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Matt Wolf- Wild Combination:A Portrait of Arthur Russell (2008)- DVD9 (NTSC Format)

matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell
We've posted a lot of music this weekend so I thought I'd mix things up with this documentary. About a musician. Arthur Russell's music spanned genres from pop to folk to disco to experimental and while there is probably some godawful term to pigeon-hole his diversity into an easily identifiable genre, such as "alt-experimental" or "avant-disco," it's Russell's strong sense of melody that connects all of his compositions.

In Wild Combination, director Matt Wolf interviews the people who knew and loved Arthur best, but it's the footage of him playing that seems the most revealing, along with the music itself. And while there may be only a few insights into who he was and why he made the music that he did, this is a great overview of his life and career and a portrait of how much he was loved by the people who knew him. If you don't know anything about Arthur Russell (as I didn't before watching this tonight) this is a great place to start.

A special thanks to Remain In Flight for suggesting this documentary. If anyone else has a request, speak up and we'll see what we can do!


matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell

From Wesley Morris at the Boston Globe:

A shortcoming of many documentary portraits of artists is that, while they manage to wrangle insights from the artists' friends and collaborators, they don't capture, in equivalent cinematic terms, the artists' art. "Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell" doesn't have that problem.

Not only does director Matt Wolf hear the baleful beauty in Russell's music, he matches it with passenger-seat tracking shots of empty fields and cloudless skies, and with shots of, say, a record-player arm rising with the steady undulations of a spinning LP (moving at about 33 rpm).

The first set of images is unexpectedly lonely. The other is sensual. And both get amazingly close to capturing the strange emotional essence of Russell's music - cello, drum loops, and his bashful vocals ricocheting against various backdrops of sonic detritus. Russell died of AIDS in 1992. He was 40, and for most of the 1980s, until his death, he was making the saddest dance music in the world. Almost nobody had heard it, of course, except other musicians, his pals, and his boyfriend Tom Lee.


matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell

In the spring of 2004, a New York label called Audika released "Calling Out of Context," a kind of Russell sampler. (One of the best is called "Wild Combination.") If there was justice in this music's release, it was merely poetic, since Russell was no longer around to make more. In exploring Russell's life, Wolf's documentary convinces you that Russell's experimentalism was scratching at the mass market's door.

Russell was born and raised in Oskaloosa, Iowa. He was mocked for being quiet and thoughtful. His parents, kind heartland folks, explain that he changed his name to Arthur because he hated being called "Chuck Junior" (his father is Chuck Senior), how acne made Arthur self-conscious, and how Arthur ran off to San Francisco and befriended Allen Ginsberg in 1967 after a fight with Chuck Senior.


matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell

Russell loved John Cage, but he liked disco and rock, too. The music he eventually wrote and recorded dramatized the tensions between frothy intelligence and intelligent froth. He'd bridged the canyon between Radiohead and Madonna before there was officially a Radiohead or Madonna to bridge - the perils of being ahead of one's time. Some of his work is folk. Some of it sounds like he wanted to be Grand Master Flash.

Russell haunts "Wild Combination" like a kind of ghost. Everyone who knew him - be it Philip Glass or Russell's former partner Tom Lee - fills in some of the blanks. But as you might expect, Russell is alive in the music, which toward the end of his life was changing incrementally but significantly. The joy in pop music was learning to cohabitate with the seriousness of avant-gardism.

For this, Wolf summons the remarkable sight of blurry fireworks. It's the perfect image for a man whose vivid music appeared to be fighting its way into sharper focus.



matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell

Technical Information:

Title: Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell
Year: 2008
Country: USA
Director: Matt Wolf

Source: DVD9 Retail
DVD Format: NTSC
Container: .iso + mds
Size: 7.40 GB
Length: 1:10:48
Programs used: DVD Decrypter, ImgBurn

Resolution: 720x480
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Video: MPEG2 @ ~7500 kb/s
Frame Rate: 29.97 fps

Audio 1: English- Dolby AC3 5.1 @ 448 kb/s
Audio 2: English- Dolby AC3 Stereo @ 192 kb/s
Subtitles: None

Menu: Yes
Video: Untouched

DVD Extras:
- Full-length performance: Soon To Be Innocent Fun/Let's See (1985)
- Full-length performance: Calling All Kids (1989)
- Allen Ginsberg: A Memorial for Arthur Russell (1992)
- Arthur's Sneakers (1979)
- 1970 audiocassette letter from Arthur in San Francisco to his parents
- Tribute performances of Russell's songs by Jens Lekman, Verity Susman, Joel Gibb and Arthurs Landing


matt wolf- wild combination- arthur russell

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