List of Cambodian films and Ol' Dirty Bastard: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Musicians -->
{{Cambodianfilmlist}}
| Name = Ol' Dirty Bastard
This is an incomplete, chronological '''list of films produced in the [[Cinema of Cambodia]]'''. Most are in the [[Khmer language]], and generally does not include foreign-produced documentary films.
| Img = ODB Mural.jpg
| Img_capt = A tribute mural to Ol' Dirty Bastard.
| Img_size =
| Landscape =
| Background = solo_singer
| Birth_name = Russell Tyrone Jones
| Alias = ''[[Ol' Dirty Bastard#Aliases|See Below]]''
| Born = {{birth date|1968|11|15|mf=y}}
| Died = {{death date and age|2004|11|13|1968|11|15}}<br/>[[New York City|New York City]], [[New York]], [[United States]]
| Origin = [[Brooklyn, New York]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| Genre = [[Hip hop music|Hip hop]]
| Occupation = [[Rapper]]
| Years_active = 1990 &ndash; 2004
| Label = [[Loud Records|Loud]]/[[RCA Records|RCA]]<br />[[Elektra Records|Elektra]]<br />[[Roc-A-Fella Records]]<br />Sure Shot Recordings<br />NuTech Digital<br />[[Dame Dash Music Group]]/[[Koch Records]]
| Associated_acts = [[Wu-Tang Clan]]<br>[[Brooklyn Zu]]<br>[[Insane Clown Posse]]
}}
'''Russell Tyrone Jones''' ([[November 15]] [[1968]]–[[November 13]] [[2004]]) was an [[United States|American]] [[rapper]] who went by the [[stage name]] '''Ol' Dirty Bastard''' (often shortened to '''ODB'''). He was one of the founding members of the [[hip hop music|hip hop]] group [[Wu-Tang Clan]].


Ol' Dirty Bastard simultaneously brought a measure of humor and a touch of the [[absurd]] to the Wu-Tang Clan. Often noted for his unusual [[microphone]] technique (critic Steve Huey writes of Jones' "outrageously [[profane]], [[free association|free-associative]] [[rhymes]]" delivered "in a distinctive half-rapped, half-sung style"<ref>[http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:3g67gjvr86ia~T1 Description at AllMusic]</ref>), Jones' stage name came from a 1980 [[kung fu]] film entitled ''Ol' Dirty & The Bastard'', the relevance of which was articulated by [[Method Man]]'s assertion that there was "no father" to Jones's style.<ref>[[Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)|as related on track 5 of Enter the Wu-Tang]]</ref>
For an alphabetical listing, see [[:Category:Cambodian films]].


After establishing the Wu-Tang Clan, Ol' Dirty Bastard went on to a successful solo career. However, his professional success was hampered by his erratic personal behavior and frequent legal troubles, including [[incarceration]]. He died in late 2004 of [[congestive heart failure]] as a result of an accidental drug overdose only two days before his 36th birthday.
===1950s-1970s - Undocumented dates===
Please note that several of these films have been lost due to the [[Khmer Rouge]] regime of the 1970s and dates are unknown. Many films did survive and copies are still sold and watched in Cambodia today.


==Biography==
Films starring the popular [[Vichara Dany]]:
===Early life and career===
Russell Tyrone Jones was born in [[Brooklyn]] in 1968, and grew up in the neighborhood of [[Fort Greene]]. As he got older, he started hanging out more and more with his cousins [[Robert Diggs]] and [[Gary Grice]]; they all shared a taste for rap music and kung-fu movies. Diggs, later known as the [[RZA (rapper)|RZA]], Grice, later the [[GZA]], and Jones formed Force of the Imperial Master, which subsequently became known as the All in Together Now Crew after they had a successful underground single of that name.


In 1990, Ol' Dirty became close friends with fellow "[[The Nation of Gods and Earths|5 percenter]]," Freedom Shabazz Allah, "Slumlord Shabazz," while both were residing as roommates in Orlando, Florida. Shabazz, hailing from Plainfield, New Jersey, immediately became close friends with "Ason" after graduating from Job Corps in upstate New York along with RZA's eldest brother. The two became inseparable and spent countless hours penning rhymes together and working a brief stint at the local Hardee's and at Universal Studios as laborers at the "Jaws" attraction.
* ''Tep SodaChan''
* ''Sovan Pancha''
* ''Panchapor Tevy II''
* ''Cheung Dai Ouvpouk''
* ''Bomnol Cheam Ouvpok''
* ''Teptyda klok Teip ( the princess of the magical gourd)
* ''Khyum surth heuy khyum yum ( I laugh and I cry)
* ''Panarong Pongnarith
* ''Techodamden
* ''Preas PerPath
* ''Gonsan Lohete ( The scared scarf)
* ''Gosan sla dok
* ''Dao pak daong meas ( The sword with the golden handle)
* ''Neang Champa Meas
* ''Pijayvonsa
* ''Pralmath Pralmong
* ''Phtong moranak
* ''Tao ak
* ''Preas Reach Gomah Pichsongvavong
* ''Srey sross Torng Vong
* ''Poss vath songnae (the black cobra)
* ''Neang champei sal
* ''Tralpeng pere
* ''Sovannthanann
* ''Pkah Thgall Meas
* ''Neang Mahori
* ''Sangsarajay
* ''Neang Badacha
* ''Jassdeth
* ''Gampoll boross muok pei ( the heroes with 2 identity)
* ''Neang Ompolpich
* ''Preas Thuong Neang Nag
* ''Rithysang prune meas
* ''Akarat Mayura
* ''Sanmaron Sanmarie
* ''Sayon vel venn
* ''Bong koss hueye oun
* ''Gonsan kralhom ( The red scarf)
* ''Praleng khmot (The spirit)
* ''Kralmom seurt kamloss yum (The girls laugh, the guy cry)
* ''Sarai Ondeth
* ''Chomreang Ut Preang Tok [Unprepared Song]<br />''
* ''Pheakdey Snae [Faithful Love]<br />''
* ''Ream Cbong Yeung [Our Elders]<br />''
* ''[[Thavory meas bong]] [Thavory]<br />''
* ''Peil Dail Trouv Youm [A Time to Cry]''
* ''Mouy Muen Alai''
* ''Srey na men yum
* ''Ahso oun pong
* ''San tyronn
*''Dan Prean Lbas Prich'' (''Footprints of the Hunter'')
*''Kar Pear Prumjarei Srei Durakut'' (''Protect Virginity'')
*''Lea Haey Duong Dara'' (''Goodbye Duong Dara'')
*''Pos Keng Kang'' (''The Snake King's Wife'')
*''Au Euil Srey An'' (''Khmer After Angkor'')
*''[[Orn Euy Srey Orn]]''
*''[[Tep Sodachan]]''
*''[[Thavory meas bong]]''


