure
Sunday, May 15, noon – 6 p.m.
Tickets: $5
Brooklyn Arts Center
516 North 4th St.

2004 Indonesian Tsunami, Anna Marie Kennedy, art event, Bokeh Nights, Brooklyn Arts District, CAM, Cameron Art Museum, Canvas Giclee Printing, Encore Magazine, Fernando Bengoechea, fine art photographer, Frame Masters, ICP, Indonesian Tsunami, Interior photographer, International Center of Photography, Jessica Pham, Kelly Starbuck, Kristen Crouch, Nate Berkus, NYC, photo show, Photography Gallery, portrait photographer, Rich Leder, Salt Studio, Southeastern Camera, Southern Exposure Photo Show, The Brooklyn Arts Center, Wilmington, Wrightsville Beach
Editorial, Live Music, Musician photography, musician portrait, News |

July 18, 2015

| Kelly Starbuck

ALOKE Band Photo by Kelly Starbuck in ICON vs. ICON

 

ICON VS. ICON (iconvsicon.com)

 

ALOKE COMES ALIVE: Christian Zucconi On Band’s Long Awaited New Album!

Categorized | Blog, Featured Stories, Interviews, Music
Originally Posted on 12 June 2015

aloke-2015-10

Aloke is an explosive band with who have taken an amazing journey as artists. The New York band, featuring Christian Zucconi of the indie rock collective Grouplove [widely known for the smash hit “Tongue Tied”, which reached the number-one position on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart in 2012, becoming their first number-one single], recorded the album live in the Chicago home of legendary producer and noise merchant Steve Albini, resulting in a sound that’s pure old, school rock ‘n’ roll. To sum it up in the words of Zucconi: “Two-inch tape… no Pro Tools, no overdubs… energetic, fun, important music.” 

Aloke eventually camped out in Brooklyn and the Lower East Side, playing shows. They didn’t fit in any scene or mold, which is usually a badge of honor. Aloke was playing mathy, discordant post-hardcore when hipster rock bands with somewhat new wave influence, like The Strokes and The Killers, were on the rise.

The next year, Aloke, who honed their chops touring the East Coast, released a few of the songs on an EP and sent them to press and booking agents. No one bit. A year later, Hooper invited Zucconi to Greece for six weeks and the seeds of their participation in Grouplove were planted. After returning from Greece the band parted ways being too broke to continue touring. Zucconi and Hooper worked on new music together and included some Aloke material which somewhat accidentally got a new lease on life as Grouplove tracks, songs like “Colours,” “Itchin on a Photograph” and “Gold Coast.”

Now, fast-forward to 2015, Alive is coming out as is, in an untouched and unchanged format. ‘Alive’ is what the kids today need. No laptops. No clicks. No software. Just real rock ‘n’ roll. The album is set for release in digital, CD and vinyl LP July 17 via The End Records/ADA.

Jason Price of Icon Vs. Icon recently sat down with Christian Zucconi to discuss his musical roots, the process of bringing Aloke’s “Alive” to life with legendary producer Steve Albini, the circumstances surrounding its long delayed release and what he has in store for us in the months to come from both Aloke and Grouplove.

Going back to your early years, what music had a big impact on you and what are some of your first musical memories?

aloke-2015-9  Christian Zucconi

My first musical memories go back to when I was very, very young. When I was a baby I had emotional responses to certain songs. I remember being a little kid and hearing Billy Joel’s “Uptown Girl.” I would hear it come on the radio, freak out, grab my Mickey Mouse guitar, jump on the couch and headbang! [laughs] That is when I was 3 years old. I think I was destined to have music be an integral part of my life. When I was growing up, like a lot of other people, my brother gave me Nirvana’s “Nevermind” on cassette tape. I lost my shit because I had never heard such pain, emotion and dynamics in music before. Nirvana was a huge catalyst for me to pick up a guitar and learn their songs. They really put me on the road to playing electric guitar and singing in a band.

