Blog
April 16, 2012
Most of us work in an office or cubicle, but if you are lucky enough to be a race car driver your office is the cockpit. If you are lucky enough to be a musician the stage is your office. Those jobs are very similar in many ways. Both demand a lot of brain power and both require stamina because the work environment can change at any second. Your reflexes need to be quick and you must have the ability to focus only on the task at hand. Both, hopefully, are in front of a large and excited crowd interested in what you are doing. Adrenaline pours through the body of the musician on stage or the race car driver in the cockpit. I feel the same thing when I photograph them! It really is alot of fun for me.
In 2003, after years of photographing race car drivers I wanted to find a different angle, a different view that we don't see very often, a view to call my own. I thought a view of the race car driver from above, in his office, would be an interesting angle. On pit lane one day, I put the Nikon directly above Indy Car driver Tiago Monteiro, who I was photographing for Fittipaldi-Dingman Racing. There it was! I knew I had something good there. This started my cockpit photograph library. It is a difficult photograph to take because I am shooting blind with just putting the camera above the driver and firing away. Digital photography makes that so easy, but in 2003, those first cockpit pictures were taken with film. I did not make the switch to digital until 2005.
My cockpit photographs have traveled around the world since then and all of a sudden it seems that the racing world is catching on. I see other photographers doing and publishing the same thing! It is a nice compliment and I believe that maybe I started a little something way back in 2003. I'm not sure, maybe I didn't start it, but it is a cool view, isn't it?
Thanks,
Rich Zimmermann
April 10,2012
I know I have to keep up with this blog thing a bit better. I will try to blog once every week.
We lost a neat guy last week, Earl Scruggs. Someone once said that he dressed like a Nashville dentist, but Earl Scruggs was a classy man. He came from the days when we all dressed up to go on an airplane. These days, people do not dress up much for anything at all.
I had the pleasure of meeting and hearing Earl play twice. One of these photographs is from an interview we did before a show at UW Milwaukee in 1972. The other photograph shows him playing with one of his sons and the incredible Vasser Clements. Earl did things with a banjo that made you listen hard and look twice.
We will miss you Earl and keep playing that banjo in heaven.
Thanks,
Rich Zimmermann
March 18, 2012
In 1998 at the Milwaukee Mile I had the pleasure of chatting with Greg Moore who was one of the nicest racers I have ever known. He was always very calm it seemed when he was going to his Indy Car office. He was one of those guys that went into his car and just did it. Greg made it look very easy to go so fast and he was always very fast. At the time, I was a bass tournament fisherman and an Indy Car photographer. I don't remember exactly what shirt I was wearing that day pictured here, which was a Friday practice, but as I was talking with Greg on pit lane he noticed my fishing shirt. We got to talking about fishing and found out that he loved to fish too! I told him that I lived on Pewaukee Lake which was 25 minutes from the Milwaukee Mile and it was full of bass and muskies and he said he would love to fish it sometime with me in the future.
In October of 1999 we lost Greg Moore in a race in California. In 2000 he was to be driving for Team Penske which was the seat to have at the time. Team Penske instead of Greg, hired Helio Castroneves which is another whole story of another favorite race car driver. As we are about to start a new Indy Car and fishing season Greg has been on my mind. I don't know if he would like the new Indy Car we are about to see but I think he would. It's a whole new safer car and if it is faster than the old one I really think he would like it!
Greg and I still have a date to go fishing someday upstairs. We miss you Greg. Tell me what you think on my Facebook or Twitter page.
Thanks,
Rich Zimmermann