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Ernie Paniccioli leaned in close. âYo, take a minute,â he insisted. âYouâve got to listen to this from Public Enemy!â
Ernie is a big man, big enough for anyone with sense to pay attention. The song âEverythingâ starts to play, and the words fill the room. Itâs a soulful litany of all the things Chuck D, the groupâs leader, needs and does not have.
Never was hot/Never was pop
But I never, ever stopped/That real hip-hop.
Got no paparazzi/Got no company that got me
Walking alone in the hood/So itâs easy to spot me.
Who needs paparazzi when you have Ernie? An imposing chronicler of the hip-hop scene from LL Cool J and Biggie Smalls to Queen Latifah and Lilâ Kim, Ernie has been especially close to Public Enemy, counting its members as collaborators, conspirators and counselors. It has been a good month for them: Public Enemy will be inducted tonight into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and Ernie recently finished a conference at Cornell University, whose library acquired his vast photographic archive.
Itâs been a big climb for the self-taught photographer and Native American activist who prizes creativity and social consciousness. Decades ago, Ernie, now 66, fell in love with the street art, music and dance created in Harlem, Hollis and the South Bronx by young people who had little money but plenty of imagination. But even as some of them became stars, he always sought that glimmer in their personalities that had ignited the culture decades earlier.
âMy work shows them as larger than life but also as part of life,â Ernie said. âMy work has a pulse. It three-dimensionalized a lot of these people. And the artists themselves have always let me be up close and personal. There never been dichotomy between the photographer and the artist. Itâs a circle.â
That approach carried him through the decades. He started in the 1970s by photographing graffiti murals on his way to work for a telephone company, then moved on to B-boy battles in clubs and rap concerts in community centers and concert halls. He became the go-to photographer for magazines like Word Up and Rap Masters, and a generation of young people grew up with Ernieâs pictures on their walls. He has published several books, including âWho Shot Ya,â and was the subject of âThe Other Side of Hip-Hop,â an award-winning documentary.
Ernie grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, but ran away from home when he was a teenager. He hung around Greenwich Village and befriended the singer Richie Havens, who taught him about art. He spent six years in the Navy and then returned to New York, where he married and had a child. Though he worked as an analyst for the phone company, the graffiti murals he saw in Manhattan Valley led him to borrow a camera.
One thing led to another as he went from taking pictures of murals to photographing spray-painted denim jackets worn by early B-boys and their fans. Soon, he was being hired to take pictures in clubs for $100 a night. In time, his improvised start led to steady magazine work. And he could go anywhere, any time.
âThere were cats who got beatdowns, some photographers who got jacked,â he said. âI have a certain look or air that does not invite some cat whoâs 19 and weighs a buck twenty-five to step to a guy whoâs 260 pounds and look like Cochise.â
But one encounter threw him. One day, while taking some film to be developed, he heard something new.
It was Public Enemy. The sound, the attitude, the politics moved him.
The lab technician said he knew the group, and within a week, Ernie was meeting with Chuck D, Flavor Flav, Terminator X, Professor Griff and the S1Ws.
âImmediately, we became family,â Ernie said. âI felt I was in the presence of people who had the potential to create revolutionary change, not in the physical sense but in the mental sense. Chuck always reminds us. Heâs always saying, âYo, wake up! Check it!â Heâs like the alarm clock that Flavor wears.â
The feeling was mutual.
âHe was very well in tune with where we were coming from,â Chuck D said. âHe was not oblivious to struggle. One thing about Ernie was he was able to encompass all of P.E. in the shots, and that set him apart from others who only saw me and Flav. He considered the sum of all the parts to be important, and that endeared him to all the members of P.E.â
In the 1990s, when he was laid up from knee surgery, Ernie got a call from Chuck, who wanted him to do a cover shoot for Terminator X, the groupâs D.J.
âI canât,â Ernie said. âIâm on crutches.â
âYouâre broke,â Chuck replied. âIs your finger broke?â
âNo,â Ernie said.
âIâll have the S1Ws pick you up and hold your camera,â Chuck said. âYou just flick it.â
âWell,â Ernie said, âthey picked me up, carried me out to the parking lot for the shoot and put me on my back. But I took the shot â" shooting up.â
The curators at Cornell â" whose growing hip-hop archive also includes work by Charlie Ahearn and Joe Conzo â" said Ernieâs evident rapport with various artists was among the reasons they acquired his work, which includes as many as 70,000 images of stars, fans and fashion.
âThe range is the most significant feature of his archive,â said Ben Ortiz, the assistant curator of the collection. âHe had access that just blows my mind. Thereâs a particular photo with Treach from Naughty by Nature jumping on Biz Markieâs back on the street. It looks like theyâre celebrating something. Ernie said that was the moment they heard about the O. J. verdict.â
That image hints at another theme in Ernieâs work: a political sense, at times controversial, that once motivated performers. He is equally outspoken about rap pioneers who do little but rest on faded glories and about current ones who have no lyrical prowess but make millions as little more than shills driven by false pride and money.
âThat ended up diluting something that was organic into something that is not,â he said. âIt became a marketing gimmick. Now rappers look like professional wrestlers. Fancy names, fancy personas. Imaginary characters in an imaginary world. But at one point it really mattered.â
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