What made you pursue music as a career as opposed to going a different route? Were there doubts this was the path for you?

No. Even before Nirvana, I was on the piano and writing songs. I never wanted to learn what the teacher wanted to teach me, I just wanted to write my own stuff. I was always composing. I think it was something that was in my blood. Hearing bands like Nirvana, The Pixies and Fugazi made me want to move on to the electric guitar, start playing shows and releasing whatever I held inside. I am kind of a shy and quiet person in life but when I get onstage I become a totally different animal. I feel like the music was in me and I had no choice. It just happened.

Aloke has a brand new album and you are playing several shows in support of its release. How did the band get started?

We all grew up in a town called Ossining, New York. Sing Sing prison is located there in the Hudson River Valley. It is about half an hour north of New York City. There is something in the water there because a bunch of us met and had the knack for music, playing songs and musicianship. One of my friends could play any Slash solo in fifth grade and do all this crazy stuff. It was a great environment and great friends to come up with. We just started playing in bands as kids. We started in bands in high school and just kept moving forward. There were little changes and shifts along the way. We all had the same influences, like the ones I described, and they were our role models and made music in that vein. We started recording, playing shows and eventually went out to our hero, Steve Albini, and recorded this record with him. It is a classic story of kids who grew up in the same town and survived together by being in a band.

 

ALOKE, Crash Mansion 2006 NYC - Photo by Kelly Starbuck of SALT Studio Photography

ALOKE, Crash Mansion 2006 NYC – Photo by Kelly Starbuck Photography


The musical seeds for “Alive” were sown back in 2007 with producer Steve Albini. What can you tell us about what was happening at the time and led to it being shelved until now?

The album was written in New York at a crazy time personally for all of us. Living in New York City is crazy in itself when you are an artist and rent is so expensive. It is a hard place to survive. There is a lot of struggle and it comes down to self-preservation and how to keep it together, learning to be yourself and persevering in a hard environment. A lot of the songs on this album reflect that sentiment. Personally, I had been in a crazy long-term relationship that had just ended, like “Gold Coast” and “Hard Day At Work” were influenced by that emotional turmoil, which is always a great breeding ground for songwriting. We made the record out at Steve Albini’s that summer. He tracked 18 songs in a few days and finished the entire record in 14 days. We stayed at his studio and lived there, which was really cool because we stayed as a band, as opposed to going home every night. We would wake up, have breakfast together in the kitchen and go right to work. It was a cool and creative environment. It was very satisfying at the end because we were so proud of creating this piece of art. It sounds like a Steve Albini recording, which was our whole goal because he is able to capture a band’s essence live, which is where we shine. We are kind of a cathartic live band and he was able to capture that. It felt really good and was at the pinnacle of our career to work with him. We came home and started sending out little EPs. Music at the time was a little different. Labels and people in that world just weren’t into or willing to risk their jobs, I guess, for a band that was hard to figure out or define. There was a big dance/new wave/disco scene in the rock world at that time in New York. We just didn’t fit in anywhere. It was kind of the end of an era. It was just silly to keep plugging along when we had recorded this album and felt really good about it. After a year or so, we thought it might be time to do something else and move on to the next chapter of our lives, so we kind of shelved the album, knowing one day we would release it. After a few years, suddenly, the time arrived and here we are. We are really excited to bring it back and it still feels really fresh and important. It doesn’t feel like it is dated at all. I think it fills a hole because there aren’t a lot of bands doing this kind of music. Bands like ours are hard to find. There are some on Sub Pop and a few others coming up that are heavy and are bringing a heavy, ‘90s grunge influence back but I think it is a great time to reveal this album.

Creating this album at a very pivotal time in your life alongside Steve Albini, what did you take for future projects?

I learned to just be honest with yourself and be honest in your songwriting. I learned not to be tempted by frills or tricks and to write music from an honest place. You have to have fun doing it. It was really cool to see him work and see how he mic’d stuff from a production standpoint. Most of all, I learned you have to stay true to yourself and stay true to that, whether you are successful or not. You have to do what you love.