[[Image:Wu-tang-chessboxin.jpg|150px|thumb|RIGHt|ODB in ''Da Mystery of Chessboxin' '' music video]]
===1966-1989===
The cousins soon added six more friends and associates to the Clan, and released their debut album ''[[Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)]]'' in 1993. ''36 Chambers'' received enormous critical praise, and is now widely regarded as one of the best and most influential albums of any genre to be released in the 1990s, as well as one of the best hip hop albums of all time.<ref>http://www.acclaimedmusic.net/A890.htm Acclaimed Music - Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)</ref>{{Citation broken|date=August 2008}}


While most of the group's members received individual praise from critics and fans, Jones became perhaps the best-known member of the group. Armed with a seemingly crazed, slurred, often [[Back beat|off-beat]], half-sung half-rapped delivery, bizarre lyrics and humorous antics that were unlike anything ever heard before in rap, he seemed to encapsulate and personify the raw, unadulterated and innovative style of the group.
===1990s===
*''[[My Village at Sunset]]'' (1992)
*''[[The Path Seperates Into Three]] (1992)
*''[[See Angkor and Die]]'' (1993)
*''[[Beisach Kromom]]'' (1994)
*''[[Peasants in Distress]]'' (1994)
*''[[Rice People]]'' (1994)
*''[[An Ambition Reduced to Ashes]]'' (1995)
*''[[The Last Days of Colonel Savath]]'' (1995)
*''[[Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy]]'' (1996)
*''[[Peecheyvongsa]]'' (1996)
*''[[Cheat Satrey-1 of Cambodia first series]]'' (1997)
*''BBB'' (''Croatia at the Crossroads'') (1998)
*''[[One Evening After the War]]'' (1998)


===2000s===
===Solo career===
[[Image:Odb welfare.jpg|250px|thumb|left|ODB's infamous [[Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version|debut album]] cover showing a mock [[Welfare (financial aid)|welfare card]].]]
*''[[The Land of the Wandering Souls]]'' (2000)
ODB's solo career began in 1995, making him the third member of the Wu-Tang Clan to release a solo album, following [[Method Man]]'s 1994 effort, ''[[Tical (Album)|Tical]]''. Released on [[March 28]], [[1995]], ''[[Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version]]'' spawned the hit singles ''Brooklyn Zoo'' and ''Shimmy Shimmy Ya,'' which helped power the album to [[Gold album|gold status]]. The album's sound was as raw and gritty as ''36 Chambers'', producer RZA creating beats even more minimalist and stripped-down than on the group's debut.
*''[[Que la barque se brise, que la jonque s'entrouvre]]'' (2001)

*''[[The Snake King's Child]]'' (2001)
That same year, he was featured on the remix of [[Mariah Carey]]'s "[[Fantasy (Mariah Carey song)|Fantasy]]". What might have seemed like an unlikely pairing spawned a major hit song."Fantasy" was among the first popular pop, R&B, and hip hop collaborations.
*''[[Moto Thief]]'' (2003)

*''[[The People of Angkor]]'' (2003)
Around this time, Jones gained notoriety when, as he was being profiled for an [[MTV]] biography, he took two of his thirteen children by [[limousine]] to a [[New York State]] welfare office to pick up his [[welfare (financial aid)|welfare]] check while his latest album was still in the top ten of the US charts. The entire incident was filmed by an MTV camera crew and was broadcast nationwide.
*''[[S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine]] (2003)

*''Sovann komar'' (2004)
In 1997, ODB appeared on the Wu-Tang Clan's second and most commercially successful album, ''[[Wu-Tang Forever]].'' However, Jones appeared less often on the Clan's second album than on the debut; he contributed a solo track titled "Dog Shit" as well as hooks ("As High As Wu-Tang Get") and spoken introductions ("Triumph"), but other than these appearances and featuring prominently on the songs "Maria" and "Reunited," as well as delivering a very short verse on "Heaterz," he was absent.
*''Chheam Anatha'' (''The Blood of an Orphan'') (2005)

*''[[The Burnt Theatre]]'' (2005)
In February 1998, Jones witnessed a car accident from the window of his Brooklyn recording studio. He and a friend ran to the accident scene and organized about a dozen onlookers who assisted in lifting the 1996 [[Ford Mustang]]&mdash;rescuing a 4-year-old girl from the wreckage. She was taken to a hospital with second and third degree [[burn (injury)|burns]]. Using a [[Pseudonym|false name]], Jones visited the girl in the hospital frequently until he was spotted by members of the media.<ref>[http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1429494/19980224/ghostface_killah.jhtml News - Articles - 1429494 - 19980224<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
*''[[Que la barque se brise, que la jonque s'entrouvre]]'' (2007)

