The
Cambodian Space Project performing live against a projected backdrop of
images from the lost pre-Khmer Rouge years of Cambodian music. Courtesy
Michael Laub / The Cambodian Space Project
Album review: The Cambodian Space Project – Whisky Cambodia
The National | August 21, 2014
Non-anglophone
pop music, fashioned on American and British styles, is an
under-written part of pop culture’s first wave of globalisation. Long
before the digital pathways opened up, there were already a plethora of
multimedia networks tying together the West with the rest: chiefly,
though not exclusively, international vinyl sales, tapes, TV clips and,
most importantly, radio. From Maori heavy-metal gangs to the Japanese
psychedelic-rock scene of the 1970s to the multiracial, apartheid-era
punk scenes in South Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, these sounds and
their attendant dances, clothes and attitudes have rarely spread without
controversy: usually around the perceived western imperialism of
culture and values, set up against protectionists concerned about the
erasure or assimilation of traditional musical styles. These
controversies have often been fascinating – although too often the
debate drowns out the art itself and devoices the young people revelling
in sounds and youthful rebellion imported from afar.
One such moment in pop-cultural history is that of the 1960s and early 1970s pop scene in Cambodia, a thriving period of joyous rock ‘n’ roll after the country gained independence from France. The essence of Motown, American funk, surf-rock, psychedelia, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and The Bee Gees rang out across the capital Phnom Penh – this spirit was captured and sung in the Khmer language and blended with local instruments and traditional rhythms. Everything changed when the Khmer Rouge seized power in 1975, and in their deranged, agrarian, xenophobic-communist revolution, pop culture was eliminated with unflinching brutality, along with anything else seen as foreign, decadent or urban – temples and libraries were destroyed, city-dwellers forced out to the countryside and even western medicine was outlawed. It’s believed there’s something in the region of 20,000 mass graves across Cambodia, and somewhere between 1 and 2 million of the country’s population perished – either executed or via starvation or disease.
In recent years, Cambodians have sought to excavate not only the
meaning of one of humanity’s greatest tragedies, but the artistic
freedom that reigned before 1975. The once-flourishing sound of Khmer
pop music has been revived by the Cambodian Space Project, a band
combining covers of songs from the lost “golden age” with their own
compositions. They were formed in 2009 when Julien Poulson, an
Australian, visited a karaoke bar in Phnom Penh and heard a singular,
astounding voice singing Peggy Lee’s Johnny Guitar.
It belonged to Srey Thy, who, together with Poulson and a cast of
others, has since taken the sound of the Cambodian 1960s to the world,
producing their third and most effervescent album yet, Whisky Cambodia.
It’s astonishing to think that most of the 1960s and 1970s songs that
they cover were physically destroyed by the Khmer Rouge, along with
their owners: even a vinyl record by someone like Sinn Sisamouth, “the
King of Khmer Music”, was seen as an obstruction to Pol Pot’s fanatical
vision of a new society. Pop music was outlawed as decadent and
dangerous; like any intellectuals or artists, musicians were obvious
targets for the Khmer Rouge. While the terror swept through Cambodia,
the possibility of survival for musicians was slim, and meant desperate
adaptation: Thy’s mother, also a great singer, abandoned music, cut her
hair short (even female beauty could be taken as incitement) and
darkened her skin to avoid persecution – an ethnic element to the
genocide meant lighter-skinned Cambodians were especially at risk. The
legendary blind lute player Kong Nay, known as the “Cambodian Ray
Charles”, only survived the 1970s by performing propaganda songs for the
Khmer Rouge government. When Vietnamese troops liberated Phnom Penh in
1979, it wasn’t the end of Pol Pot’s terror, but it was the beginning of
the end – and it meant that Thy’s mother could sing again. Thy was born
in 1980, and has said in interviews that her mother barely stopped
singing, that the radio was never turned off – in a childhood immersed
in this cathartic musical outpouring, how could she do anything else but
sing herself?
