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Irwin Chusid

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Irwin Chusid (born April 22, 1951, Newark, New Jersey) is a journalist, music historian, radio personality and self-described "landmark preservationist". His stated mission[1] has been to "find things on the scrapheap of history that I know don't belong there and salvage them." Those "things" have included such previously overlooked but now-celebrated icons as composer/bandleader/electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott, Space Age Pop avatar Esquivel, illustrator/fine artist Jim Flora,[2] various outsider musicians (including William "Shooby" Taylor, a.k.a. "The Human Horn"),[3] and The Langley Schools Music Project.[4] Chusid calls himself "a connoisseur of marginalia," while admitting he's "a terrible barometer of popular taste."[5]

His journalism has appeared in Mojo, The New York Times, Film Comment, Mix magazine, New York Press, Pulse! and other publications. He has lived in Hoboken, New Jersey, since 1992.[6] He describes his political views as "leaning libertarian".[7]

Radio

Since 1975 Chusid has been a DJ on free-form radio station WFMU, where he continues to host an unpredictable and idiosyncratic weekly program whose content he calls "genre-surfing tokenism".[8] Prior to that, he worked briefly at WPKN radio from 1969-1971 while an undergrad at the University of Bridgeport (which he left after two years); in 1977, while living in New Orleans, he hosted a weekly program on WTUL. In 1988, he served as a comedy writer for author/humorist Tom Bodett's syndicated radio series, The End of the Road.

In the late 1970s, Chusid was one of the first DJs to regularly air recordings of Jandek, The Shaggs, Lucia Pamela, and R. Stevie Moore on the radio. In the early 1980s he programmed a weekly segment entitled The Atrocious Music Hour, which featured recordings from such non-musical celebrities as William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy.[9] This subgenre was eventually chronicled by Rhino Records on their Golden Throats series of albums, for which Chusid authored liner notes. These compilations contributed to Shatner's revived celebrity, albeit with overtones of self-parody.

Between 1997 and 2002 Chusid was the co-host (with Michelle Boulé) of the Incorrect Music Hour on WFMU.[10] From 2005 to 2007 he programmed vintage Calypso, Soca and Mento on a one-hour weekly program entitled Muriel's Treasure.[11]

Music projects

Chusid is credited with the rediscovery and popularization of the "Space Age Bachelor Pad" music of Juan García Esquivel, which helped spark the 1990s resurgence of vintage exotica and lounge music. He compiled the first CD reissues of Esquivel and Raymond Scott, and manages the musical estates of both deceased composers/bandleaders. He has produced landmark CD reissues by The Shaggs, Wendy and Bonnie, Judson Fountain, Lucia Pamela, and Alabama folk-art ensemble The Clouds,[12] while penning liner notes for dozens of CD and LP releases on a multitude of labels.[13] He produced Raymond Scott Rewired, an album of Scott remixes by The Bran Flakes, The Evolution Control Committee, and Go Home Productions, which was released in February 2014 on the Basta label.[14]

In 2000, Chusid discovered two LPs of privately pressed western Canadian schoolchildren recordings made in 1976–77 by music teacher Hans Fenger. After much legwork and ten label rejections, Chusid licensed the project to Netherlands-based Basta Audio-Visuals and (for North America) Hoboken-based Bar/None Records, who in October 2001 released the recordings on a CD entitled The Langley Schools Music Project.[15] Within one week of its release, the album went to #1 on Amazon.com. The popularity of that CD led to a VH1 documentary in 2002, which sent the CD back to #2 on Amazon.com. Jack Black's 2003 hit film School of Rock was admittedly inspired [16] by the Langley CD. In 2005, the story rights to the project were acquired by an undisclosed Hollywood film writer/director, who hopes to bring the story to the big screen. In a dismissive review of the album, former Village Voice music critic Robert Christgau referred to Chusid as "a tedious ideologue with a hustle."[17]

In 2002, Chusid produced the sole album by the New York-based septet The Raymond Scott Orchestrette (a band he formed in 1999).[18] That same year he produced the first solo sessions of former Suddenly, Tammy! singer/songwriter Beth Sorrentino, released in 2006 as Nine Songs, One Story. In 2011, he co-conceived and coordinated Sorrentino's album Would You Like To Go: A Curt Boettcher Songbook, a collection of reinterpretations of songs written by and/or associated with sunshine pop progenitor Curt Boettcher. (The album, produced by Sean Slade, was released in April 2013 on the Basta label. Chusid was credited as "Solicitor and Overseer.") In 2013, he undertook administration of Boettcher's publishing on behalf of the late songwriter's son, Varek Boettcher.