What can you tell us about the songwriting process for “Alive” and has your approach to songwriting changed through the years?

aloke-alive-2015-album  Aloke – ‘Alive’

With Aloke, we would do a lot of improv in the rehearsal room and let go for a few hours and jam. We had played together for so long, since we grew up together, that we were very comfortable with that. A lot of the songs on the album came from random jams. We would record the practices on cassette tapes. When we would go back and listen and discover a really cool riff or something from a particular day. Some songs would come that way with all of us collaborating at the same time in a room and the lyrics would come after. Other songs I had written at home on an acoustic guitar but it was all very collaborative and we would all arrange together. With Grouplove, meeting Hannah [Hooper] was a huge changing point in my life. Her and I write more together now. Back in the day, I didn’t really collaborate in the real songwriting process if we weren’t jamming as a band. Having Hannah to bounce ideas off in the early stages of the songs is a completely different experience for me. It has been a really nice change. Hearing a beautiful woman’s voice singing with mine was a really fun experience. Although we do write at home, we also do a lot of collaboration after the song is brought in. Everyone adds their own thing to it and the songs change quite a bit from where they begin. There are a lot of similarities between Grouplove and Aloke. It is hard to really define how songs happen because they come from an unknown place and I don’t really understand it. That has always been the case with me.

What was it like stepping back into an earlier chapter of your life with this release? Was it a difficult transition to make?

No. It is interesting. We got together this past weekend to start practicing again. It had been seven years but the strange thing was that it wasn’t strange at all. It felt completely normal and as if no time had passed. I think that was a cool and comforting sign. There weren’t any crazy nerves. We played our first show last night in Philly and it was awesome. I think we put in so much time as a band back in the day and growing up together that it feels completely natural. It feels like breathing or going to sleep, in that it feels so natural. That was really a cool thing to realize when we did it.

That is very cool to hear and you seem to be in a great place creatively. Do think Aloke might continue forward and even record new music in the future?

aloke-2015-4  Aloke

Yeah, definitely. It is so much fun and we are so good together. For artists to stick to one thing forever is crazy, so it is important to pursue passion projects on the side. It is important to grow and explore as an artist while working with other people. If our schedule allows it we definitely want to put out some new stuff. Aloke was writing material almost too fast in a way. At our shows, we would play six new songs and everyone wanted to hear the six old songs they had heard a few times, ya know? There are some songs we never really captured and we would love to go back and record. We have already jammed on some of the riffs by just messing around in the studio the other day. So, yeah. If time allows it and we can build up a cool audience with this record, we would love to do it and keep doing some tours over the next few years.

Having written this music at a different time in your life and revisiting it now, do any of the songs resonate with you in a different way at this point in time?

Ya know, not in a different way. I respect them as they are reflective of a different time in my life. It was a hard time in my life but I would never want to change it because it led me to become who I am today. I think it is important to revisit that. I am a very nostalgic and emotional guy, so sometimes I like to wallow in the sadness of my past. It is not always the best idea but sometimes it is nice to relive those kind of memories and honor them. It is not painful to sing the song live or anything. In a weird way it celebrates that sadness through song and allows it to live forever.

Where do you look for inspiration these days? Anything you find yourself gravitating toward?

Yeah! Hannah and I have been writing a lot for the next Grouplove record and Hannah is now seven months pregnant! We are having a baby in August, so that has been super inspirational. Knowing this magical process that is old as time itself is happening to us is really exciting to us. It is inspiring a lot of new songs as well as new approaches to songwriting. It has been a very creative year being off from Grouplove, getting Aloke going and writing songs. It has been really fun.

