Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell with Matt Wolf: DVD Cover

    Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell Director: Matt Wolf

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    • DVD Release Date: 11/18/2008
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 11,586

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    • Overview
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    Features

    25 mins of archival Arthur Russell performance footage; Allen Ginsberg's mantra at Arthur's memorial; An audiocassette letter from Arthur to his parents; Covers of Arthur Russell's songs by Jens Lekman, Verity Susman of Electrelane, Joel Gibb of the Hidden Cameras, and Arthur's Landing

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    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell
    1. The World of Arthur Russell [3:52]
    2. Oskaloosa [2:50]
    3. Buddhist Bubblegum [2:02]
    4. Welcome to New York [3:16]
    5. The Kitchen [6:59]
    6. Tom Lee [7:50]
    7. Disco and Go Bang [2:46]
    8. Grownups Are Crazy [6:58]
    9. World of Echo [6:51]
    10. Good Sport [6:12]
    11. Time to Come Home Now [7:52]
    12. Love Is Overtaking Me [3:31]
    13. Wild Combination [5:31]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    With his documentary Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell, director Matt Wolf etches out a biographical portrait of avant-garde musician, artist, and disco producer Arthur Russell, who died of AIDS at age 40 in 1992. Though Russell was a classically trained composer and cellist with an almost encyclopedic knowledge of indigenous Indian music, this performer quickly branched off in a more offbeat and unusual direction. The Oskaloosa, IA, native fixated on such counterculture icons as John Cage and Timothy Leary at an early age, then ran away from home during adolescence and joined a Frisco-based Buddhist group. Russell became acquainted and associated with poet Allen Ginsberg, then moved to New York City, where (like Cage) he established himself as a veritable fixture in the underground music scene and worked as the music director for The Kitchen. By the mid-'70s, Russell began producing prescient disco records in the pre-Gibb days, under colorful pseudonyms such as Indian Ocean and Loose Joints. Unfortunately, he never culled the devoted following that he deserved until about 15 years after his death. Wolf employs a fractured film-essay style throughout the film, intercutting such materials as archival footage, extracts of musical compositions by Russell, and revealing interviews with Russell's family. Thematically, the director uses the tale of Russell's colorful life as a springboard into investigations of broader subjects and themes including gay lifestyles in the early AIDS era, the sociocultural landscape of Manhattan (and the cultural underground) during the 1970s and '80s, and the importance of staking out new directions in art and music for an innovative mind such as Russell's. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide All Movie Guide

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