Chicago Sun-Times

VINYL ENCOUNTERS

‘Dusty Groove’ film sifts through the emotions of giving up your records

- BY RICHARD ROEPER, MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Rick Wojcik and J.P. Schauer are the co-founders of the Dusty Groove record store in Wicker Park, and they’ve been at this a long time. If you caught up with John Cusack’s Rob Gordon and Jack Black’s Barry Judd from the fictional Championsh­ip Vinyl record store in Wicker Park from “High Fidelity” (2000) some 20 years down the road, well, that’s Wojcik and Schauer in a nutshell.

One key difference: Whereas Rob and Barry were unapologet­ic music snobs who regarded the vast majority of their customers as a necessary nuisance to keep the lights on, Wojcik and Schauer have a genuine respect for their fellow music aficionado­s — especially those who have decided to part with their beloved, lifelong collection­s for one reason or another. In Danielle Beverly’s engrossing and warm-hearted documentar­y “Dusty Groove: The Sound of Transition,” the customers aren’t treated as human props for the proprietor­s, as is often the case on shows such as “Pawn Stars” and “American Pickers.” Beverly is clearly as interested in the record lovers as the record store owners, and the result is a verité slice of American life shining a light on a disparate group of individual­s who have one thing in common: They love their vinyl.

And sometimes their CDs. And occasional­ly even a few boxes of VHS tapes, maybe a few dozen comic books and some T-shirts and posters as well. They’re not hoarders because they’re far too meticulous about their stash — but they ARE hardcore collectors.

Beverly, an assistant professor at Northweste­rn University who worked the counter at a number of record stores (including Dusty Groove) in the 1990s, implements the classic fly- on-the-wall documentar­y style and lets the

storytelle­rs tell the story. We marvel at Wojcik’s dexterity as he flips through album collection­s like a jazz keyboardis­t, instantly determinin­g which ones he’ll buy and which ones might as well be melted down. (“He’s a maniac,” says a manager at Dusty Groove, in the most admiring of tones.) Rifling through one collection, Wojcik cracks, “Didn’t this guy buy anything other than Nina Simone?” but he never stops stacking.

“Hearing people’s stories is so rewarding and rich,” says Wojcik. “A lot of time, they’re at a key transition­al point in their lives … moving, downsizing, someone has died.”

One such collector is Grady Johnson, 93, a jazz sax player who was one of Chicago’s first Black pharmacist­s and figured out a way to balance his day job and his nighttime passion. Johnson has Stage 4 cancer and has decided to part with his collection to help out his family. (Mr. Johnson has passed away since his scenes were filmed.) As Johnson tells his life story (augmented by a treasure trove of family photos), Wojcik is attentive and kind and considerat­e — but as Wojcik later acknowledg­es, “I’m very much the white guy walking into their house with money. It’s a business relationsh­ip.”

True. But it’s also a labor of love.

“Dusty Groove” is available as part of the Chicago Undergroun­d Film Festival, presenting virtual screenings of offbeat films through Sunday. To view it online, go to cuff.eventive. org between 7 p.m. Friday and 7 p.m. Saturday.

 ?? DANIELLE BEVERLY ?? Chicago record store owner Rick Wojcik looks over a vinyl collection in the documentar­y “Dusty Groove.”
DANIELLE BEVERLY Chicago record store owner Rick Wojcik looks over a vinyl collection in the documentar­y “Dusty Groove.”

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