Looking back on your career, how have you most evolved as an artist along the way?

aloke-2015-3  Christian Zucconi and Hannah Hooper

Meeting the guys in Grouplove, as randomly as we did in that art commune in Greece, has had an enormous impact on me. Meeting new people to collaborate with, approaching songs differently and meeting new personalities from around the world opened up my whole process. With Aloke, we took music much more seriously in a way. Grouplove was an accidental band in a way, as we didn’t plan on being a band when we were recording our first EP, it was more of a fun passion project. Approaching music that way and not taking yourself too seriously was a big growing experience for me. Writing with Hannah and the other guys in Grouplove really expanded my horizons. When you hear any Grouplove record, it is so different from Aloke. It was amazing to experiment and go down that road in music. The biggest lessons I learned were to be open and not to be afraid to collaborate with people of different musical tastes or influences. The results can be amazing. It has been really good for me.

What is in the works as far as touring for Aloke in support of “Alive” in the short term?

We are looking to do some West Coast shows in July. The album comes out in July, so we are looking to do Los Angeles and San Francisco. Those shows are just about to come together. That is going to be awesome to play out there. We will take it from there. If the record gets a good response or not, we are going to be hitting the road!

aloke-2015-8  Christian Zucconi and his bandmates in Grouplove

You mentioned you were writing for Grouplove. With a new baby on the way and Aloke touring, you have a busy schedule. Any idea on when you will return to the studio?

We’ve demo’d out at least 15 to 17 songs right now. We are hoping to get into the studio by next month to get started but we are definitely aiming to have it finished this year for release in 2016. We will be back on the circuit next spring or summer.

That is great news! We wish you continued success with all you have going on! We will be spreading the word!

Thank you, Jason! I really appreciate your support!

 

The pre-order for Aloke’s ‘Alive is now available! The album is set for a July 17th release. 

 

News |

June 25, 2015

| Kelly Starbuck

“FOCUS ON LOCAL FOTO” Photography Exhibition in the Star News

The WAE

Local photography exhibition pops up at SALT Studio June 12 and 13

Tuesday, June 9, 2015 at 7:34 by Justin Lacy
(Edited by Kelly Starbuck to include the closing reception Friday, June 26th from 6pm-9pm)

An exhibition featuring a wide range of photography produced by local photographers is popping up at the Brooklyn Arts District’s SALT Studio this weekend, June 12 and 13.

For two days only, the Gallery at SALT Studio presents “Focus on Local Foto,” a group exhibition featuring photographs by area fine art, professional, and emerging photographers.

“Focus on Local Foto” opens with a public reception 6 to 10 p.m. June 12 at The Gallery at SALT Studio, 805 N. Fourth St.

The show includes works by Bruce Cotton, ACME Art Studios multimedia artist Kristen Crouch, William Fridrich, Chad Hartwell, Jason Keller Hudson, Jeff Janowski, David Pascua, Barbara Snyder, SALT Studio Photography owner Kelly Starbuck, photogram artist Melissa Wilgis and StarNews photographer Mike Spencer (work pictured above).

“Having worked as a photojournalist in North Carolina for almost 15 years has given me a window into the lives of countless people and the opportunity to tell their story,” Spencer states in a press release issued by SALT Studio.  “Sometimes they are joyous occasions and other times they are heartbreaking. I make it a point to always go into a story with an open mind and the goal of portraying my subject as honestly as possible and to help reveal something to the viewer.”

Each photographer will deliver an artist talk 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 13.

Details:  910 367 5720 or www.SaltStudioNC.com

+++

“FOCUS ON LOCAL FOTO” Group Photography Exhibition
Exhibition closing reception – June 26th, 2015 from 6-9pm

SALT Studio Photography
805 N 4th Street
Wilmington, NC 28401
http://saltstudionc.com
910 367 5720

Photographer, Owner, Curator: Kelly Starbuck

SALT Studio is a working photography studio and business. Please call ahead (910.367.5720) to confirm the gallery is open and that we are not on location for a photo shoot. Appointments welcome!

