‘Phil Ochs - There but for Fortune’ - Documentary Review

To say that the 1960s folk singer Phil Ochs dreamed big is to understate
the huge scope of his ambition. As recalled in Kenneth Bowser’s
respectful, nonmaudlin documentary portrait, “Phil Ochs: There but for
Fortune,” Ochs moved to New York in the early ’60s intending to be the
best songwriter in the country. After meeting Bob Dylan, Ochs was forced
to revise his opinion of his own potential to “second best.”

Even before Ochs discovered folk music and left-wing politics through
Jim Glover, his fellow student at Ohio State University, he was in the
thrall of larger-than-life cultural symbols, from Elvis Presley to
western movie stars like John Wayne and Gary Cooper, who embodied the
concept of a world-saving hero. Not coincidentally, the folk music
movement in its early days had the same messianic sense of its own
importance.

The Dylan-Ochs connection, however friendly, had its tormenting
underside. While Ochs worshipped Mr. Dylan (who is not interviewed in
the film), his idol refused to pay him much respect. Ochs’s typical
songs were specific topical commentaries gleaned from poring over
newspapers and magazines. Even when Mr. Dylan was addressing current
events, he remained suspicious of politics as a songwriting platform and
soon moved on to become the superstar that Ochs wanted desperately to
be.

Ochs, who committed suicide in 1976 at 35, never understood that there
was a limited audience for brainy musical editorials composed in a rigid
singsong mode and sung in a droning, nasal voice with a modest range and
faltering intonation. If his verses were finely wrought, his singing
conveyed an emotional distance from the words.

Ochs’s involvement with the civil rights and antiwar movements and his
presence at the 1968 Democratic National Convention make “There but for
Fortune” not only a biography but also a running history of the period’s
left-wing activism, replete with film clips of that decade’s tragic
events; the assassination of John F. Kennedy hit Ochs especially hard.

Besides family members — his younger brother and sometimes manager,
Michael; his older sister, Sonny; his wife, Alice Skinner; and his
daughter, Meegan, all appear in the film — the documentary’s talking
heads include Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Tom Hayden, Judy Henske, Billy
Bragg, Ed Sanders, Christopher Hitchens and Sean Penn.

The earnestness of Ochs’s broadsides was often leavened by a sarcastic
humor that he sometimes directed at himself. His 1966 song “Love Me, I’m
a Liberal” assailed the slightly left-of-center politics of those who
wept over the Kennedy assassinations but believed that Malcolm X “got
was what coming” when he was killed. Other Ochs songs that are now
considered folk music classics include “There but for Fortune”
(memorably recorded by Ms. Baez), the antiwar “I Ain’t Marching
Anymore,” and the caustically witty “Draft Dodger Rag.”

The story told by Mr. Bowser’s film is complicated and tragic. Once the
songs stopped coming, Ochs’s bipolar illness, worsened by alcoholism,
led to acute paranoia and eventually to suicide. A contributing factor
to his decline was probably his realization after the violent police
response to radical demonstrators at the Democratic National Convention
that the powers that be, if sufficiently irate, would lash back
viciously.

While his folk singing peers embraced folk-rock in the mid-’60s, Ochs
took an artier musical direction and moved to the West Coast, where he
recorded his disappointingly received 1967 album, “Pleasures of the
Harbor,” which featured ornate, semiclassical orchestrations. The
album’s producer, Larry Marks, recalls that Ochs was certain it would go
to No. 1 and gain him recognition as America’s greatest singer and
songwriter. It peaked at No. 168 on Billboard’s album chart.

Poking fun at his lust for fame, Ochs, who never had a Top 40 hit, made
a “greatest hits” album of new songs in 1970, for which he posed,
Elvis-like, in a gold-lamé suit and followed it with a Carnegie Hall
concert at which he wore the same outfit. The flamboyant, self-mocking
stunt received a mixed reception.

World travels followed, including trips to Chile, where he befriended
the folk singer Victor Jara, who was later murdered in the military
coup, and to Africa, where he was mugged and nearly killed while walking
on a Tanzanian beach. But there was no escaping his demons.

PHIL OCHS: THERE BUT FOR FORTUNE

Opens on Wednesday in Manhattan. 

Written and directed by Kenneth Bowser; directors of photography, Jarred
Alterman, Jacob Cohl, Zev Greenfield, Rob Humphreys, Tom Kaufman,
Jefferson Miller, Nick August Perna and Trevor Smith; edited by Pamela
Scott Arnold; music by Phil Ochs; produced by Michael Cohl, Mr. Bowser
and Michael Ochs; released by First Run Features. At the IFC Center, 323
Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village. Running
time: 1 hour 38 minutes. This film is not rated.

--
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/05/movies/05phil.html?src=me
Via InstaFetch

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