For most of the 35-thousand years or so that humans have roamed the Earth, we were able to represent what we see and hear through art and music. But we were not able to capture images and sounds and replicate them until – in the grand scheme of things – relatively recently when the inventions of the industrial revolution brought us rudimentary photography and phonographic recordings.

Imagine how that changed the world. Not only the way we see and hear ourselves and others, but the way we think about reality. In the nearly two centuries since, technology has created unlimited creative opportunities for people in the audio and visual fields and given rise to some exciting new possibilities.

On the forefront of changes in the audio world for the past couple of momentous decades, Bill Kelley has been a Recording Engineer at the LSU school of Music and Dramatic Arts, a century old school on the LSU campus with more than 400 students and two dozen majors.

Bill Kelley, from his perch at LSU's College of Music and Dramatic arts, produces over 300 recitals a year and develops audio technology including his music-loop tool The Rhythm Tickler

Bill Kelley, from his perch at LSU’s College of Music and Dramatic arts, produces over 300 recitals a year and develops audio technology including his music-loop tool The Rhythm Tickler

Bill produces 300 or so recitals a year for students and faculty, and supports them with their various creative projects. Bill also has several creative projects of his own: he’s a musician and has also created an audio production tool, The Rhythm Tickler, that makes it easier to build digital loops that musicians can use to create new compositions.  

On the visual side of the ledger, Kristen Soileau Freeman is a Baton Rouge-based wedding and lifestyle photographer with an approach that is at once spontaneous and organic on one hand and artful, and studied and beautiful on the other.

Kristen Soileau Freeman, bringing a uniquely artistic perspective to wedding photography that's given her a nationwide clientele of destination brides

Kristen Soileau Freeman, bringing a uniquely artistic perspective to wedding photography that’s given her a nationwide clientele of destination brides

Kristen hung out her shingle, Kristen Soileau Photography, in 2010, while she was still a student at LSU, where she majored in fine arts. In the years since, she has grown her business into one of the city’s most in-demand wedding photographers, which is no small thing in an era when brides must have the Insta-perfect photo from the moment of the proposal til end of the wedding reception – and everything in between. Kristen is a native of Lake Charles, who came to Baton Rouge in 2009 to attend LSU.

Bill Kelley, Stephanie Riegel, Kristen Soileau Freeman, Out to Lunch at Mansurs on the Boulevard

Bill Kelley, Stephanie Riegel, Kristen Soileau Freeman, Out to Lunch at Mansurs on the Boulevard

Both Bill and Kristen are great examples of the wisdom of the piece of advice often directed at people looking for career guidance: “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life.” They’ve both turned creative passions into careers that enable them to capture the beautiful sights and sounds of the world around us. 

Bill Kelley studies Mansur's menu

Bill Kelley studies Mansur’s menu

Kristen Soileau Freeman turns her back on the extensive Mansurs wine rack and sticks with water

Kristen Soileau Freeman turns her back on the extensive Mansurs wine rack and sticks with water

 

 


Out to Lunch is recorded live over lunch at Mansurs On the Boulevard.

Photos by Ian Ledo and Miranda Albarez.