Editorial, News, theater and film photography |

May 22, 2015

| Kelly Starbuck

STAR NEWS: Indie Film Cover Story – Kelly Starbuck photos

 

 

STAR NEWS

“INDIES AT RISK”
Indie film community considers options as industry bows out

By John Staton
John.Staton@StarNewsOnline.com
Published: Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 7:35 p.m.

Anhedonia Film Stills by Kelly Starbuck at SALT Studio Photography, Wilmington, NC.

Anhedonia Film Stills by Kelly Starbuck Photography, Wilmington, NC.

Independent filmmaker Dylan Patterson (left, in hat), on the set of his locally shot short film ‘Anhedonia’ in 2011. Patterson said he would have a tougher time making the film today, given that many film industry professionals have left Wilmington. Photo by Kelly Starbuck

Anhedonia Film Stills by Kelly Starbuck at SALT Studio Photography, Wilmington, NC.

Anhedonia Film Stills by Kelly Starbuck Photography, Wilmington, NC.

 

This summer or sometime thereabouts, Wilmington’s Dirt Poor Film Festival will go out in a blaze of glory.

The festival/gathering, which since 2012 has been holding semi-regular screenings of work by local and regional independent filmmakers at downtown Wilmington’s Calico Room, recently sent out a call for entries to “Dirt Poor Apocalypse,” the festival’s final chapter. As one comment on Dirt Poor’s Facebook page put it, “This is how the world ends. Not with a bang, but with a film festival.”

“Most of our original cofounders, including myself, have had to move” to find work in the film industry, John Lopez wrote in a Facebook message. Film jobs have dried up in recent months, and he’s eyeing August for Dirt Poor’s swan song.

It’s just one local example of how some in Wilmington’s independent film community are predicting dire consequences for their art form in the wake of the well-publicized downturn in film production tied to the reduction in tax incentives provided by the state of North Carolina.

But, as always, where there is destruction, there is often opportunity.

Films with benefits

Troy Carlton straddles the film industry and independent filmmaking worlds. For a decade, he’s worked as a grip on such locally shot productions as HBO’s “Eastbound and Down” and summer blockbuster “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island.” He also co-owns Crane House, a camera and crane-rental business. Locally shot CBS drama “Under the Dome,” one of the few productions left in town, was renting one of his cranes just this week.

Carlton has also had films in Wilmington’s Cucalorus Film Festival, including the short action cop comedy “McDuffy: The Urban Eagle” in 2013 and “Half Empty,” a dark, comic feature, in 2009. He’ll be submitting to Dirt Poor Apocalypse, but there’s a “99 percent” chance he’ll be moving to Los Angeles in October and taking one of his rental cranes, which he calls his “bread and butter,” with him.

“As an independent filmmaker, I’m not going to say (the lack of local production is) good, but it’s forcing me to jump out of my comfort zone,” Carlton said. “There’s limited opportunity here for independent filmmakers. There is not the interest (from) people who actually have money.”

Because he had the downtime, however, in January Carlton was available to shoot a short film, “Step-A-Head,” directed and co-written by Wilmington’s Jonathan Guggenheim. It’s an offbeat comedy about a young graphic designer (Wilmington actor Taylor Kowalski, who just moved to L.A.) given 24 hours by his boss (locally based actor Peter Jurasik) to design a logo for a men’s shampoo bottle.

“Joe Dunton (of JDC Wilmington Camera Services) hooked us up with a great camera package, mainly because it was not being used at the time,” said Guggenheim, who used a small grant from the Arts Council of Wilmington and New Hanover County to help fund “Step-A-Head.”

Despite the fact that no one was getting paid, the filmmakers were able to recruit Emmy-nominated sound man Larry Long.

“When everybody’s busy in Wilmington, you can’t make this kind of stuff with that crew,” said Chad Keith, producer of “Step-A-Head” and the production designer for such indie hits as “Take Shelter” and “Martha Marcy Mae Marlene.” “If there’s three shows (shooting) in Wilmington, everybody’s eaten up. People take the time to make their own projects during these times.”