Whisky Cambodia overflows with
poignant musical legacies, even beyond Cambodia itself. There’s a direct
connection between the album and the very music that inspired the 1960s
Khmer pop scene: it was recorded and produced in Detroit by the
American guitarist Dennis Coffey, who once played with the Funk Brothers
and The Temptations, among others – the most high-profile of several
original Motown session musicians on the record. And yet Whisky Cambodia is
no stale throwback, nor a kitschy pastiche: Coffey’s guitars spring
with youthful energy, and Thy’s singing on even the more balladic songs,
such as Mountain Dance or Rom Rom Rom,
boasts terrific range and zest. She is accompanied – naturally – by the
irresistible shimmy-shimmy sound of trumpets and handclaps. Tracks like
If You Wish To Love Me launch back into a different 1960s, abounding
with funky basslines and psychedelic keyboard sprees. They sound as
spookily warped and lush as anything from that era, while Black To Gold is just terrific pop music, Thy’s voice languorously coasting along atop the garage rock twang and flurries of brass.
Though it’s tempting to refer to them as “lost songs”, they were
certainly never forgotten – and now they’re being memorialised with
greater enthusiasm than ever. The Cambodia Space Project have as
partners in revivalism the perhaps even more globally renowned six-piece
Dengue Fever. The latter’s singer, Chhom Nimol, had already established
herself in Cambodia in the Phnom Penh karaoke scene, but moved to
California to work, where she met her American bandmates. Since forming
in 2001, Dengue Fever have produced several acclaimed albums – mixing
covers of 1960s classics with new material to produce a heady,
psychedelic kind of surf-rock, rooted simultaneously in two different
histories; from Cambodia and California’s 1960s and 70s, too.
The process of exploration and commemoration has crossed into film, too: Dengue Fever’s story is told in the captivating short Sleepwalking Through the Mekong,
in which the band explore the Cambodia of Nimol’s youth, jamming with
schoolchildren and performing songs in some of the very villages where
the genocide took place. There’s also a very promising full-length
documentary in the offing. John Pirozzi’s Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: The Story of Cambodia’s Lost Rock and Roll is
a joint Cambodian and American production, years in the making, that
was premiered in the American Embassy in Phnom Penh earlier this year –
hopefully it will be distributed globally, just like the music made by
Dengue Fever and the Cambodian Space Project.
Remembering the culture grimly eliminated by the Khmer Rouge has been
the less painful side of a tortuous process of recovery of historical
memory. In 1997, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
(ECCC) was set up in conjunction with the United Nations as a tribunal
system to investigate crimes against humanity, genocide, war crimes and
seek justice for the countless victims of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to
1979. Though not without its own controversies, the tribunals were
greatly needed. The ECCC was established to do more than just punish the
worst offenders, a quarter of a century after their crimes: as their
own stated goals make clear, “the trials are also for the new generation
– to educate Cambodia’s youth about the darkest chapter in our
country’s history”.
These processes seek to mitigate unimaginable loss, but also look to
create a Cambodian future that’s not just “remembering in order to
forget”; one that acknowledges the country’s history – its tragedies and
its glories. To this end, the growing catalogue produced by the
Cambodian Space Project and Dengue Fever is incredibly welcome, but it’s
also gratifying that the music of the 1960s is being preserved and
catalogued in its original form, too: in the Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten documentary, but also the Groove Club
compilations of golden-age classics and a 2010 collection put together
by Dengue Fever called Electric Cambodia. Here the songs of performers
such as Sisamouth, Ros Sereysothea and Pan Ron, who met their deaths at
the hands of the Khmer Rouge, have been lovingly curated – the crackle
on the old tapes carries a poignant warmth. According to one apocryphal
story, after the evacuation of Phnom Penh, Sisamouth was brought in
front of a firing squad, and he asked if he could perform one last song
to the Khmer Rouge troops – he sang it and then they shot him. Like so
many Cambodians, the actual circumstances and location of his death at
the hands of the Khmer Rouge are unknown. However he died, it’s some
small mercy that his voice, and his songs, live on.
Dan Hancox is a regular contributor to The Review. His work can be found in The Guardian, Prospect and New Statesman.
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