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  • Calling Out Of Context Arthur Russell Rar
    카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 29. 10:55

    Charles Arthur RussellI first heard the name Arthur Russell mentioned in an interview with Animal Collective, referencing inspirations for Merriwether Post Pavilion. One night in the summer of 2013, a social media friend sent me link to an Arthur Russell mp3 discography, which I downloaded and listened to over the succeeding months and years. (I should add that I have since purchased a legit lossless copy of every release available.) For a music geek like me, the discovery of Arthur Russell was a life-changing event; the beginning of many years of obsession.Arthur Russell is a romantic figure; the frustrated artist or tragic genius, like Van Gogh, who allegedly never sold a painting, Orson Welles or Brian Wilson, who both had commercial aspirations, but had their most ambitious work rejected by their business partners.

    This unique, multi-faceted artist, a cello player, lived and worked in the then-center of the artistic universe in lower Manhattan; 'downtown'. His work cut across many genres, and was difficult to market. It failed to find a commercially viable audience in his own lifetime, which was cut short by AIDS. Russell died in 1992, leaving a prodigious body of unreleased recorded music, that, as attested by the posthumous releases, is uniformly brilliant. It’s rich, emotional music, with the full spectrum of life and being expressed and explored with absolute artistic authenticity. Russell’s songs are as deep as the ocean. The singing and cello playing are so nuanced and idiosyncratic, the sound so richly detailed and original, so startling in its’ complexity, that Arthur Russell has no peer in all of popular music.

    The music was so far out that even in 2015, it is avant garde, and anticipated many of the developments since, including shoegaze and dream pop, much of the dance music of the interval, and even DIY and chillwave.This week, the licensed conduit for the estate of Russell, released Corn, the first set of unreleased Russell recordings to emerge from the vault in seven years. Corn was originally conceived as Arthur's solo debut – the first record released under his name, and has been one of the major mysteries of his extensive body of work until now. The album consists of Russell’s own songs, his voice and unique amplified cello interacting with heavy and spare electronic beats, and percussion from Mustafa Ahmed, and Peter Zummo’s and Rik Albani's respective trombone and trumpet. There is a unified production approach, a sort of earthy electro. The tracks seem to belong to a set, though many have noted the demo-like sound quality of the recordings.

    Arthur Russell World Of Echo Rar

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    Steven Hall, close friend and frequent collaborator states flatly, “Arthur would not have released most of those tracks. They were demos.”So is this 2015 Corn the unreleased album from 1985, or not? Turns out the answer to that question, like everything involving Russell, is too complex to yield to the simple either-or frame of that question.Tom Lee's artwork for CORNFrom Tim Lawrence's insightful biography of Arthur, Hold On To Your Dreams:'During late 1984 and 1985, Russell recorded approximately twenty tracks for his solo album, and having struggled to find a final version, presented the results on three separate test pressings.'

    The pressings were all titled Corn but the artist was labeled as El Dinosaur, Indian Ocean and Untitled, respectively. Lawrence’s book gives a track list; “See My Brother, He’s Jumping Out”, The Deer in the Forest – Part I”, “Hiding Your Present from You”, “Calling Out of Context”, “The Platform on the Ocean”, “You Have Did the Right Thing When You Put That Skylight In”, ‘The Deer in the Forest – Part II”, “Keeping Up”, “Corn”, “They and Their Friends”, and “I Like You”, but doesn’t make clear which of the three versions this represented. These newly released recordings were made between the 1982 Dinosaur L album and 1983's Tower of Meaning andLoose Joints 'Tell You (Today)', according to the press release byAudika. So, are these newly released versions the material that was on the 1985test pressings? Or was it the more finished versions of “Calling Out ofContext”, “The Platform on the Ocean”, “I Like You”, that were eventuallyreleased on the 2004 Calling Out ofContext compilation? 'LuckyCloud', “Keeping Up” and “This Is How We Walk on the Moon”, released on Another Thought, sound finished, softened,and unlike the spare, hard tracks of the 2015 Corn.

    'You Have Did the Right Thing When You Put That SkylightIn' is absent, but already was released on Springfield. 'They andTheir Friends' and 'Hiding Your Present from You', and “See MyBrother, He’s Jumping Out”, however, sound similar to the versions released on Let's Go Swimming and Springfield, although we are assured bythe notes that “all tracks previously unreleased”. But if you thought you’veheard Corn because you know these songs, you’d be very wrong. Although it would benice to know exactly what the contents of those test pressings were, thefinished 1985 Corn album is probablya myth. It’s likely that Russell himself never resolved on a final version, andthe test pressings were for Arthur’s own use. The failure to finish C orn ultimately has more to do withArthur than Socolov.Again, from Hold On To Your Dreams: '“Arthur wasn’t happy with anything he did, so he ended upwith all these alternate mixes of the same thing,” notes the Sleeping Bag boss.“He would EQ things a million times and then he would ask me to listen to thetapes.