*''[[Staying Single When]]'' (2007)
The evening following the traffic accident, Jones rushed on-stage unexpectedly during [[Shawn Colvin]]'s acceptance speech for "[[Grammy Award for Song of the Year|Song of the Year]]" at the [[Grammy Awards of 1998|Grammy Awards]], and began complaining that he had recently purchased expensive clothes in anticipation of winning the "[[Grammy Award for Best Rap Album|Best Rap Album]]" award that he lost to [[Puff Daddy]]. Before being escorted off-stage, he implored the audience, "I don't know how you all see it, but when it comes to the children, Wu-Tang is for the children. We teach the children. Puffy is good, but Wu-Tang is the best. I want you all to know that this is ODB, and I love you all. Peace!." His bizarre on-stage antics were widely reported in the mainstream media.

In April 1998, he announced his new stage name, Big Baby Jesus (the first of many alternate stage names; see [[#Aliases|the list below]]), but was never able to give a coherent explanation for the very brief switch.

In 1999, he found time to release ''[[Nigga Please]]'' between jail sentences, which received much success and was even more bizarrely warped than his debut. This release included the single "Got Your Money" which became extremely successful in the US and elsewhere; it was produced by [[The Neptunes]], and its success would serve as one of the production group's main stepping stones to the super-stardom they would later achieve. As well as the Neptunes, the single also put singer [[Kelis]], who sang the chorus, on the map; she went on to have a successful solo career. During the same period, Jones was paid US$30,000 to appear on [[Insane Clown Posse]]'s 1999 album ''[[The Amazing Jeckel Brothers]]''. Completing his track in two days, his recording consisted of him rambling about "bitches."

In 2001, with Jones again in jail for crack cocaine possession, his record company [[Elektra Records]] made the decision to release a greatest hits album (despite there being only two albums in ODB's back catalog) in order to both end their contract with the unreliable, troubled artist as well as make some money off the publicity generated by his legal troubles. After the contract with Elektra was terminated, the label D-3 records released the album "The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones" in 2002, comprised of tracks put together without Jones's input, using the vocals he had recorded prior to his capture by authorities. The label recruited many guests including several [[Wu-Tang Clan affiliates]], [[No Limit Records]] artist [[C-Murder]], and Insane Clown Posse. However, the album was critically panned and sales were poor.

The year 2003 brought a change in the life of Ol' Dirty Bastard however. The day he was released from [[prison]], with [[Mariah Carey]] and [[Damon Dash]] by his side, Jones signed a contract with [[Roc-A-Fella Records]], and began a new chapter in his life. Living at his mother's home under [[house arrest]] and with a court-ordered [[probation]] hanging over his head, he managed to star in a VH1 special :"INSIDE OUT: ODB LIFE ON PAROLE. He also managed to record a [[Osirus (album)|new album]], originally scheduled to be released through [[Dame Dash Music Group]] in 2004; it was released posthumously in 2005.

===Aliases===
The members of the Wu-Tang clan rapped under several personae, each with their own mythology and influences. Some recurring aliases:<ref>[http://www.tv.com/ol-dirty-bastard/person/2443/summary.html TV.com page on ODB]: "Alias Names: Dirt McGirt, Russell Jones, O.D.B., Osirus, Big Baby Jesus, ODB, Dirt Dog, Joe Bananas"</ref>
* '''Ol' Dirty Bastard''', '''ODB'''
:Ol' Dirty Bastard takes his [[stage name]] from the 1980 Meng-Hwa Ho film ''[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081097/ Mad Mad Kung Fu]'' (''Guai zhao ruan pi she'', also known as ''Ol' Dirty Kung Fu'' or ''Ol' Dirty & the Bastard''). The movie features [[Yuen Siu Tien]] aka Simon Yuen who can also be found in other classics such as ''[[Drunken Master]]''. Yuen Siu Tien often played a character of an old drunkard who had mastered the [[martial art]] of [[Zui Quan|Drunken Boxing]].
*'''Big Baby Jesus''', '''Sweet Baby Jesus''' (from ''ODB: Dirty Minded Documentary'')
*'''Dirt McGirt''', '''Dirt Dog'''
*'''Russell Jones'''
*'''Osirus'''
*'''Joe Bananas'''
*'''Old Dirty Chinese Restaurant'''

===Legal troubles===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=March 2008}}
[[Image:Odb mugshot.jpg|thumb|right|Ol' Dirty Bastard taken sometime after an arrest in 2001.]]
In 1993, ODB was convicted of second degree [[assault]] for an attempted [[robbery]] and in 1994, he was shot in the abdomen following an argument with another rapper.

In 1997, he was arrested for failure to pay [[child support]] for three of his thirteen children. His wife, Icelene Jones, claimed he had not paid any support in over a year.

In 1998, he pled guilty to attempted assault on his wife and was the victim of a [[home invasion]] robbery at his girlfriend's house. He was shot in the back and arm but the wounds were superficial.

In July 1998, only days after being shot in a push-in robbery at his girlfriends house in Brooklyn, he was arrested for [[shoplifting]] a pair of $50 shoes from a [[Foot Locker]] store in [[Virginia Beach, Virginia]], although he was carrying close to $500 in cash at the time. He was issued bench warrants by the Virginia Beach Sheriffs Department to stand trial after he failed to appear in court numerous times. He was arrested for [[criminal threatening]] after a series of drunken confrontations in [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] a few weeks later, and was then re-arrested for similar charges not long after that.

