About this Performance
Curated by: Thomas Bartlett
The music of multi-hyphenate icon Arthur Russell echoes throughout Little Island in a marathon event curated by Thomas Bartlett. At the heart of the evening is a ticketed concert at 8:30 PM in The Amph, featuring a starry lineup performing Russell’s groundbreaking, genre-defying work—from art-pop to folk to disco—in a tribute as expansive and unclassifiable as his legacy.
At 6:30 PM, the park comes alive with free programming open to all: Zoh Amba’s solo saxophone, a park-wide drone led by DM Stith, a Western swing set by Smokey Hormel and poetry readings in The Glade. Following the concert: a free, improvised performance of Russell’s experimental disco piece 24>24, and a DJ set by Laurie Anderson.
Run time: 90 minutes
The music of multi-hyphenate icon Arthur Russell echoes throughout Little Island in a marathon event curated by Thomas Bartlett.
6:30pm -Drone Performance
Island-Wide – Free and Unticketed
The marathon begins with live drone – a musical style and tool that Russell pioneered – sounding throughout the Island, punctuated by instrumentalists roaming and improvising, in Russell style, along the winding paths of the park.
Featuring: Zoh Amba, Sam Amidon, Max Moston, DM Stith,
7:15pm – Poetry Reading
The Glade – Free and Unticketed
Gather in the Glade for recitations of poetry that inspired Russell, accompanied by live music.
Featuring: Sam Amidon, Laurie Anderson, Ernie Brooks, Jennifer Charles, Max Moston, Spencer Murphy, Doug Wieselman.
7:45pm – Western Swing Set
The Play Ground – Free and Unticketed
While best known for his disco and experimental work, Russell sometimes presented as a straightforward country singer-songwriter, a side of his work that will be celebrated with a set of Western Swing-style covers by guitarist Smokey Hormel and his band.
Featuring: Smokey’s Round-Up
8:30pm – Concert
The Amph – Ticketed
A starry lineup performs Russell’s groundbreaking, genre-defying work—from art-pop to folk to disco—in a tribute as expansive and unclassifiable as his legacy.
Featuring: Mustafa K. Ahmed, Sam Amidon, Laurie Anderson, Ernie Brooks, Thomas Bartlett, Oren Bloedow, Jennifer Charles, Ella Hunt, John Morgan Kimock, Spencer Murphy, Anna Roberts-Gevalt, serpentwithfeet, DM Stith, Martha Wainwright, Doug Wieselman
10:00pm – 24 > 24
Island-Wide / Unticketed
A free-form invitation to wander the Island while Russell’s major disco hit 24>24 plays throughout.
11:00pm – DJ Set by Laurie Anderson
The Play Ground – Free & Unticketed
The Cast
Creative Credits
Arthur Russell
Music
Arthur Russell (1951 – 1992) was a cellist, vocalist and composer known for his fusion of classical and popular music. Originally from Oskaloosa, Iowa, Arthur traveled to the west coast in 1970 joining a Buddhist commune and studying Indian classical composition at the Ali Akbar Khan College in Marin County. In 1971 Arthur met and performed with Allen Ginsberg who brought him to New York for a recording session produced by John Hammond that also included Bob Dylan, Perry Robinson, and Happy Traum. Arthur moved to New York in 1973 to study at the Manhattan School of Music. Quickly gravitating to the then burgeoning downtown music scene, Arthur wrote and performed his minimal compositions, including the bubblegum pop inspired “Instrumentals”, and was music director at the Kitchen in 1974, along with recording his own pop songs for John Hammond. Throughout his life Arthur collaborated with a who’s who of some of New York’s most influential artists including Christian Wolf, John Cage, Peter Gordon, Peter Zummo, Ernie Brooks, Jon Gibson, Mustafa Ahmed, Rhys Chatham, Jill Kroesen, David Byrne, Laurie Anderson, Larry Levan, Phillip Glass, Robert Wilson, Julius Eastman, Arnold Dreyblatt, Walter Gibbons and Phill Niblock. Russell’s music shifted dramatically in 1977 after an unexpected visit to a disco. Inspired by the sonic repetition and sense of community, Arthur wrote and recorded some of the most influential records of the disco era including “Kiss Me Again,” “Is It All Over My Face,” and “Go Bang”. By 1984 Arthur began stretching the boundaries of disco and composition, becoming entranced with echo, and its use in his own songwriting. The completed album, World of Echo combined Arthur’s rich composition skills with echo, feedback, voice and cello, and remains one the most influential documents of the era as a work of timeless beauty. When Arthur Russell died from complications due to AIDS in 1992, he left an overwhelming archive of unreleased material that has since been rereleased and compiled by Audika Records in association with Arthur’s partner Tom Lee. As a cellist, songwriter, composer, and disco visionary, Arthur Russell consistently challenged our expectations of what pop music could be.
Thomas Bartlett
Curator
Thomas Bartlett, also known as Doveman, is an American pianist, producer, and singer. He has released four solo albums as Doveman, four albums as a member of The Gloaming, duo albums with the composer Nico Muhly and the hardanger d’amore player Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh, and “Shelter,” an album of solo piano compositions. As a producer, Bartlett has worked with a range of notable artists, including Yoko Ono, St. Vincent, Norah Jones, and many others. “Mystery of Love,” a collaboration with Sufjan Stevens for the soundtrack to Call Me by Your Name, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song, and a Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media. Bebel Gilberto’s “Agora,” produced, engineered and mixed by Bartlett, was nominated for Best Global Music Album at the 2021 Grammys, and he also contributed to Taylor Swift’s “evermore,” and Rufus Wainwright’s “Unfollow the Rules,” both nominated that year. Since 2018, Bartlett has worked closely with Florence Welch on a musical adaptation of The Great Gatsby.
David Schnirman
Sound Design
David A. Schnirman (Sound designer -Mix engineer) David is very pleased to be adding this production to his fun and exciting summer. So far, David has traveled the U.S. for six weeks with Soft Cell as part of Simple Mind’s “Alive and Kicking” tour. Traveled to India for his son’s wedding. Has been working on the plans for Rufus Wainwright’s concert version of his musical “Opening Night” at Town Hall this September and has also working on Justin Vivian Bond’s Flaming September Concerts to take place at St. Ann’s Church in Brooklyn. David has collaborated on sound with many musicians including : Lara Downes, Gogo Bordelo, Ollabelle, Amy Helm, Rosanne Cash, Peter Wolf , Laurie Anderson, Ahnoni, Lou Reed, and Hal Wilner.
Aaron Gubler
Lighting Design
Bio to come.
Erin McCoy
Stage Manager
Bio to come.