    There were times when I could distinguish between them, but I didn’tknow what was better, and he just went on and on,” Socolov says Arthur “wentcrazy” over his recordings.' .Mustafa Ahmed, told author Tim Lawrence, “I workedfor hours on tracks but never got the sense we were finished, because of hisconstant editing. Anyone who collaborated with Arthur would tell you this wasthe most frustrating aspect about working with him.

    He was neversatisfied.”. ' Corn' was a themeof Russell’s, a connection to his roots in small town, agrarian Iowa. Thereis 'In the Corn Belt', from 24→24 Music, and he posed for iconicphotos in a corn field, and with a John Deere tractor, which later graced thecovers of Love Is Overtaking Me and Springfield. There are two versions of'Corn' on the new album, making sense of the title of the previouslyreleased 'Corn #3'.There is parallel aquatic theme in Russell's work, thatacts as in compliment to ‘corn’.

    Arthur populated his song with water images. 'Let'sGo Swimming', 'Platform on the Ocean', 'Ocean Movie',“Little Lost”, That’s Us / WildCombination”, the artist names Indian Ocean and Killer Whale - all convey a nautical theme. The sound of Corn 2015 is raw and minimal. Some ofthe songs share musical passages; 'Corn' falls into 'KeepingUp' nicely, and it's easy to imagine that might have been intended.' Corn (Continued)” shares beats with 'The Platform on theOcean', and may have morphed into that track by 1985. In this incarnationit's a 10 minute workout of noisy, grinding jam, that is as close to hard rockas Russell would ever get; a worthy follow-up to Dinosaur L's chaotic 'Get Set'. The new 'Lucky Cloud' may be the best of all.

    It soundsmore 'finished' than some of the other tracks, Arthur's cello's 'feedbackharmonies' cresting in a blissful waves of carefully controlled noise.It's easy to imagine this might have been a hit had it enjoyed proper supportand promotion. 'This Is How WeWalk on the Moon' is one of Corn’sbest tracks, and contains (like many of Russell's recordings) passages ofindescribably nasty funk that only lasts for a few bars, making it ripe for anew edit. This version is by no means inferior to the other versions of one ofArthur’s very best songs.

    The metronomic snare and melodic cello lock into agroove that is danceable, to which is added the trashiest dirty synth soundimaginable, and the “slurry” (as Lawrence aptly terms it) of trumpet andtrombone. The same dirty synth shows up in “I Like You”. “See My Brother, He’sJumping Out ( Let’s Go Swimming #2) ” is a succeeding version of the song of the same name on Springfield, tagged 'Let's Go Swimming #1'. This track does not appear to be a remix but an entirely different recording of the song, which would continue evolving and eventually be releasedas a single in 1986.

    Arthur Russell Love Is Overtaking Me Rar

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    Arthur Russell Corn Rar

    This Corn version features tremendouspercussive assaults and intense rhythmic thrust. Whether it's the album Arthur intended or not, t he sequencing and selections could hardly work better than they do. Corn is a gem that will delight fans and lure new listeners into strange world of Arthur Russell. The failure torelease Corn in its' own time leftthe seeds of these remarkable songs in Arthur's fertile soil, and theycontinued to grow and develop under his nurturing protection. These multipleversions should not be thought of as remixes, or even re-recordings, butas variations on a theme, such as in classical music, each being a distinctwork.

    This obsessive-compulsive, quixotic reworking resulted in a greater body of work being left than we otherwise would have. Russell's bizarre working methods and overall approach to his art callinto question the very nature of 'finishing' a work of art, of 'releasing', andeven of the concept of audience. Nodoubt he had commercial aspirations, but ultimately, made this music forhimself.

    It is the businessmen of the world who are preoccupied with 'releasing', and whatever drove Arthur, it wasn't money.' Some sort of unconscious state seemed to govern Arthur.

    As he went about his work, he set aside the constraints of everyday reality.He followed his ear in order to live out an ambition that evoked a sublime chaos of the inner psyche - or a dream that resembled a dream,' writes Tim Lawrence. He managed to absorball these impersonal genres, modern classical/minimalist, avant-rock/new waveand disco, dub, hardly known for lyrics or authenticity of personal artisticexpression (disco was a lot of things, but individual artistic expression, it was not), and then produce a fusion that was as deeply personal andgenuine and authentic as the original American blues.The songs and recordings have a life of their own.

    A new generation of musicians is discovering Russell, and his influence is being felt everywhere in the avant garde of the internet new music community. It's what the world needs, it's love.

    It's the best music I have ever heard. Arthur was a Buddhist, and didn't believe in a heaven, butit's tempting to imagine this angel looking down on us with satisfaction, that hisbeautiful music is finally being recognized as the work of a genius. I hope to eventually hear every scrap of music he recorded.Photos courtesy of Audika. Much of this was drawn from 2009 Duke University Press. Highly recommended.

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    The film is essential viewing. Thanks to Steve Knutson, Mustafa Ahmed, and Steven Hall for background.

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