Congratulating you (early) on your 2,000th post. Now go ahead and say a couple more things quickly so I don't look like a schmuck...
Diggin' the work!
Thank you—I posted a couple of things a few minutes ago just so I could make this reply my 2,000th post.
I love music. For me, as a visual artist, I find music conjures a more immediate emotional response in me than visual art. Very rarely do I get moved instantaneously by a painting. Perhaps, it's because I'm processing and thinking about and analyzing a work of art, trying figure it out. Music plays and my foot starts tapping right away. No processing. Because of my love of music, I got into high-end audio around 1995 and have enjoyed the pursuit of reproducing music more accurately since. I know there are several members here that have systems that lean towards that realm.
One of my proudest work associations is
Stereophile Magazine. I made some beautiful friendships with editors and writers there. I did a number of feature illustrations for the magazine and I reworked their logo in 2011 because the previous one was so wonky, I took it upon myself to clean it up.
In the '60s, when J. Gordon Holt ran the publication by himself, the logo appeared like this:
Below is the May 2011 cover with the logo that bugged me. They debuted my version the following month in June 2011, which combined elements of the 1962 version and the one that bugged me:
Most audiophiles are familiar with Chesky Records, who are known for their great recordings. I began working with them in 2009 and designed CD and LP covers more to my liking for about ten years. Below are some of them, with some obvious nods to the design of Reid Miles at Blue Note and S. Neil Fujita at Columbia.