In 1997 Chusid co-produced (with Edie Adams and Josh Mills) the Ernie Kovacs Record Collection (Varese-Sarabande), a compilation of songs and themes used by the legendary TV comedian in his programs during the 1950s and early 1960s.[19] The package was designed by noted illustrator Chris Ware. In 2004 he curated Interesting Results: Music by a Committee of One for UK's Sonic Arts Network, a CD-publication of DIY music with cut-out figures of the featured artists.[20]

In 2010 Chusid compiled for WFMU Don't Mess With the Power Child, the first collection of late 1980s recordings by an uninhibited, hyperactive 10-year-old Alabama girl named Amanda (Whitt).[21] These recordings aired frequently on WFMU and subsequently achieved widespread notoriety via the web. A follow-up, Let's Get Plastered and Raid Circus World, was compiled for WFMU in 2011.

Besides administering the Raymond Scott, Esquivel, Bob Thompson, Curt Boettcher, and Shooby Taylor musical estates, he serves as manager for R. Stevie Moore, Beth Sorrentino, Wendy & Bonnie, and the Raymond Scott Orchestrette.

In 2014 Chusid became administrator of Sun Ra LLC, the heirs who control the catalog of the late, eccentric "Afro-Futurist" bandleader/composer.[22] That same year, he and Michael D. Anderson of the Sun Ra Music Archive co-produced a digital-only series of classic Sun Ra albums remastered for iTunes from original Sun Ra session tapes.[23][24]

In 2013, Chusid created the first website devoted to the late record producer Tom Wilson,[25] including a comprehensive discography of Wilson productions.

Outsider music

In a July 1996 Pulse magazine article entitled "You Want Alternative?", Chusid coined the term "outsider music",[26] which he defines as "crackpot and visionary music, where all trails lead essentially one place: over the edge". Chusid has drawn a distinction between the terms "incorrect music" (as used on his WFMU radio program) and "outsider music", which he insists are not synonymous and overlap only slightly. Chusid has explained that Incorrect Music was a radio concept, which included all manner of musical "wrongness", often by people who should have known better, or whose sincerity was questionable. Outsider musicians, on the other hand, he defines as "artists who are often termed 'bad' or 'inept' by listeners who judge them by the standards of mainstream popular music. Yet despite dodgy rhythms and a lack of conventional tunefulness, these often self-taught artists radiate an abundance of earnestness and passion. Most importantly, they betray an absence of pretense. And they're worth listening to, often outmatching all contenders for inventiveness and originality."

His book Songs in the Key of Z: The Curious Universe of Outsider Music (2000), published by A Cappella Books, covered musical oddballs and obscure visionaries. Reviewing this testament to twisted tunesmiths, Publishers Weekly commented:

He profiles 20 darlings of dissonance. Several of them -- including Tiny Tim, Captain Beefheart and Pink Floyd's former acid troubadour Syd Barrett -- have made a few compilation bangs, but the great majority have enjoyed mere dog-like whimpers of success. Take Eilert Pilarm, the Swedish Elvis; Joe Meek, who produced the 1962 instrumental hit 'Telstar' before committing suicide; and The Shaggs, three sheltered sisters from Fremont, N.H., who recorded the 'aboriginal rock' masterpiece 'Philosophy of the World'. Careful not to ridicule his more eccentrically volatile subjects (e.g., Wesley Willis and Daniel Johnston), Chusid narrates each musician's vital statistics and career with rhythm and respectful compilation wit. The book also includes brief profiles of numerous lesser-known outsider musicians, including Arcesia, Bingo Gazingo, and Y. Bhekhirst.

BJ Snowden, Shooby Taylor ("The Human Horn"), Wesley Willis, and other musicians profiled in the book can be heard on two CDs produced and annotated by Chusid. Bill Meyer reviewed the first CD:

This collection is a compilation companion to Irwin Chusid's book of the same name. It celebrates outsider music, music "so wrong it's right", and if you're drawn to sounds that make you wonder just what the musician was thinking, this collection is for you. The compilation is enthusiastically, if not always respectfully, annotated by Chusid. His selections range from the output of blissfully un-self-aware but basically functional individuals to the certifiably insane. Among the former are Lucia Pamela, an Ethel Merman sound-alike who contributes an infectiously enthusiastic celebration of "Walking on the Moon", and Congress-Woman Malinda Jackson Parker, a late Liberian lawmaker whose "Cousin Mosquito #1" cautioned against contracting insect-borne disease. The latter includes Daniel Johnston, whose "Walking the Cow" weds a sublime melody to puzzling lyrics and a toy keyboard arrangement, and Wesley Willis, who pays tribute to Chicago's "Rock 'n' Roll McDonald's". Some of the artists are quite famous (Tiny Tim), some anonymous (the unknown writer and performers of song-poem "Virgin Child of the Universe")—they're united by their blithe certitude that the world needed to hear their unlikely but singular creations.

