Nicki Germaine
Nicki Germaine got a phone call back in 1974 asking her to come to Liberty Hall in Houston to photograph a band’s first show in Texas. That was before Born to Run changed everything.
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were on the verge of stardom.
Four nights in March of that year summarized everything the band was about—and about to be. Nicki Germaine was there, capturing not just what happened onstage, but also backstage and behind the scenes. For nearly fifty years, her striking photographs sat dormant, only to be recently discovered by happenstance.
Nicki Germaine
Nicki Germaine got a phone call back in 1974 asking her to come to Liberty Hall in Houston to photograph a band’s first show in Texas. That was before Born to Run changed everything.
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were on the verge of stardom.
Four nights in March of that year summarized everything the band was about—and about to be. Nicki Germaine was there, capturing not just what happened onstage, but also backstage and behind the scenes. For nearly fifty years, her striking photographs sat dormant, only to be recently discovered by happenstance.
Nicki Germaine
Nicki Germaine got a phone call back in 1974 asking her to come to Liberty Hall in Houston to photograph a band’s first show in Texas. That was before Born to Run changed everything.
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were on the verge of stardom.
Four nights in March of that year summarized everything the band was about—and about to be. Nicki Germaine was there, capturing not just what happened onstage, but also backstage and behind the scenes. For nearly fifty years, her striking photographs sat dormant, only to be recently discovered by happenstance.