Little is known about the designers of the distinctive record covers produced in Cambodia before the Khmer Rouge. DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA |
Long-awaited film tells the tale of Cambodia’s musical ‘golden age’
Everyone has heard the songs from the pre-Khmer Rouge
period when Phnom Penh rocked to new sounds that fused traditional
Cambodian folk music with Western rock and pop – but the story of the
scene behind the songs has remained untold, until now. Will Jackson
reports.
When US documentarian John Pirozzi set out to make his film Don’t
Think I’ve Forgotten, about Phnom Penh’s pre-Khmer Rouge music scene,
all he had to work with was a handful of singers’ names.
Pirozzi first came to Cambodia to work on the 2002 film City of
Ghosts and had become fascinated by the country’s tragic history. But
what really drew him in was a music compilation he was given: a mix of
60s and 70s pop and rock ‘n’ roll songs called Cambodia Rocks.
“The problem was there was no primary research to go to, no one had
written about it at that point,” he said. “So I was starting out with
just a few names [of singers] Sinn Sisamouth, Ros Sereysothea, Pan Ron.”
In the years that followed, he conducted more than 70 interviews in
three different languages across Cambodia, the US, France and Singapore.
He scoured dozens of personal and public archives of footage and combed
through scores of tapes and vinyls for original unremixed recordings of
songs. Finally, after spending the last three years in a cold dark
editing room piecing it all together, the film is finally complete.
Pirozzi said Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten – which premieres this
Saturday night at an invite-only screening at Phnom Penh’s Chatomuk
Theatre to be followed by a concert by some of the musicians in the
documentary – is the first film to bring together a cohesive narrative
of the scene before it was destroyed by the Khmer Rouge.
“I really wanted the film to give a sense that there was this
comprehensive music scene,” he said. “It wasn’t just a few random
singers. It was very rich with many different types of music.”
Through the 1960s and 1970s Phnom Penh was alive with new sounds.
Nightclubs and dance halls were packed with revellers wanting to hear
the latest interpretations of Western songs and Khmer folk classics
remixed with a rock or pop sound.
Bands were known to play impromptu gigs in the streets. People who
couldn’t afford radios would gather at radio stations to listen to music
played on speakers installed outside. The film and music industries
were inextricably linked with a good soundtrack able to turn a mediocre
flick into a blockbuster.
“I don’t think rock ‘n’ roll in Cambodia was associated with drugs or
rebellion quite as much as it was in the West,” Pirozzi says. “A few
people talk about how the older people told them ‘cut your hair you look
like a zombie’ but from my understanding it wasn’t perceived as
rebellious until you get to the ‘70s and you get to Yol Aularong who
starts to write songs that are sarcastic.”
Touch Seangtana, who appears in Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten talking
about his time as a guitarist with one of the biggest Cambodian rock
bands, Drakkar, said people liked rock ‘n’ roll because it incorporated
many different influences. Traditional Cambodian music was combined with
Western sounds like the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Bee Gees and
Santana.
“We loved rock ‘n’ roll because it was easy and you can play whatever
you want,” Seangtana said. “And you can communicate between four
people, sing all together and make a unique sound of music.”
Other interview subjects in the film include musicians from the
golden age and those they have influenced, families of those who didn’t
make it through the Khmer Rouge, historians, the late King Father
Norodom Sihanouk, former US Ambassador John Gunther Dean and more.
Chhom Nimol, singer with the US-Cambodian band Dengue Fever who also
appears in the film, said it was an important record of the roots of
Cambodian music.
“Young people don’t know about this story,” Nimol said. “[Cambodians]
have our own style. We don’t need to copy [other countries]. Young
people should watch this film and understand and know where this music
comes from.”
Pirozzi said he was particularly pleased to have a big section on
Cambodian guitar bands in the film that includes interviews with the
members of what’s thought to be the first, Baksei Chan Krung.