During a routine traffic stop, the details of which remain clouded in multiple versions of events, he was arrested for [[attempted murder]] and criminal [[Concealed carry in the United States#Weapon possession|weapon possession]]. The case was later dismissed.

In February 1999, he was arrested for driving without a license and for being a [[convicted felon]] wearing a [[bulletproof vest]] (the first person arrested for this infraction under a new California law). Back in New York weeks later, he was arrested for [[drug possession]] of [[crack cocaine]] and for traffic offenses. With multiple cases in the past and present, he was arrested with [[cannabis (drug)|marijuana]] and 20 vials of crack. After his arrest, ODB reportedly asked the police to "make the rocks disappear". During a court hearing, he once called a female prosecutor a "sperm donor."<ref>[http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20041113-2317-people-bastard.html Rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard dies suddenly in New York]</ref>

This criminal record was commented on by [[Chris Rock]] in his 1999 spoken word song, "[[No Sex (In the Champagne Room)]]", with Rock asserting that "ODB couldn'tve ''possibly'' committed all those crimes. [[Coolio]] did some of that shit."

ODB entered [[Substance-abuse rehabilitation|rehab]] while still technically a fugitive from the law, but strange behavior during a subsequent court date sent him to jail for a brief period.

In October 2000, he escaped from his court-mandated drug treatment facility and spent one month as a fugitive. During his time on the run, he met with RZA and spent some time in their recording studio. He then appeared onstage at the [[Hammerstein Ballroom]] in New York swigging a bottle at the record release party for ''[[The W]]'', the third Wu-Tang Clan album. In the summer of 2002, he was arrested inside a [[South Philadelphia]] [[McDonald's]] (at 29th and Gray's Ferry Ave.), he was spotted by an off duty Philadelphia Police Officer. He spent a couple of days in a [[Philadelphia]] jail and was later extradited to New York City. A [[Manhattan]] court sentenced him to two to four years incarceration. He attempted [[suicide]] not long after his sentencing.

In May 2003, Russell Jones was released from prison. It was rumored that long time friend, [[Mariah Carey]], picked him up after his release.

===Death===
At first, his legal troubles and odd behavior made Jones "something of a [[folk hero]]", according to ''[[The New Yorker]]'' writer Michael Agger.<ref>{{cite news
| last = Agger
| first = Michael
| title = Not Dirty
| work = [[The New Yorker]]
| date = [[2005-01-10]]
| url = http://www.newyorker.com/talk/content?050117ta_talk_agger
| accessdate = 2006-10-09 }}</ref> However, critic Steve Huey writes that "it was difficult for observers to tell whether ODB's wildly erratic behavior was the result of serious drug problems or genuine [[mental illness|mental instability]] ... the possibility that his continued antics were at least partly the result of conscious image-making disappeared as time wore on."

Russell Jones collapsed at approximately 5:29 p.m. on [[November 13]], [[2004]] (two days before his 36th birthday) at Wu-Tang's recording studio (36 Records LLC on West 34th Street in [[New York, New York|New York City]]). He was pronounced dead less than an hour later. His funeral was held at Brooklyn's Christian Cultural Center.

A statement was released on Saturday ([[November 13]], [[2004]]) evening by his mother Cherry Jones:

{{cquote|''"This evening, I received a phone call that is every mother's worst dream," she said. "My son, Russell Jones, passed away. To the public, he was known as Ol' Dirty Bastard, but to me, he was known as Rusty, the kindest, most generous soul on earth. I appreciate all the support and prayers that I have received. Russell was more than a rapper, he was a loving father, brother, uncle, and most of all, son."''}}

A statement was also released by Damon Dash, who signed ODB to [[Roc-A-Fella Records]] in the fall of 2004:

{{cquote|''"All of us in the Roc-A-Fella family are shocked and saddened by the sudden and tragic death of our brother and friend. Russell inspired all of us with his spirit, wit and tremendous heart. He will be missed dearly, and our thoughts, prayers and deepest condolences go out to his wonderful family. The world has lost a great talent, but we mourn the loss of our friend."''}}

The cause of death remained unknown until [[December 15]], [[2004]]; although he reportedly complained of chest pains prior to collapsing, a [[myocardial infarction|heart attack]] was not listed as the cause of death. During the initial autopsy of the 35-year-old rapper, a doubled plastic bag containing cocaine was discovered in his stomach. Final results from an [[autopsy]] show he had a lethal mixture of the prescription painkiller [[Tramadol]] and high amounts of [[cocaine]] from Colorado, in his system at the time of his death, which was ruled an accidental overdose by the New York Medical Examiner's Office.<ref>{{cite news | last = Zahlaway | first = Jon | title = Autopsy shows ODB died of accidental drug overdose | publisher = LiveDaily | date = [[December 15]], [[2004]] | url = http://www.livedaily.com/news/7457.html?t=77 | accessdate = 2007-01-13}}</ref>

== Discography ==
=== Albums ===

{|class="wikitable"
|-
!rowspan="2"| Year
!rowspan="2"| Title
!colspan="3"| Chart positions<ref name=Billboard>[http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/retrieve_chart_history.do?model.chartFormatGroupName=Albums&model.vnuArtistId=36620&model.vnuAlbumId=805373 Billboard chartings]. Accessed [[October 29]] [[2007]].</ref><ref name=Zobbel>[http://www.zobbel.de/ UK Album chartings]. Accessed [[November 10]] [[2007]].</ref>
!rowspan="2"| RIAA<br />certifications<ref name=RIAA>[http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH Searchable Database]. RIAA. Accessed [[October 29]] [[2007]].</ref>
|-
!width="40"|<small>[[Billboard 200|U.S. Hot 100]]</small>
!width="40"|<small>[[Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums|U.S. R&B]]</small>
!width="40"|<small>U.S. Rap</small>
|-
|1995
|''[[Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version]]''
*Released: [[March 28]] [[1995]]
*Label: [[Elektra Records]]
|align="center"|7
|align="center"|2
|align="center"|1
|Gold
|-
|1999
|''[[Nigga Please]]''
*Released: [[September 14]] [[1999]]
*Label: Elektra
|align="center"|10
|align="center"|2
|align="center"|1
|
|-
|}

