No, calm down, not Bob Dylan, but frequent Bob Dylan photographer, Barry Feinstein. Feinstein, a Woodstock, New York, resident, who was a legendary, award-winning chronicler of music stars in the 1960s and ’70s, died yesterday at a hospital in Kingston, New York, after a 10-year illness. He was 80. His photos were published in such magazines as Life, Look, Time, Esquire, Newsweek and he shot now-iconic album cover photos for the likes of Bob Dylan, George Harrison, The Byrds, Janis Joplin, and Eric Clapton. “I’d put Barry in the top five of all-time rock photographers,” said Peter Blachley, owner of the Morrison Hotel Gallery in New York City, which represents Feinstein’s work. Feinsteins’s success, said Blachley, came about because of “the way he was able to get the access to deliver those shots. And that access is gained by his personality with artists. They loved working with Barry, and that makes a great music photographer.” It’s probable that Feinstein will be remembered most for his shots of Dylan, like the one above, taken in the back of a limo in London in 1966. (More at LA Times)