Swamp Dogg Gets His Pool Painted toasts a singular soul survivor
The documentary is a joyful, stylish, open-hearted love letter to the musician born Jerry Williams Jr.
Photo: Magnolia Pictures
“I will now sell five copies of Love, Loss, And Auto-Tune by Swamp Dogg,” whispers Rob (Zoë Kravitz) to her co-worker in the TV version of High Fidelity, recreating a great scene from the 2000 film in which John Cusack’s record-store owner—also named Rob—does the very same with The Three EPs by The Beta Band. Subbing in Swamp Dogg during this moment—one where a relatively recent(ish) song is so head-turning that it will get customers asking “who is this?” and immediately buying whatever record it’s on—was pretty good, regardless of one’s opinion of the show. If one puts on “Synthetic World,” from Swamp Dogg’s debut album, 1970’s Total Destruction To Your Mind, at an outdoor gathering or during a scenic drive, people who haven’t heard it will almost certainly give a “who’s this?” (And if they don’t, maybe think about finding some new company.) This is all to say that Swamp Dogg is known, but not really—or certainly not as much as he should be. Swamp Dogg Gets His Pool Painted, a seven-years-in-the-making documentary by Minneapolis-based musicians and filmmakers Isaac Gale and Ryan Olson, attempts to get to the bottom of the man born Jerry Williams Jr.
Now 82, the cult figure is a fascinating guy with an equally fascinating career, one that’s touched on many different corners of American music and history: He performed on bills with Percy Sledge; played piano with Irma Thomas; became the first Black A&R man for Atlantic Records, relocating from a cheap hotel in Midtown Manhattan to the Four Seasons in Miami (alongside drinking buddy Gary U.S. Bonds); wrote songs that became country hits for the likes of Conway Twitty and Johnny Paycheck; became part of the scenes in Macon, Georgia and Muscle Shoals; dipped his toes into hip-hop in the ’80s by managing World Class Wreckin’ Cru (which counted Dr. Dre as member); and was featured, early in his Swamp Dogg days, on Jane Fonda’s FTA tour in Vietnam, which led to, he claims, being dropped by Elektra Records and put on the F.B.I. watchlist. “Something about me ‘stealing a car,’” he reflected wryly on the latter situation. “At that time, I had nine automobiles. What am I stealing a car for?”