{| class="wikitable"
! width="350"|Album Name
! width="150" align="center"|Release Date
! width="150" align="center"|Status
|-
|''[[Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version]]''
|[[March 28]], [[1995]]
|Gold U.S.
|-

|''[[Nigga Please]]''
|[[September 14]], [[1999]]
|Gold U.S.
|-
|''[[The Dirty Story: The Best of Ol' Dirty Bastard]] (compilation)''
|[[September 18]], [[2001]]
|
|-
|''[[The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones]]''
|[[March 19]], [[2002]]
|
|-
|''[[Osirus (album)|Osirus]] (mix-tape)''
|[[January 4]], [[2005]]
|
|-
|''[[The Definitive Ol' Dirty Bastard Story]] (compilation)''
|[[June 21]], [[2005]]
|
|-
|''[[Free to Be Dirty! Live]]''
|[[August 30]], [[2005]]
|
|-
|''[[A Son Unique]]''
| TBA
|}

===Singles===
* 1995 "[[Brooklyn Zoo]]"
* 1995 "[[Shimmy Shimmy Ya]]"
* 1999 "[[Got Your Money]]" (feat. [[Kelis]])

===Appearances ===
* 1993 "Show & Prove" (from the [[Big Daddy Kane]] album ''[[Daddy's Home]]'')
* 1995 "Nuttin' But Flavor" ([[Funkmaster Flex]] single)
* 1995 "Duel Of The Iron Mic" (from the [[GZA]] album ''[[Liquid Swords]]'')
* 1995 "[[Fantasy (Mariah Carey song)|Fantasy]]" (from the [[Mariah Carey]] album ''[[Daydream (album)|Daydream]]'')
* 1996 "Woo-Hah!! Got You All In Check (Remix)" (single by [[Busta Rhymes]])
* 1997 "Fix (Main Mix)" (single by [[Blackstreet]])
* 1997 "Hip Hop Drunkies" (from the [[Tha Alkaholiks|Alkaholiks]] album ''[[Likwidation]]'')
* 1997 "Say Nothin'" (from the [[Omar Lye-Fook]] album ''[[This Is Not A Love Song]]'')
* 1998 "If You Don't Know" (from the [[Killah Priest]] album ''[[Heavy Mental]]'')
* 1998 "Nowhere To Run" (from ''[[Chef Aid: The South Park Album]]'')
* 1998 "Shining Star" (from the [[Sunz Of Man]] album ''[[The Last Shall Be First]]'')
* 1998 "For The Money" (from the [[Mack 10]] album ''[[The Recipe]]'')
* 1998 "[[Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You Are)]]" (from ''[[Bulworth (soundtrack)]]'')
* 1999 "Bitches" (from the [[Insane Clown Posse]] album ''[[The Amazing Jeckel Brothers]]'')
* 1999 "Prepare For The Buddha Monk" (from the [[Popa Wu]] album ''[[Visions Of The 10th Chamber]]'')
* 1999 "Kiss Of A Black Widow" (from the [[RZA]] album ''[[Bobby Digital In Stereo]]'')
* 1999 "Crash Your Crew" (from the [[GZA]] album ''[[Beneath The Surface]]'')
* 2000 "Violence" (from the [[Cam'ron]] album ''[[S.D.E. (album)|S.D.E.]]'')
* 2000 "Wreck (Mankind Theme)" (from ''[[WWF Aggression]]'')
* 2001 "Black Widow Pt. 2" (from the [[RZA]] album ''[[Digital Bullet]]'')
* 2001 "Sussudio" (from the album ''[[Urban Renewal (album)|Urban Renewal]]'')
* 2002 "Doe Rae Wu" (from the [[Wu-Tang Killa Beez]] album ''[[The Sting]]'')
* 2003 "Pop Shit" (from [[The Neptunes]] album ''[[The Neptunes Present... Clones]]'')
* 2003 "We Pop" (from the [[RZA]] album ''[[Birth Of A Prince]]'')
* 2003 "When You Hear That" (single by [[Beanie Sigel]])
* 2004 "Dirty" (from the [[Slum Village]] album ''[[Detroit Deli (A Taste of Detroit)]]'')
* 2004 "Dirty and Thirsty" (from the [[:de:Melbeatz|Melbeatz]] album ''[[Rapper's Delight]]'')
* 2004 "[[Some Girls (Dance With Women)]]" (bonus [[remix]] of the first single off the [[JC Chasez]] album ''[[Schizophrenic (album)|Schizophrenic]]'')
* 2004 "Old Man" (from the [[Masta Killa]] album ''[[No Said Date]]'')
* 2005 "Blah-Blah-Blah" (from the [[Brooke Valentine]] Album ''[[Chain Letter (album)|Chain Letter]]'')
* 2005 "Break That" (from the [[Mathematics (producer)|Mathematics]] album ''[[The Problem]]'')
* 2005 "Thirsty" (from ''[[Blade_trinity#Soundtrack|Blade Trinity OST]]'')
* 2005 "Specially Trained Ninja" (from the [[Zu Ninjaz]] album ''[[Now Justice]]'')
* 2005 "[[Where's Your Money?]]" (bonus track from the [[Busta Rhymes]] album ''[[The Big Bang (album)|The Big Bang]]'')
* 2006 "9 Milli Bros" (from the [[Ghostface]] album ''[[Fishscale]]'')
* 2006 "Where Brooklyn At?" (from the [[Bekay]] single "Where Brooklyn At?")
* 2006 "Build Me Up" (from the [[Rhymefest]] album ''[[Blue Collar (album)|Blue Collar]]'')
* 2006 "Dirty Mef" (from the [[Method Man]] album ''[[4:21...The Day After]]'')
* 2007 "[[Toxic (song)|Toxic]]" ([[Mark Ronson]] remix from the album ''[[Version (album)|Version]]'')
* 2008 "Do it For" (from the [[Brooklyn Zu]] and ''Chamber #9, Verse 32'')

