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Paul Natkin: From Chicago Stadium to Rolling Stones Tour Photographer | Rock History Revealed

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There are Chicago stories—and then there are Chicago stories that feel too wild, too perfectly stitched into the fabric of American music mythology to be real.

Paul Natkin is one of those stories.

Buy Paul's book, here:
Book link: https://trope.com/products/natkin-the-moment-of-truth

The kind that starts under the dim lights of Chicago Stadium—where a kid tagging along with his father realizes the perks of photography aren’t just free parking and great seats… they’re front-row access to history. The kind that ends—if it ever really ends at all—in a quiet Avondale home, where decades later, the shutter is still clicking, still chasing that same electric moment.

Because for Natkin, the story never stopped. It just got louder.

FROM BULLS GAMES TO BACKSTAGE PASSES

In 1971, photography wasn’t the plan—it was the pivot.

Natkin’s father, a seasoned photographer turned contractor, got pulled back into the business when the building trade collapsed. A phone call later, he was shooting for the Chicago Bulls. One game was all it took.

The access. The energy. The proximity to something bigger.

That was it.

Natkin was hooked.

DISCOVERING THE SOUNDTRACK OF A LIFETIME

By 1975, the lens had shifted—from hardwood to amplifiers.

His first concert? Bonnie Raitt at Northwestern University.

That moment cracked something open.

What followed wasn’t easy—no roadmap, no guarantees—but Natkin carved his way in the old-school way: hustle, access, relationships, and an instinct for being exactly where the moment would explode.

Soon, his work was everywhere:

Rolling Stone
Creem Magazine
Hit Parader
Circus Magazine

And beyond music:

Newsweek
Time
Playboy
Ebony

This wasn’t just a career—it was infiltration.

THE MONTH THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

June 1984.

A stretch of days that reads like rock folklore:

Prince’s birthday party in Minneapolis
The launch of the Jackson 5 Victory Tour
The opening of Bruce Springsteen’s Born in the U.S.A. tour

And somewhere in there? Natkin, camera in hand, capturing moments that would become permanent fixtures in music history—including the filming of “Dancing in the Dark.”

A year later, one of those shots landed on the cover of Newsweek.

Game over.

FROM PRINCE TO OPRAH

That single image didn’t just elevate his career—it detonated it.

Natkin’s photos from that era circled the globe, especially from that night with Prince. The exposure led to a five-year run as staff photographer for The The Oprah Winfrey Show.

Yes—that Oprah.

Because in Natkin’s world, music, culture, and media weren’t separate lanes—they were one long highway.

ON THE ROAD WITH ROCK ROYALTY

Then came the call that every rock photographer dreams about.

A conversation. A connection. A door opens.

Suddenly, Natkin is on the road with Keith Richards and the X-Pensive Winos.

Then it escalates.

The big one:

Three and a half months embedded with The Rolling Stones on the Steel Wheels tour.

Not watching from the pit. Not shooting from the press line.

Living it.

Breathing it.

Documenting it from the inside.

He’d return again:

Voodoo Lounge Tour (1994)
Bridges to Babylon Tour (1997)

Because once you’re in that circle—you don’t really leave.

ALBUM COVERS, ICONS, AND IMMORTALITY

Natkin’s work didn’t just live in magazines—it became part of the music itself.

His lens helped define the visual identity of artists like:

Ozzy Osbourne
Alanis Morissette
Buddy Guy
Johnny Winter

These weren’t just photos.

They were artifacts.

STILL SHOOTING. STILL CHASING THE MOMENT.

Today, back in Chicago’s Avondale neighborhood, Natkin is still working.

Still chasing light.

Still pressing the shutter at exactly the right moment.

Because that’s the thing about guys like Paul Natkin—they don’t retire from the story.

They are the story.

And if you think you’ve heard it all?

Buckle up.

This one’s still being written.

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COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER UNDER SECTION 107 OF THE COPYRIGHT ACT 1976
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976,
allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. #storiesfromthe78

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