What We Loved This Week, Apr. 24 – 30

Published April 29, 2016
Updated April 28, 2016

Never-before-seen outtakes from the photo shoots for your favorite rock album covers, the surprising beauty of the bugs in your backyard, Spike Lee’s dance party to celebrate Prince, Earth’s most impressive caves, the best one-of-a-kind historical curiosities.

Famous Album Covers

David Bowie circa Heroes, 1977. Photo: Masayoshi Sukita/The Guardian

Never-Before-Seen Outtake Photos Behind Famous Rock Stars’ Album Covers

Famous Album Covers 2

The B-52s circa 1979. Photo: George DuBose/The Guardian

Every David Bowie fan recognizes the cover of his Heroes album. But how many have actually seen the other photographs that were taken on the same roll of film?

A new book, Outside The Lines: Lost Photographs Of Punk and New Wave’s Most Iconic Albums, compiles behind-the-scenes shots, outtakes, interviews, and firsthand accounts from photographers who captured some of the most legendary images during the cover shoots of some of the most famous rock LPs in music history!

View more images at The Guardian.

Famous Album Covers 3

Blondie circa 1978. Photo: Martyn Goddard/The Guardian

The Surprising Beauty of the Bugs Living in Your Backyard

Long Legged Fly

Long-legged fly. Photo: Daniel Kariko

No matter how vigilant we are in keeping nature on the other side of our windowpanes, insects always find a way into our homes.

Yet you might want to think twice before you smash them or shoo them away — some of them are actually surprisingly beautiful creatures, especially up close. Assistant professor of photography at East Carolina University, Daniel Kariko combines photography and microscopic imaging to explore this unseen world of bugs.

See more at National Geographic.

Cuckoo Wasp Window Screen

Cuckoo wasp. Photo: Daniel Kariko

Dryophthorine Weevil Front Porch Doormat

Dryophthorine weevil. Photo: Daniel Kariko

Spike Lee Hosts Dance Party to Celebrate Prince’s Life

Prince Party Above

Aymann Ismail/Slate

Last Thursday, the world mourned as word got around that iconic musician Prince had passed away in his home in Paisley Park, Minnesota. While grief colored the faces of many, others chose to honor Prince’s legacy through dance.

On Friday, director Spike Lee threw an impromptu dance party outside his Fort Greene, Brooklyn home to “dance, sing and shout to his music,” the invitation said. The Associated Press estimates that around 1,000 people gathered for the event.

In case you missed it, Slate took some pretty fantastic photos of the event.

Prince Party Spike Lee

Spike Lee greets his guests. Photo: Aymann Ismail/Slate

Prince Party Man

Aymann Ismail/Slate

author
All That's Interesting
author
A New York-based publisher established in 2010, All That's Interesting brings together subject-level experts in history, true crime, and science to share stories that illuminate our world.
editor
John Kuroski
editor
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.