I just saw this little known but quite charming movie called The River King….. It’s a mystery/crime movie based on Alice Hoffman’s bestselling novel by the same name, starring Ed Burns (remember the assault-rifle wielding, handsome Ranger in Saving Private Ryan?) and Jennifer Ehle (who bears a good resemblance to the the exquisite, great Meryl Streep) plus an excellent supporting cast. What struck me most while I was watching this movie was Simon Boswell’s refreshing mandolin score in the background.
There are some sounds, smells and sights that hit a spot somewhere deep inside you, awaken memories or strong feelings….. things you had buried so deep in your psyche. The mandolin score in this movie (plus the whole setting and theme of the movie) reminded me of someone who failed to “see” me a long time ago. The music somehow strikes resonance with the vibrations of your heart (corny, huh! ). I get a somewhat stronger reaction when I listen to “Never Tear Us Apart” from Inxs (see my previous post for more on this)….. especially the poignant flourish which accompanies the lines
“I was standing….. you were there,
Two Worlds collided”
Today I would like to share with you some tunes that have stayed with me for a long time…. have almost become a part of me.
————————————–
I bet every Malayalee has seen Padmarajan’s immortal movie Thoovanathumpikal …. a love triangle movie way ahead of it’s time, which sports some of the most multidimensional characters in film history. There’s this central theme which we fans call “When It Rained” or “Clara’s Theme”….. a most soothing and melodious violin and piano piece lasting about 90 seconds. This music evokes bittersweet feelings and subtley warns that the love is doomed even before it began… even before Jayakrishnan meets the enigmatic Clara. Whenever it rains and the smell of fresh, moist earth (what we call Puthu Mannu or ‘New Earth’) hits me….. this song rings inside my head. Love it…..
Dil Chahta Hai…… remember that scene where a smitten Sidd is talking to Tara? He suddenly blurts out “I want to paint you” to which a pleasantly surprised Tara doubles up in laughter and agrees. There is this music piece termed “Sidd’s theme” which plays as he first walks , then jogs and finally sprints to his home to collect the canvas and brushes…. stuffs them in his jhola and races back to Tara’s house. Notice that adoring expression turning to moonstruck impatience and desperation as he picks up his speed? The music piece is so haunting….. It is the bedrock to the “Kaise He ye” song by Srinivas, but this short piece is sheer poetry. It’s something that grows on you as you analyse the most cerebral story of that 3 segment movie again and again….
Remember the whistling ‘hook’ in “Always look on the bright side of life” in Monty Python’s The Life of Brian. (Spoilers Follow……..)
The classic satire on bigotry, organised religion and the stream of Bible thumping movies from Hollywood is a real piece of art. Period. The highlight is the finale, the mass crucifiction scene parody with a hapless Brian(Graham Chapman) being let down by his lover, his compatriots, his very Jewish mom and the dumbest suicide squad ever. The movie ends with a fellow condemned (played by Eric Idle) cheering up Brian with his astute poetical observations on some Nihilist truths of life, spiced up with that oh so catchy whistling ‘hook’. Black humor at it’s best! The movie ends with most of the ensemble cast plus Brian singing the song cheerily while they wait a slow death on the cross. This song captured public imagination as a testament to human fortitude in the 80s and has been called the second national anthem of Britian…. even the drowning sailors of HMS Sheffield, sunk by Argentine exocet missiles, were heard singing this song in the icy South Atlantic waters. I first listened to this song way back in IIT-Mumbai festival Mood Indigo, 2000…. ever since it has been a sort of anthem during my dark hours.
There’s this short and sweet “Wind of My Soul” by Cat Stevens, now Yusuf-ul-Islam, now a fundamentalist Muslim convert, recently imprisoned for funding the Al Qaeda. The soothing guitar and Steven’s soulful voice mouthing some simple yet deeply philosophical and autobiographical lines is some experience. The guitar strikes that resonance I told you about…… I dunno, there’s something with stringed instruments that takes me places. Wish I could get some time to learn to play them.
Every English speaking music lover has listened to Elvis Presley’s stirring “I can’t help falling in love with you“….. probably you have heard every other artist make a personal version of this song. From Britney Spears to U2, many have tried a hand with this cult song (the remake craze is second only to “Leaving on a jetplane” from John Denver). However, nobody has been able to measure up to the UB40 version set to the Sharon Stone’s thriller flick Sliver. Remember that slick black and white video, brilliantly edited to scenes from the movie….with the entire UB40 troupe doing their thing in a brightly lit, narrow hallway with all those closed-circuit cameras swinging ominously? ( I bet you pervs were more interested in that peek-a-boo shot of a nude Sharon Stone strategically covered by an errant bedsheet edge! Well, it was kinda tastefull though…). UB40 pulls it off through the judicious mix of the reggae beat they are famous for and trumpets and saxophones. The streched vocals and the deliberate (with almost Shakespearean sighs) phrasing of
“Taaayke myyyyy haaaaaand,
Taaayke myy whhhholle life tooooo…
Eyeee caaaaan’t help….. faaalling in laavv weeeth you”
gives you the picture of a man well aware of the forbidden, illict love….but can’t just fr1ggin help falling for her magic. The whole effect is mindblowing; the soothing Elvis paean is transformed into a classic confessional anthem….. an anthem of “dangerous love”. This song stayed in the charts for a looong time and was played over and over again in channels and radios…. something like that “My Heart will go on” craze.
Speaking of Titanic anthem “My heart will go on”….. strangely, that piece doesn’t affect someone so “sensitive” like me. But there’s this flute and bagpipes theme, an instrumental version of the same song, titled ‘Hymn to the Ocean”. It’s the piece they play in the last scene….. when Rose finally rejoins Jack to the applause of all those who died with the ship. It’s beautiful.
Coming to my favourite genre…. Celtic and New Age. I could write pages on my favourites, there are a lot of them…. but I guess I should stop with one or two best of tha best.
Guys and gals, I am making a confession. Enya was my teenage crush…. and I still am pretty struck by her looks and talent. I was 13 when I first heard “Anywhere it is” and “Orinoco Flow” you know….. her exquisite pure Irish features and silken voice bowled me over big time.
Anyway, there’s this rather recent song from Enya called “Only Time”….. it’s set to that bittersweet movie Sweet November starring Keanu Reeves smitten by a gorgeous and tantalizing Charlize Theron. The original video featuring dreamlike settings remniscent of Heaven in Robin William’s “What dreams may come”and the best portrayals of passage of time, was an instant hit. The condolence ceremony to the fallen in 9/11 featured this song set to scenes of worldwide support for the victims and America. Again, this is one track that struck a deep chord in me…. for the same reasons as Thoovanathumpikal and The River King.
——————————————
Whew, got it off my chest! Wanted to put it into black and white so many times…… you know, I talked about these fundaes, like which pieces stay with me and why to somepeople closest to me. But I guess I failed to convey it through just words…. maybe its because I went on tangent everytime and they couldn’t catch up with my feverish brain. Perhaps I have done a better job now…… I hope.
Chhhalll…… Bye for now. Thank you for listening to me.
Posted by thest0ryteller