Sunday

Docs about Dusty

The DA Pennebaker Documentary
Just Shut Up and Love Me
2004. Written and directed by DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus.

DA Pennebaker, the legendary documentary filmmaker responsible for such classics as Primary (1961), Don't Look Back (1966), and the multi-awarded War Room (1993), found himself navel-gazing in 2003, overeating and pretending that he enjoyed reality TV. "I can see now that I was bored. Nobody with an ounce of decency or compassion for fellow humans actually likes reality television. I was in big trouble."


In order to snap out of a potentially lethal bout of ennui, Pennebaker knew that he had to latch onto a larger-than-life subject. "That's when Dusty Carr came to mind," says Pennebaker. "My work is all about exploring the individual as a representation of society. Can you name me one person, dead or alive, who better encapsulates twentieth century angst? It's freakin' impossible. When you look in the face of Dusty Carr, you look in the face of chronic terror kind of mingled with bravery. He's tough but weak, extremely violent but compassionate."


Pennebaker spent three months following Carr from Atlantic City to Memphis, then to Miami and finally Las Vegas. "Travelling with Carr was like going on a dark road trip of the soul. The people that he attracts range from hardcore rock and rollers to Reno sleazoids. His groupies range from beautiful twenty year olds to aging crack whores. In all my years of documentary filmmaking, this is the most engrossing but terrifying project I've ever done. And keep in mind that I got pretty close to Bill Clinton."


Just Shut Up and Love Me will receive an extremely limited release through Mainline Cinema.


The PBS Documentary One Hand Clapping Very Loudly: The Dusty Carr Story
2006. Written and directed by Lenny Brillstein. The Carnegie Film Arts Institute
Graduating with an MA from Harvard in 1992, Lenny Brillstein's doctoral thesis centered on the study of desperation in the creative process. "We always harbor grand illusions about how works of art actually come to fruition," says Brillstein. "We have the indentured poet, tearing his hair out in a drafty turret. We have the bloodied feet of an exhausted dancer swaddled once again for a final rumba. Whatever the case, total desperation, and not especially talent, is often the key motivator of success." 


Brillstein set out to investigate how desperation motivates creativity. "I was itching to make a film, and my brother works for the Carnegie Institute. He told me that all I had to do was write up a typed, double-spaced proposal, and the they would give me money - and they did." 


The next step was to find subject matter that exemplified Brillstein's thesis. "I looked around and finally determined that the greatest living progenitor of what I term mind over talent was Dusty Carr, and I aimed to let his so-called career tell my story," Brillstein comments. 


Brillstein discovered the most difficult aspect of the film was actually convincing Dusty Carr of the validity of the project. "At first, all Dusty wanted to know was how much he was going to get paid, and if it involved any nudity. I told him that I couldn't pay him and that he didn't have to remove his clothes. He told me I was a freak." 


By 2002, Dusty had settled into complete obscurity. "I had had fame and fortune," Dusty says of that period, "and I felt that I had entertained the people of the world enough, so to hell with them and it." 


Brillstein and his crew followed Carr through his dark haunts in Manhattan, into crumbling nightclubs packed with what Carr dubs - "kind of sick looking people." 


"It was in these clubs," says Brillstein, "that it really became apparent that Dusty had very little talent. But what he did possess - and this is truly admirable - is the ambition to keep off Social Assistance. So he'd drag his forlorn self onto these ratty little stages, put on a karaoke-type tape, and belt out his songs from forty years ago. It was very primal and eventually quite terrifying."


One Hand Clapping Very Loudly: The Dusty Carr Story aired on PBS in December, 2006 "The reaction was immediate," Brillstein comments. "On one side were people who thought it was a total waste of energy and money. On the other side, thousands of people wrote to me, expressing their admiration for Dusty, for the way he just keeps going like a spring bull in heat. Oscar Wilde once said that when the critics disagree, then you have a work of art. And I think that's what we accomplished."

Tuesday

Discography

Discography (and Books/Articles)

Albums
1953 Let's Have A Good Time!
1954 Let's Have A Really Good Time!
1955 Good Times Are Over: Dusty Sings the Blues
1956 Hey, Let's Go To Crazy-ville: On The Road With Carr
1959 C'mon Everybody, Get Happy! (released in France as Through a Thick Veil of Salty Tears)
1962 Surf's Comin' Up! (released in France as So Many Forlorn Faces)
1968 Streaming Lights and Cartoon Faces: Live At The Fillmore (with The Jefferson Airplane)
1972 Feelin' Kinda Thoughtful
1979 Gotta Disco 'Til I Die
1990 Really Fast Carr
2005 Dusty After Dark