==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://us.imdb.com/Sections/Countries/Cambodia/ Films from Cambodia] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]
* [http://www.vh1.com/news/articles/1429492/02261998/ghostface_killah.jhtml Ol' Dirty Bastard Tells Why He Stormed Grammy Stage]
*[http://www.imdb.com/Sections/Languages/Khmer/ Khmer-language films] at the [[Internet Movie Database]]
* [http://www.discogs.com/artist/Ol%27+Dirty+Bastard Ol' Dirty Bastard Discography] at [[Discogs]]
*[http://www.norodomsihanouk.info/cinematographie/index.htm Filmography] of [[Norodom Sihanouk]]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4010505.stm BBC News - Rapper collapses and dies aged 35]
{{-}}
* [http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1493725/20041113/ol_dirty_bastard.jhtml MTV News - Rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard Dies]
{{CinemaofCambodia}}
* [http://economist.com/people/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3422709 The Economist - Obituary in brief Ol' Dirty Bastard]
{{Filmsbycountry}}

{{inc-film}}
{{Wu-Tang Clan}}

[[Category:1968 births]]
[[Category:2004 deaths]]
[[Category:African American musicians]]
[[Category:American rappers]]
[[Category:Cocaine-related deaths in the United States]]
[[Category:Deaths from congestive heart failure]]
[[Category:Def Jam Recordings artists]]
[[Category:The Nation of Gods and Earths people]]
[[Category:New York City musicians]]
[[Category:People from Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Wu-Tang Clan members]]
[[Category:Drug-related deaths in New York]]


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cambodian films}}
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[[ko:올 더티 바스타드]]
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[[ja:オール・ダーティー・バスタード]]
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Revision as of 08:43, 11 October 2008

Ol' Dirty Bastard

Russell Tyrone Jones (November 15 1968November 13 2004) was an American rapper who went by the stage name Ol' Dirty Bastard (often shortened to ODB). He was one of the founding members of the hip hop group Wu-Tang Clan.

Ol' Dirty Bastard simultaneously brought a measure of humor and a touch of the absurd to the Wu-Tang Clan. Often noted for his unusual microphone technique (critic Steve Huey writes of Jones' "outrageously profane, free-associative rhymes" delivered "in a distinctive half-rapped, half-sung style"[1]), Jones' stage name came from a 1980 kung fu film entitled Ol' Dirty & The Bastard, the relevance of which was articulated by Method Man's assertion that there was "no father" to Jones's style.[2]

After establishing the Wu-Tang Clan, Ol' Dirty Bastard went on to a successful solo career. However, his professional success was hampered by his erratic personal behavior and frequent legal troubles, including incarceration. He died in late 2004 of congestive heart failure as a result of an accidental drug overdose only two days before his 36th birthday.

Biography

Early life and career

Russell Tyrone Jones was born in Brooklyn in 1968, and grew up in the neighborhood of Fort Greene. As he got older, he started hanging out more and more with his cousins Robert Diggs and Gary Grice; they all shared a taste for rap music and kung-fu movies. Diggs, later known as the RZA, Grice, later the GZA, and Jones formed Force of the Imperial Master, which subsequently became known as the All in Together Now Crew after they had a successful underground single of that name.

In 1990, Ol' Dirty became close friends with fellow "5 percenter," Freedom Shabazz Allah, "Slumlord Shabazz," while both were residing as roommates in Orlando, Florida. Shabazz, hailing from Plainfield, New Jersey, immediately became close friends with "Ason" after graduating from Job Corps in upstate New York along with RZA's eldest brother. The two became inseparable and spent countless hours penning rhymes together and working a brief stint at the local Hardee's and at Universal Studios as laborers at the "Jaws" attraction.

File:Wu-tang-chessboxin.jpg
ODB in Da Mystery of Chessboxin' music video

The cousins soon added six more friends and associates to the Clan, and released their debut album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) in 1993. 36 Chambers received enormous critical praise, and is now widely regarded as one of the best and most influential albums of any genre to be released in the 1990s, as well as one of the best hip hop albums of all time.[3][full citation needed]

While most of the group's members received individual praise from critics and fans, Jones became perhaps the best-known member of the group. Armed with a seemingly crazed, slurred, often off-beat, half-sung half-rapped delivery, bizarre lyrics and humorous antics that were unlike anything ever heard before in rap, he seemed to encapsulate and personify the raw, unadulterated and innovative style of the group.

Solo career

ODB's infamous debut album cover showing a mock welfare card.