“I’m really happy with that because people who know Cambodian music
will have heard a lot about Sinn Sisamouth and Ros Sereysothea and all
the rest of them, but they don’t know this part of the story and I
always knew there [was a missing link],” he said.
“Like, how did they begin to play rock ‘n’ roll? Where did it come
from? Before the rock ‘n’ roll, in the ‘50s there were crooners
influenced by Frank Sinatra and Pat Boone and all that stuff but where
was the rock connection?
“That band is Baksei Cham Krung.”
Pirozzi said one of the biggest difficulties making the film was
finding footage; little was archived in the first place and the Khmer
Rouge did their best to destroy the rest when they took over in 1975.
Much of the film that was safely archived was not very useful, he said.
“A lot of the time with archival material it’s around an event – the
opening of a hospital, a dignitary arriving – so it doesn’t give you a
sense of the real gist of what life was like,” he said.
However, Pirozzi was lucky enough to get access to Sihanouk’s
personal film collection and some outtakes from footage taken in the
1970s that he found in the US NBC television network’s archives in New
York.
He said some of the best footage came from “some guy” who found it in a box at his aunt’s house in the US mid-west.
“All this footage was shot in the ‘50s in Phnom Penh and it’s great,”
he said. “You can really see what it was like here and it was shot
really well.
“It’s really exciting to bring that out because I think a lot of
Cambodians haven’t seen anything like that unless they were here then.”
DC-Cam executive director Youk Chhang, who was an executive producer
on the film, said one of the most interesting discoveries they made was
that the famous singer Ros Sereysothea was briefly married to Cham
Muslim singer Sos Math.
“I always think to myself, what if she hadn’t been divorced? Perhaps
if they stayed together and had children and been able to protect each
other perhaps she would still be alive today to sing beautiful songs for
us,” Chhang said.
Pirozzi said it was hard to know what happened to many of the artists and entertainers who died during the Khmer Rouge era.
“Someone in the film says it wasn’t like if we even know whether
there were orders from above to kill all these singers, but it was more
like there was this hatred that had built up against the city people and
the singers represented that. So who knows?” he said.
“Sinn Sisamouth’s son has a great line in the film. He says: ‘30
different people have told me they were with my father when he was
killed in 30 different places. How can someone die 30 times?’
“That really kind of sums it up.”
However, Pirozzi was hopeful that Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten could
stir up new information that would fill in more of the gaps about what
we know about the time.
“I’m sure there are some older Khmer people who were involved in [the
scene] and no one’s bothered to ask [them about it] and they have all
this great information and they don’t even realise anyone would be
interested,” he said.
Pirozzi said he hoped Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten would receive a general release once a distributor was found.
BIOPIC SET TO TELL SINGER’S SAD TALE
One of the greatest singers of Cambodia’s pre-Khmer Rouge music scene, Ros Sereysothea, is the subject of another film in the works.
Sereysothea’s story is particularly tragic. A young girl from
Battambang with incredible talent – she was dubbed “The Golden Voice” –
but terrible taste in men, after moving to Phnom Penh she was involved
in a series of abusive relationships.
Her ultimate fate remains a mystery with some saying she was executed
in 1975 immediately after the Khmer Rouge arrived in Phnom Penh. Others
believe she survived a couple of years longer and was ordered to marry a
Khmer Rouge general before being killed while a third theory holds that
she lived until the Vietnamese liberation.
The biopic’s producer Greg Cahill – who wrote and directed a short
film called The Golden Voice which depicted Sereysothea’s final days –
said he had finished the script for the feature-length version of the
film and was in the process of securing funding and putting together a
casting wish list.
“Ros Sereysothea was a very special figure in the history of Asian
pop music, and she deserves international recognition,” Cahill said.
“It’s not the typical story of the pop star who rises to fame and
goes crazy with drugs and antics. Too many stories of the musician are
about self destruction. This is a refreshing and unique story with an
inspirational character. Ultimately it is tragic, but not in the same
way as a Jim Morrison or Kurt Cobain.”
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