John Lurie

John Lurie

John Lurie in 2013
Born (1952-12-14) December 14, 1952
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Residence New York City
Occupation Actor, musician, painter and television producer
Years active 1978–present
Television Fishing with John, Oz
Website www.strangeandbeautiful.com www.johnlurieart.com

John Lurie (born December 14, 1952) is an American musician, painter, actor, director, and producer. He co-founded The Lounge Lizards jazz ensemble, acted in 19 films, including Stranger than Paradise and Down by Law, composed and performed music for 20 television and film works, and produced, directed, and starred in the Fishing with John television series. In 1996 his soundtrack for Get Shorty was nominated for a Grammy Award, and his album The Legendary Marvin Pontiac: Greatest Hits has been praised by both critics and fellow musicians.

Since 2000 Lurie has suffered from symptoms attributed to "chronic Lyme disease" and has focused his attention on painting.[1] His art has been shown in galleries and museums around the world. His primitivist painting Bear Surprise became an internet meme in Russia in 2006.

Early life

Lurie was born in Minneapolis and was raised with his brother Evan and his sister Liz in Worcester, Massachusetts.[2]

In high school Lurie played basketball and harmonica and jammed with Mississippi Fred McDowell and Canned Heat in 1968.[2] He briefly played the harmonica in a band from Boston but soon switched to the guitar and eventually the saxophone.[3]

After high school Lurie hitch-hiked across the United States to Berkeley, California. He moved to New York City in 1974 then briefly visited London where he performed his first saxophone solo at the Acme Gallery.[2]

Music

The Lounge Lizards

Main article: The Lounge Lizards

In 1978 John formed The Lounge Lizards with his brother Evan Lurie; the Lurie brothers were the only constant members in the band through numerous lineup changes.

Robert Palmer of The New York Times described the band as "staking out new territory west of Mingus, east of Bernard Herrman." While originally a somewhat satirical "fake jazz" combo spawned by the noisy No Wave music scene, the Lounge Lizards gradually became a showcase for Lurie's increasingly sophisticated compositions. Alongside the Lurie brothers personnel included guitarists Arto Lindsay, Oren Bloedow, David Tronzo, and Marc Ribot; drummers Grant Calvin Weston and Billy Martin; bassists Erik Sanko and Tony Garnier; trumpeter Steven Bernstein; and saxophonists Roy Nathanson and Michael Blake. The band made music for 20 years.

Marvin Pontiac

In 1999 Lurie released the album The Legendary Marvin Pontiac: Greatest Hits, a posthumous collection of the work of an African-Jewish musician named Marvin Pontiac, a fictional character he created. The album includes a biographical profile describing the hard life of the troubled genius and the cover shows a photograph purported to be one of the few ever taken of him.[4] Lurie wrote the music and performed with John Medeski, Billy Martin, G. Calvin Weston, Marc Ribot, and Tony Scherr. The album received praise from David Bowie, Angelique Kidjo, Iggy Pop, Leonard Cohen, and others. "I thought people would be up in arms about pretending to be a black person," Lurie said in a 2008 interview, "but people were more upset that I pretended to be an insane person."[4]

"For a long time, I was threatening to do a vocal record. But the idea of me putting out a record where I sang seemed ostentatious or pretentious. Like the music of Telly Savalas . . . I don't sing very well, I was shy about it. As a character, it made it easier."[4]

John Lurie National Orchestra

Parallel to the final version of the Lounge Lizards in the early 1990s, Lurie formed a smaller group: the ironically-named John Lurie National Orchestra. Personnel were Lurie on alto and soprano saxes, Grant Calvin Weston on drum kit, and Billy Martin on congas, timbales, kalimba, and other small percussion. Unlike the tightly-arranged music of the Lounge Lizards this group's music was heavily improvised and compositions were credited to all three musicians.