Singles
1953 You Are My Angel
1953 Thinkin' 'Bout Somethin' Stupid!
1954 Hey, Give A Fella A Kiss!
1955 The Loneliest Boy On Broadway
1956 You Make Me Feel Funny Inside
1959 I Cut My Lips On Your Love
1962 You Are My Angel (with The BoneTones)
1968 Big Corporate Toilet (with The Jefferson Airplane)
1969 It's All So Groovy
1972 People Are Really Petty
1979 Gimme A Chunka Funk
1990 Early One Morning I Wept
2005 Never With A Skank

Books/Articles (by or about Dusty Carr)
Dusty Carr: My Life, My Love, My Hell
by Dusty Carr with Albert Goldman (Gibberish Press, NYC, 1978)
Total Flukes of Fame: Ringo and Beyond
by Eileen Jessup (Advantage Press, Boston, 1980)
Teen Dreams: A Sociological Interpretation of Teen Idols
by Barbara Goldblatt (Harvard University Press, 1982)
Carr Crash
by Derrick Dunne (Vanity Fair Magazine, October 1986)
On The Beach With Dusty Carr
by Mark Grielus (Rolling Stone Magazine, September, 1990)
An Analysis of Chronic, Abusive Drug Addiction
by Adam Grundig (McGill University Medical Press, 1992)
Deep Loathing and Midnight Jabbering
by Gelbart Thompson (Schrevers Press, NYC, 1994)
Whoa! Running Over Republicans With A Dusty Carr!
by P.J. O'Rundgren (The Atlantic Magazine, March 1996)
Why the fat corporations hate Dusty Carr
by Michael Moore (Mother Jones, July, 2004)

My Secret Admiration for the Laudable but Prevaricating Artistry of Dusty Carr
by William F. Buckley (New York Times, February 2006)

Saturday

Best seller
Thumbnail Biography
Dusty Carr was born Gossamer Gretch in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1934. His mother, Queenie Carr (nee Gretch), was a local nightclub 'performer'. His father, Tor Lappard Carr, had immigrated to the United States from Norway in 1933, escaping a jail term for mail fraud and petty larceny. Tor became a chronically unemployed train mechanic who met Queenie only once, for about five minutes. 

In his self-published (very limited edition) autobiography 'Dusty Carr: My Life, My Love, My Hell', Dusty describes growing up in a run down house trailer: "The worst thing about a house trailer is that there's only one way in and one way out. That's it. One damn door! Do you know what that's like? It really affects your whole stinking perspective of life." 


Dean smacks Dusty. Frank cheers
In 1948, through a 'friend' of his mother's who worked in an advertising agency, Dusty became the on-air voice of 'Tripple Tipple Soda', as featured on Jack Benny's weekly radio program. Two years later he signed (that is, his mother signed) a five year recording contract with Silly Sally Records. 

Irving ("Dead Lips") Moffberg, former head of A & R and Building Supervisor of Silly Sally, recalls, "Although he was kind of an ugly kid, he had the voice of a fallen angel." Moffberg arranged an audition for the boy with the head of Silly Sally, Shelby Critter. Says Critter, "What I heard was a raw talent that we had neither the interest nor energy to refine into something better. And herein lays the 'Carr appeal' - just a desperate guy with balls big enough to go up and sing in front on people." 

Carr's first single for Silly Sally, and his first big hit, was the self-penned
'You Are My Angel', an achievement that won him repeated appearances on the Milton Berle Show. 

As Carr's career was never properly managed, he stumbled through the dark morass of pop music like a drunk moose in mating season. But above all, he's a survivor, although clearly jaded and profoundly embittered. 

Dusty Today
The year 2018 finds Dusty with a new lease on life, having survived six months in a state penitentiary for drunk driving and evading arrest. In his defense, Dusty claimed that he was "actually too drunk to drive" so "technically, I wasn't really driving." Recently, he received an offer from Lady Gaga to duet on his 1960s hit 'It's All So Groovy'. Dusty plans to "keep in the biz in a big way. I'm talking Dayton, I'm talking Atlantic City - wherever there's a stage. In fact, I've got a personal invitation from my close pal Donald Trump for a casino gig - so I'm told. In fact, we have the same barber."

Friday

Welcome


"O Lord, you made the night too long"

The Lounge Lizard King comes in from the cold.
Dedicated to the violent, troubled career of an intemperate man. Contact: terrylennox.rc@gmail.com


An Introduction to 'The Legend'
When you think of Dusty Carr, what comes to mind?… Perhaps not much, or perhaps way too much. Whatever your memories and opinions, we invite you into a life well lived. 


Much has been written about Dusty - some of it accurate, but mostly garish and ill prepared, reminiscent of its subject. Above all, Dusty is complex: he loves hard, he sings hard, and he plays hard.


So take a few moments now to discover A Man and His Music. Go on, you can take it.