ABC News November 6, 2020

The legacy of Rolling Stone magazine photographer Baron Wolman

WATCH: August 15, 1969: Woodstock Music Festival

From Woodstock to Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, Baron Wolman will forever be remembered for photographing music's greatest era.

Wolman, then 30, was fated for the role after meeting 21-year-old journalist Jann Wenner in San Francisco in April 1967. Wenner had plans to form a new kind of publication entirely focused on music.

Wolman agreed to join the new editorial project, which would become Rolling Stone magazine. He became the magazine's first chief photographer and helped launch the magazine to its iconic status.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Jimi Hendrix performs at the Fillmore West in San Francisco, Calif. in February 1968.

Wolman was born on June 25, 1937, in Columbus, Ohio. He graduated from Northwestern University, where he studied philosophy. Wolman's professional photographic career began while he was stationed with U.S. Army military intelligence in Berlin.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Janis Joplin sings during a studio shoot in San Francisco, Calif., January 1968.

While in Berlin he sold his first photographic essay, images of life behind the then-new Berlin Wall. It was after this that he decided to become a photojournalist.

After his discharge from the military, he moved to California.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
John Fogerty, lead singer and guitarist of Creedence Clearwater Revival, performs at the Oakland Coliseum Arena in Oakland, Calif., 1970.
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Wolman began working for Rolling Stone from its first issue, and continued for another three years. Because of Wolman's access to his subjects, his photographs of musicians like Joplin, The Rolling Stones, The Who and Hendrix would become the backbone of Rolling Stone's layout.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Bob Dylan during his Slow Train Coming tour at Warfield Theatre in San Francisco, Calif., in November 1979.

After his time at Rolling Stone, Baron worked on several other long-term projects. He learned to fly and began a series of aerial photo projects. He published two books of the images after opening his own publishing company, Squarebooks, in 1974.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Johnny Cash smokes a cigarette backstage at the Circle Star Theatre in San Carlos, Calif., December 1967. His wife, June Carter Cash, is in the background.

"Baron Wolman: Every Picture Tells A Story, The Rolling Stone Years," published in 2011, tells the stories behind his iconic images and details his career, including the early days of the magzaine.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Members of the audience climb the sound tower to secure a better view at the Woodstock music festival, in Bethel, N.Y., Aug. 15, 1969.
Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Pete Townshend of British rock group the Who performs at the Cow Palace, in San Francisco, Calif., November 1967.

Wolman died on Nov. 2 of complications from Lou Gehrig's disease. He was 83.

His unique photographic style helped establish Rolling Stone magazine's early aesthetic and forever established the image of the classic rock star of the 1960s and '70s.

Baron Wolman/Iconic Images
Baron Wolman is photographed by Bill Graham during the Woodstock Festival, Bethel, N.Y., in August 1969.