They released an album (Men With Sticks, Crammed Discs 1993) and recorded music for the Fishing With John TV series. In February 2014 John Lurie National Orchestra released The Invention of Animals, a collection of out-of-print studio tracks and unreleased live recordings from the '90s. Columnist Mel Minter wrote:

"This new release may require a reassessment of Lurie the saxophonist because the playing is engagingly fluid, inventive, and visceral—and well worth revisiting. . . . The emotional immediacy of Lurie's playing – and that of his partners – makes for riveting stuff. Think of his sax not so much as a musical instrument, but instead, as a window with a clear view of his soul."[5][6]

Jeff Jackson of Jazziz added, "The resulting music is delicate, primal and utterly gorgeous."[7]

Film and television

In 1993 Lurie composed the theme to Late Night with Conan O'Brien with Howard Shore. The theme was also used on The Tonight Show when O'Brien hosted. He formed his own record label in 1998, Strange & Beautiful Music, and released the Lounge Lizards album Queen of All Ears and a Fishing with John soundtrack.

Lurie has composed scores for over 20 movies, including Stranger than Paradise, Down by Law, Mystery Train, Clay Pigeons, Animal Factory, and Get Shorty, which earned him a Grammy Award nomination.[8]

In the 1980s Lurie starred in the Jim Jarmusch films Stranger Than Paradise and Down by Law, and made cameos in the films Permanent Vacation and Downtown 81. He went on to act in other notable films including Paris, Texas and The Last Temptation of Christ. From 2001 to 2003 he starred in the HBO prison series Oz as inmate Greg Penders.[9]

Lurie wrote, directed, and starred in the TV series Fishing with John in 1991 and 1992. The series later became a cult classic.[10] It featured guests Tom Waits, Willem Dafoe, Matt Dillon, Jim Jarmusch, and Dennis Hopper. It aired on IFC and Bravo and has since been released on DVD by Criterion.

The skeleton in my closet has moved back out to the garden. (2009)

Painting

Lurie has been painting since the 1970s.[11] The majority of his early works are in watercolor and pencil but in the 2000s he began to work in oil. He has said of his art, "My paintings are a logical development from the ones that were taped to the refrigerator 50 years ago."[12]

His work has been exhibiting since July 2003 when two pieces were shown at the Nolan/Eckman Gallery in New York City.[13] He had his first solo gallery exhibition at Anton Kern Gallery in May and June 2004 and has subsequently been exhibited at Galerie Daniel Blau in Munich, Galerie Lelong in Zürich, the Galerie Gabriel Rolt in Amsterdam, the Basel International Art Fair at Roebling Hall and the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in New York, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the NEXT Art Fair in Chicago, the Mudam Luxembourg, the Watari Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, Gallery Brown in Los Angeles, and the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.[14][11][13]The Museum of Modern Art has acquired some of his work for their permanent collection.[15]

Lurie has released two art books. Learn To Draw, a compilation of black and white drawings, was published by Walther Konig in June 2006. A Fine Example of Art includes over 80 reproductions of his work and was published by powerHouse Books in 2008.

Lurie's watercolor painting Bear Surprise was enormously popular on numerous Russian websites in an Internet meme known as Preved.[16]

Personal life

Lurie has experienced debilitating ill health since 2000, with initially baffling neurological symptoms.[8] At one point he was told he had a year to live.[3] The doctors he consulted in the first few years did not agree on a diagnosis but by 2006 eight separate doctors agreed that it was "chronic Lyme disease".[17] Lurie has stated, "I have Advanced Lyme."[2] Lurie initially became ill in 1994.[8] The illness prevents him from acting or performing music so he spends his time painting.[2][18]

Stalking incident

In August 2010 Tad Friend wrote a piece in The New Yorker about Lurie disappearing from New York to avoid a man named John Perry, whom Friend said was stalking Lurie.[19] In the online literary magazine The Rumpus, Rick Moody noted that Friend's profile in The New Yorker, nominally about Lurie and his art, was two-thirds to three-quarters about Perry including a full page photo of Perry standing in front of one of his own paintings. Moody confirmed that Lurie was very ill with "chronic Lyme disease" and described Perry as a deceitful stalker capable of violence.[17]

In May 2011 Perry undertook a public hunger strike to protest The New Yorker characterizing him as a stalker. Commenting about the protest Lurie said, "He's conducting a hunger strike a half block from my house to prove he's not a stalker."[20] Lurie described the article as "wildly inaccurate," noting that its publication did not resolve anything and that "the situation continues."[8]

Editor David Remnick said the piece in his magazine was "thoroughly reported and fact-checked,"[20] But in a letter to The New Yorker in August 2012 several interviewees claimed their words had been "twisted, misquoted, or ignored," and that "the man presented in the article [Lurie] is not the man that we know."[21] In a February 2014 interview Lurie told the LA Times, "What one would hope is that the beauty in the music and in the paintings can somehow transcend and invalidate the kind of sickness that led to the article being written as it was and the kind of irresponsibility that allowed it to be published."[22]

