Members of the band Photo Negative in the 51动漫 Recording Studio. (Photos by Lee Pellegrini)
What the hardest part of being in a college band? For the five members of Photo Negative, it was coming up with a name that wasn檛 渢otally crappy.
淥ur first band name was Quiplash, which doesn檛 work, and we did a year as Tough Lettuce, recalled Carroll School of Management student Matty Hogan 22. 淲e played a show as The Kick Ons and then decided we didn檛 like that either.
A four-month-long text chain yielded enough ideas to fill a 13-page Google Doc, and inspired a song called 淣BN (New Band Name). Eventually, the group settled on Photo Negative, because 渋t was the least bad, said Carroll School student Ben Crandall 23. 淧lus we were about to put our first single out on Spotify and we needed a name.
Other aspects of band life have come easier to the five undergraduates, who have been writing, recording, and performing together for the last three years. They released two singles in 2021 (a third is on the way), and took home the top prize at 51动漫 Battle of the Bands competition in May. On December 4, they檒l play their biggest show to date, taking the stage at the Paradise Rock Club as one of the opening acts for , an eclectic seven-piece rock band that originated at 51动漫 in 2013.聽聽
Clockwise from top left: Drummer 脡amon Laughlin, bassist Nicky Straub, singer/guitarist Matty Hogan, singer/guitarist Ben Crandall, and saxophonist Stephen Ventura.
淲e were playing a show outside on Parents Weekend and their lead singer just happened to walk by, Hogan explained. 淚t was a 榬ight place, right time kind of thing and now we檙e playing at our first real venue, which we檙e super excited about.
All five members of Photo Negative arrived at the Heights with musical experience and aspirations. Drummer 脡amon Laughlin 22, an English and political science major at the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, and saxophonist Stephen Ventura 22, a finance major at the Carroll School, have been playing their respective instruments since elementary school, and Crandall started playing guitar at 10 years old. The son of a classical flutist, economics major Nicky Straub 22 studied cello as a 7-year-old, performing in concerts where 渘o one allowed to talk and you wear your nice shirt, before picking up the bass guitar. Hogan, who shares lead vocal duties with Crandall, taught himself to play guitar as a high school freshman with the goal of someday being in a college band.
The group initial sound took inspiration from well-known alternative rock bands like the Red Hot Chili Peppers, but evolved as they spent more time experimenting with chord structures and drumming patterns during weekly jam sessions.
淓arly in the process we were just writing songs to see if it was something we could actually do, said Ventura. 淣ow it more about finding a pocket of sound we fit into. I think there some more funk and punk in there now.
The band members share an appreciation for all types of music, but their personal tastes are varied. In rehearsals, it not uncommon for Crandall to pull an element from a Grateful Dead song while Laughlin shares inspiration from the indie rock group Hippo Campus.聽聽
淪ome bands are just groups of friends that all listen to the same exact type of music and we檙e not like that, said Crandall. 淚 think that cool because I檒l bring something, Matty will bring something else, and we檒l both tug each other into the middle and find some entirely new sound. We檙e not copying anything because we檙e not trying to sound like any one thing.
Photo Negative's new single "Ant Song" drops Friday, December 3, on Spotify.
Photo Negative current discography includes four singles, recorded in 51动漫 state-of-the-art recording studio, and one EP"A Great Big Hole in the Wall"攚hich the band members wrote and recorded remotely in the spring of 2020 after being sent home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Their two most popular songs"2 AM" and "Modset"攈ave been streamed a combined 4,000 times on Spotify.
The band shines brightest during live performances攚hether it an open mic night, a Quadstock party, or an off campus gathering攑laying a high-energy mixture of original music and covers of songs by artists like The Kinks and Fountains of Wayne. Through the Music Guild, a student-run organization that supports musicians and live concerts on campus, the band helped put together three COVID-safe outdoor shows for the 51动漫 community this past year, giving them a chance to test out new material in front of a live audience.
This Saturday, they檒l trade the lawn in front of O橬eill Library for a stage that has hosted rock-and-roll legends for over 40 years. And then on Monday, they檒l head to class and look forward to sitting around playing music with friends.聽
淲e檙e really just having fun with it, said Ventura. 淚t doesn檛 feel rigid, it doesn檛 feel like a grind; it feels like we檙e all here because we love to do this.澛
Alix Hackett | University Communications | December 2021