Volumes one and two of the digital audio releases of Songs in the Key of Z were reissued in expanded (25 tracks each) and remastered format in September 2013, along with all-new volumes three and four.

Visual arts projects

Chusid chronicled the overlooked work of innovative record cover artist/commercial illustrator Jim Flora (1914–1998)[27] in his colorful 180-page trade paperback, The Mischievous Art of Jim Flora (Fantagraphics, 2004). A follow-up, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora, co-authored with (former KFAI radio host) Barbara Economon, was published by Fantagraphics in February 2007. The latter book unveiled Flora's bizarre and rarely seen paintings, woodcuts, sketches, and early works. A third anthology, The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora, was published in July 2009. A fourth book, The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora, focusing on Flora's illustrated album covers and music ephemera for Columbia and RCA Victor Records, was published in September 2013.[28] Chusid and Economon serve as co-archivists for the Flora collection, and produce a line of fine art prints of the artist's work.[29]

In May 2009, Chusid and Economon teamed up with artist Drew Friedman to produce an exclusive line of limited edition fine art prints of the noted illustrator's works.[30]

References

  1. ^ Gardner, Lee, "The Outsiders: Irwin Chusid Reveals What's So Good About Playing Badly," Baltimore City Paper, February 7, 2001 Archived August 31, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Heller, Steven, "Saving Jim Flora's Private Stash: An Interview with Irwin Chusid," American Institute of Graphic Arts, November 16, 2005
  3. ^ Chusid, Irwin, "Shooby Taylor: Meetings With the Legendary Scatman"
  4. ^ Chusid, Irwin, "The Discovery of the Langley Recordings"
  5. ^ Thompson, Spenser, "Finding Rare Music: An Interview with Irwin Chusid of WFMU," BobThompsonMusic.com, November 30, 2015
  6. ^ Burr, Ty. "The worst of Irwin Chusid; Intriguing or just awful? A champion of 'outsider music' lets it speak for itself", The Boston Globe, November 17, 2003. Accessed February 6, 2013. "The chief standard-bearer of outsider music, and the man who coined the term in a 1996 article, is Irwin Chusid, a Hoboken, N.J.-based record producer, radio personality, and music historian."
  7. ^ Thompson, ibid.
  8. ^ Irwin Chusid program archives at WFMU.org
  9. ^ Oliveiri, Chad, Interview with Irwin Chusid, Rochester City Paper, February 16, 2005
  10. ^ Incorrect Music program archives at WFMU.org
  11. ^ Muriel's Treasure program archives at WFMU.org
  12. ^ The Clouds at Innova Recordings
  13. ^ List of Chusid's liner notes at his WFMU homepage
  14. ^ Raymond Scott Rewired website
  15. ^ Chusid discusses discovery of the Langley recordings during interview on Late Nights with Iain Lee, May 26, 2017
  16. ^ DeRogatis, Jim, "High Fidelity: Jack Black Stays True to His 'School'," Chicago Sun Times, September 28, 2003
  17. ^ Christgau, Robert, Consumer Guide: The Langley Schools Music Project
  18. ^ Raymond Scott Orchestrette at Raymond Scott blog
  19. ^ The Ernie Kovacs Record Collection at AllMusic
  20. ^ Fletcher, Andrew, review of Interesting Results, Computer Music Journal, Vol. 31, issue 4
  21. ^ Don't Mess With the Power Child at WFMU's Free Music Archive
  22. ^ Interview with Irwin Chusid by Christopher Eddy at the Sun Ra Arkive blog, September 1, 2014
  23. ^ Kozinn, Allan, "21 Sun Ra Albums Are Released on iTunes," New York Times, May 21, 2014
  24. ^ Gensler, Andy, "New Sun Ra Recordings To Be Released This Fall," Billboard, May 22, 2015
  25. ^ Tom Wilson website
  26. ^ Campau, Don, The Living Archive of Underground Music, interview with Irwin Chusid, November 2, 2011
  27. ^ Jim Flora anthologies published by Fantagraphics Books Archived 2013-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Fantagraphics website page[permanent dead link] for The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora
  29. ^ Jim Flora official web site
  30. ^ Drew Friedman official web site