Filmography

Title Year Role Notes
Rome '78 1978 Unknown
Men in Orbit 1979 Unknown Also writer, director
Underground U.S.A. 1980 Jack Smith
The Offenders 1980 The Lizard
Permanent Vacation 1980 Sax player Also composer
Downtown 81 1981 Himself
Subway Riders 1981 The Saxophonist Also composer
Variety 1983 N/A Composer
Stranger Than Paradise 1984 Willie Also composer
Paris, Texas 1984 Slater
Desperately Seeking Susan 1985 Neighbor Saxophonist
Down by Law 1986 Jack Also composer
The Last Temptation of Christ 1988 James
Il piccolo diavolo 1988 Cusatelli English title: The Little Devil
Mystery Train 1989 N/A Composer
Wild at Heart 1990 Sparky
Fishing with John 1991 Himself Also creator, director, composer
Keep It for Yourself 1991 N/A Short film; composer
John Lurie and the Lounge Lizards Live in Berlin 1991 1992 Himself Documentary
Late Night with Conan O'Brien 1993 N/A Composed title theme
Get Shorty 1995 N/A Composer
Blue in the Face 1995 N/A Composer
Just Your Luck 1996 Coker
Manny & Lo 1996 N/A Composer
Excess Baggage 1997 N/A Composer
New Rose Hotel 1998 Distinguished Man
Lulu on the Bridge 1998 N/A Composer
Clay Pigeons 1998 N/A Composer
Sleepwalk 2000 Frank
SpongeBob SquarePants 2000 Himself (voice)
Animal Factory 2000 N/A Composer
Oz 2001–03 Greg Penders 12 episodes
Tortured by Joy 2004 Narrator Short film
Face Addict 2005 N/A Composer
Mobsters 2010–11 Narrator

Discography

John Lurie

Lounge Lizards

Soundtracks

References

  1. "John Lurie Art". Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Brown, Tim (December 2006). "John Lurie". Perfect Sound Forever. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  3. 1 2 Ortiz, Alan (March 1, 2009). "Q&A: JOHN LURIE (Unabridged)". Stop Smiling. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 Robins, Wayne. "Behind The Legend of the Legendary Marvin Pontiac: A Conversation with John Lurie". eMusic. Retrieved February 2, 2013.
  5. Minter, Mel. "Three Saxophones: Two Reviews and One Preview". Musically Speaking. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  6. Sweetman, Simon. "The John Lurie National Orchestra: The Invention of Animals". Off The Tracks. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  7. Jackson, Jeff (Spring 2014). "The John Lurie National Orchestra "The Invention of Animals"". Jazziz: 117.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Sutton, Larson (February 1, 2011). "John Lurie Sustains". jambands.com. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  9. "John Lurie". IMDb. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  10. Fishing with John on BBC, accessed February 15, 2011
  11. 1 2 "John Lurie: The Erotic Poetry of Hoog". Archived from the original on March 7, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  12. "Melancholy Mirth". The Inquirer Digital: Arts & Entertainment. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  13. 1 2 "Strange & Beautiful". Retrieved February 14, 2011.
  14. "John Lurie: Works on Paper". MOMA PS1. May 2006. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  15. "MoMA collection". Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  16. "The "preved" phenomenon gained enormous popularity on the Russian-language Internet with the speed of an avalanche". The Moscow Times. Retrieved January 25, 2013.
  17. 1 2 Moody, Rick (June 24, 2011). "SWINGING MODERN SOUNDS #30: What Is and Is Not Masculine". The Rumpus. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  18. Forson, Kofi (September 2009). "In Conversation with John Lurie". Whitehot Magazine. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  19. Friend, Tad (August 16, 2010). "Sleeping With Weapons". The New Yorker. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  20. 1 2 Palmeri, Tara (June 24, 2011). "The squawk of the town". NY Post. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  21. "John Lurie profile in The New Yorker". Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  22. Barton, Chris (February 4, 2014). "John Lurie re-emerges with 'Invention of Animals'". LA Times. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  23. http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/18865-the-john-lurie-national-orchestra-the-invention-of-animals/
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