ODB's solo career began in 1995, making him the third member of the Wu-Tang Clan to release a solo album, following Method Man's 1994 effort, Tical. Released on March 28, 1995, Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version spawned the hit singles Brooklyn Zoo and Shimmy Shimmy Ya, which helped power the album to gold status. The album's sound was as raw and gritty as 36 Chambers, producer RZA creating beats even more minimalist and stripped-down than on the group's debut.

That same year, he was featured on the remix of Mariah Carey's "Fantasy". What might have seemed like an unlikely pairing spawned a major hit song."Fantasy" was among the first popular pop, R&B, and hip hop collaborations.

Around this time, Jones gained notoriety when, as he was being profiled for an MTV biography, he took two of his thirteen children by limousine to a New York State welfare office to pick up his welfare check while his latest album was still in the top ten of the US charts. The entire incident was filmed by an MTV camera crew and was broadcast nationwide.

In 1997, ODB appeared on the Wu-Tang Clan's second and most commercially successful album, Wu-Tang Forever. However, Jones appeared less often on the Clan's second album than on the debut; he contributed a solo track titled "Dog Shit" as well as hooks ("As High As Wu-Tang Get") and spoken introductions ("Triumph"), but other than these appearances and featuring prominently on the songs "Maria" and "Reunited," as well as delivering a very short verse on "Heaterz," he was absent.

In February 1998, Jones witnessed a car accident from the window of his Brooklyn recording studio. He and a friend ran to the accident scene and organized about a dozen onlookers who assisted in lifting the 1996 Ford Mustang—rescuing a 4-year-old girl from the wreckage. She was taken to a hospital with second and third degree burns. Using a false name, Jones visited the girl in the hospital frequently until he was spotted by members of the media.[4]

The evening following the traffic accident, Jones rushed on-stage unexpectedly during Shawn Colvin's acceptance speech for "Song of the Year" at the Grammy Awards, and began complaining that he had recently purchased expensive clothes in anticipation of winning the "Best Rap Album" award that he lost to Puff Daddy. Before being escorted off-stage, he implored the audience, "I don't know how you all see it, but when it comes to the children, Wu-Tang is for the children. We teach the children. Puffy is good, but Wu-Tang is the best. I want you all to know that this is ODB, and I love you all. Peace!." His bizarre on-stage antics were widely reported in the mainstream media.

In April 1998, he announced his new stage name, Big Baby Jesus (the first of many alternate stage names; see the list below), but was never able to give a coherent explanation for the very brief switch.

In 1999, he found time to release Nigga Please between jail sentences, which received much success and was even more bizarrely warped than his debut. This release included the single "Got Your Money" which became extremely successful in the US and elsewhere; it was produced by The Neptunes, and its success would serve as one of the production group's main stepping stones to the super-stardom they would later achieve. As well as the Neptunes, the single also put singer Kelis, who sang the chorus, on the map; she went on to have a successful solo career. During the same period, Jones was paid US$30,000 to appear on Insane Clown Posse's 1999 album The Amazing Jeckel Brothers. Completing his track in two days, his recording consisted of him rambling about "bitches."

In 2001, with Jones again in jail for crack cocaine possession, his record company Elektra Records made the decision to release a greatest hits album (despite there being only two albums in ODB's back catalog) in order to both end their contract with the unreliable, troubled artist as well as make some money off the publicity generated by his legal troubles. After the contract with Elektra was terminated, the label D-3 records released the album "The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones" in 2002, comprised of tracks put together without Jones's input, using the vocals he had recorded prior to his capture by authorities. The label recruited many guests including several Wu-Tang Clan affiliates, No Limit Records artist C-Murder, and Insane Clown Posse. However, the album was critically panned and sales were poor.

The year 2003 brought a change in the life of Ol' Dirty Bastard however. The day he was released from prison, with Mariah Carey and Damon Dash by his side, Jones signed a contract with Roc-A-Fella Records, and began a new chapter in his life. Living at his mother's home under house arrest and with a court-ordered probation hanging over his head, he managed to star in a VH1 special :"INSIDE OUT: ODB LIFE ON PAROLE. He also managed to record a new album, originally scheduled to be released through Dame Dash Music Group in 2004; it was released posthumously in 2005.

Aliases

The members of the Wu-Tang clan rapped under several personae, each with their own mythology and influences. Some recurring aliases:[5]

  • Ol' Dirty Bastard, ODB
Ol' Dirty Bastard takes his stage name from the 1980 Meng-Hwa Ho film Mad Mad Kung Fu (Guai zhao ruan pi she, also known as Ol' Dirty Kung Fu or Ol' Dirty & the Bastard). The movie features Yuen Siu Tien aka Simon Yuen who can also be found in other classics such as Drunken Master. Yuen Siu Tien often played a character of an old drunkard who had mastered the martial art of Drunken Boxing.
  • Big Baby Jesus, Sweet Baby Jesus (from ODB: Dirty Minded Documentary)
  • Dirt McGirt, Dirt Dog
  • Russell Jones
  • Osirus
  • Joe Bananas
  • Old Dirty Chinese Restaurant

Legal troubles

File:Odb mugshot.jpg
Ol' Dirty Bastard taken sometime after an arrest in 2001.

In 1993, ODB was convicted of second degree assault for an attempted robbery and in 1994, he was shot in the abdomen following an argument with another rapper.

In 1997, he was arrested for failure to pay child support for three of his thirteen children. His wife, Icelene Jones, claimed he had not paid any support in over a year.

In 1998, he pled guilty to attempted assault on his wife and was the victim of a home invasion robbery at his girlfriend's house. He was shot in the back and arm but the wounds were superficial.