Sweep the leg

But while the downturn in film production might be good for independent filmmakers in the short term, “In the long term, it just cuts the legs right out of the independent film community and the scrappy independent filmmaker who’s out here borrowing equipment and getting people to work for two or three days who are super-qualified,” said Dan Brawley, director of Wilmington’s Cucalorus Film Festival, which in some ways is the face of independent film in Wilmington. “All of those little fringe benefits of the industry start to wither away.”

The downturn is “certainly going to hurt Cucalorus,” Brawley said. “Some of our funders are going to shrink back a little bit.”

PNC Bank recently pulled out as a presenting sponsor of Cucalorus, Brawley said, something he couldn’t definitively tie to the film industry’s local decline. That said, it’s just not just the big-money donors Brawley is worried about losing.

“In a real tangible way, some of the people who funded Cucalorus for years and years and years are literally in Atlanta,” he said, referencing an exodus of film workers to the city that’s become a major production center. “The ‘Dawson’s Creek’-‘One Tree Hill‘-‘Sleepy-Hollow’ continuum has been funding Cucalorus since some of the very early days. It’s a little harder to write a check when you’re that far away.”

In the summer of 2011, Dylan Patterson, who by day is a mild-mannered English professor at Cape Fear Community College, shot his passion project, the short film “Anhedonia.” It’s a whimsical fairy tale with a budget of $25,000 – $3,000 of it Patterson’s own money – and features such working actors as Cullen Moss, Traci Dinwiddie and Shane Callahan. Patterson started submitting “Anhedonia” to festivals this year, but were he to try to make it, or any film, this summer, Patterson said, it would “absolutely” be more difficult, and not only because both Callahan and Shawn Lewallen, who shot the movie, are working out of town: “There wouldn’t be like, ‘I have a half day off on Wednesday, let’s have a production meeting.'”

Tanya Fermin, a member of the Wilmington Female Filmmakers Collective, just finished her first film, a short called “The Arrangements,” and plans to shoot another short, “Senses,” next month.

“As a female filmmaker, it is already difficult in this industry, and with the demise of the incentives it puts a dismal cast on any type of funding that would be of help here in North Carolina,” Fermin wrote in an email message. “Being an independent filmmaker it forces us to use our local resources in unique ways to tell stories from our point of view that people want to see.”

Fermin said that when she shoots her film next month, “It will be difficult to find some crew because so many have moved out of state to find work. But we will press on for the love of making movies.”

A new hope?

At best, the future of film, and independent film, in Wilmington is uncertain. Later this summer, the General Assembly will pass a budget, probably not with the $60 million in grants the N.C. House has in its budget or the $10 million Gov. Pat McCrory has in his, but somewhere in between. Some predictions are in the $40 million range. Once the smoke clears, independent filmmakers will better see where they stand.

But some of them aren’t waiting. Caylan McKay and Patrick Basquill, the two twenty-somethings behind the fledgling Fake Brothers production company, are debuting a new short film tonight, which is the kick-off for a series of fundraisers they’re doing in the hopes of financing an indie feature.

“We already have everyone saying it’s dead, it’s gone, it’s leaving,” McKay said. “But for me, (the Fake Brothers fundraising weekend) is kind of showing that not all hope is lost. With UNCW‘s film school and Cape Fear (Community College)’s film school, we still have great filmmakers.”

Besides, say those who have been around Wilmington’s film industry and independent film community for a long time, you never know what the future might hold.

“Tell people to make their own projects,” said Chad Keith, the production designer. “If they still want to make films, do your own stuff and keep it alive. It will come back. It always comes back.”

John Staton: 910-343-2343

Twitter: @JohnStatonSN

+++

SALT Studio Photography
Wilmington, NC 28401
http://saltstudionc.com
910 367 5720

Photographer, Owner, Curator: Kelly Starbuck

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