In July 1998, only days after being shot in a push-in robbery at his girlfriends house in Brooklyn, he was arrested for shoplifting a pair of $50 shoes from a Foot Locker store in Virginia Beach, Virginia, although he was carrying close to $500 in cash at the time. He was issued bench warrants by the Virginia Beach Sheriffs Department to stand trial after he failed to appear in court numerous times. He was arrested for criminal threatening after a series of drunken confrontations in Los Angeles a few weeks later, and was then re-arrested for similar charges not long after that.

During a routine traffic stop, the details of which remain clouded in multiple versions of events, he was arrested for attempted murder and criminal weapon possession. The case was later dismissed.

In February 1999, he was arrested for driving without a license and for being a convicted felon wearing a bulletproof vest (the first person arrested for this infraction under a new California law). Back in New York weeks later, he was arrested for drug possession of crack cocaine and for traffic offenses. With multiple cases in the past and present, he was arrested with marijuana and 20 vials of crack. After his arrest, ODB reportedly asked the police to "make the rocks disappear". During a court hearing, he once called a female prosecutor a "sperm donor."[6]

This criminal record was commented on by Chris Rock in his 1999 spoken word song, "No Sex (In the Champagne Room)", with Rock asserting that "ODB couldn'tve possibly committed all those crimes. Coolio did some of that shit."

ODB entered rehab while still technically a fugitive from the law, but strange behavior during a subsequent court date sent him to jail for a brief period.

In October 2000, he escaped from his court-mandated drug treatment facility and spent one month as a fugitive. During his time on the run, he met with RZA and spent some time in their recording studio. He then appeared onstage at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York swigging a bottle at the record release party for The W, the third Wu-Tang Clan album. In the summer of 2002, he was arrested inside a South Philadelphia McDonald's (at 29th and Gray's Ferry Ave.), he was spotted by an off duty Philadelphia Police Officer. He spent a couple of days in a Philadelphia jail and was later extradited to New York City. A Manhattan court sentenced him to two to four years incarceration. He attempted suicide not long after his sentencing.

In May 2003, Russell Jones was released from prison. It was rumored that long time friend, Mariah Carey, picked him up after his release.

Death

At first, his legal troubles and odd behavior made Jones "something of a folk hero", according to The New Yorker writer Michael Agger.[7] However, critic Steve Huey writes that "it was difficult for observers to tell whether ODB's wildly erratic behavior was the result of serious drug problems or genuine mental instability ... the possibility that his continued antics were at least partly the result of conscious image-making disappeared as time wore on."

Russell Jones collapsed at approximately 5:29 p.m. on November 13, 2004 (two days before his 36th birthday) at Wu-Tang's recording studio (36 Records LLC on West 34th Street in New York City). He was pronounced dead less than an hour later. His funeral was held at Brooklyn's Christian Cultural Center.

A statement was released on Saturday (November 13, 2004) evening by his mother Cherry Jones:

"This evening, I received a phone call that is every mother's worst dream," she said. "My son, Russell Jones, passed away. To the public, he was known as Ol' Dirty Bastard, but to me, he was known as Rusty, the kindest, most generous soul on earth. I appreciate all the support and prayers that I have received. Russell was more than a rapper, he was a loving father, brother, uncle, and most of all, son."

A statement was also released by Damon Dash, who signed ODB to Roc-A-Fella Records in the fall of 2004:

"All of us in the Roc-A-Fella family are shocked and saddened by the sudden and tragic death of our brother and friend. Russell inspired all of us with his spirit, wit and tremendous heart. He will be missed dearly, and our thoughts, prayers and deepest condolences go out to his wonderful family. The world has lost a great talent, but we mourn the loss of our friend."

The cause of death remained unknown until December 15, 2004; although he reportedly complained of chest pains prior to collapsing, a heart attack was not listed as the cause of death. During the initial autopsy of the 35-year-old rapper, a doubled plastic bag containing cocaine was discovered in his stomach. Final results from an autopsy show he had a lethal mixture of the prescription painkiller Tramadol and high amounts of cocaine from Colorado, in his system at the time of his death, which was ruled an accidental overdose by the New York Medical Examiner's Office.[8]

Discography

Albums

Year Title Chart positions[9][10] RIAA
certifications[11]
U.S. Hot 100 U.S. R&B U.S. Rap
1995 Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version 7 2 1 Gold
1999 Nigga Please 10 2 1
Album Name Release Date Status
Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version March 28, 1995 Gold U.S.
Nigga Please September 14, 1999 Gold U.S.
The Dirty Story: The Best of Ol' Dirty Bastard (compilation) September 18, 2001
The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones March 19, 2002
Osirus (mix-tape) January 4, 2005
The Definitive Ol' Dirty Bastard Story (compilation) June 21, 2005
Free to Be Dirty! Live August 30, 2005
A Son Unique TBA

Singles

Appearances

References

  1. ^ Description at AllMusic
  2. ^ as related on track 5 of Enter the Wu-Tang
  3. ^ http://www.acclaimedmusic.net/A890.htm Acclaimed Music - Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
  4. ^ News - Articles - 1429494 - 19980224
  5. ^ TV.com page on ODB: "Alias Names: Dirt McGirt, Russell Jones, O.D.B., Osirus, Big Baby Jesus, ODB, Dirt Dog, Joe Bananas"
  6. ^ Rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard dies suddenly in New York
  7. ^ Agger, Michael (2005-01-10). "Not Dirty". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2006-10-09. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ Zahlaway, Jon (December 15, 2004). "Autopsy shows ODB died of accidental drug overdose". LiveDaily. Retrieved 2007-01-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ Billboard chartings. Accessed October 29 2007.
  10. ^ UK Album chartings. Accessed November 10 2007.
  11. ^ Searchable Database. RIAA. Accessed October 29 2007.

External links