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Mix Tape #7 - December 2013 Yes, yes I know. December isn’t over yet so how dare we release a

Mix Tape #7 - December 2013

Yes, yes I know. December isn’t over yet so how dare we release a December mixtape already?

Well we’re doing it now as we’re off on holidays tomorrow and there ain’t no wifi on the beach, baby! Well maybe there is but we’re going to resist the urge to use it. 

We’ll be on holidays till the beginning of Feb but may possibly post a few songs in Jan if the mood takes us.

Thanks for reading our drivel over the past year (can’t believe it’s been a year since we started 7SecondsOfSound!).

Hope you all have fun eating, drinking and being merry during this festive season. We look forward to writing more drivel for you next year!

The Geek x VRV - Chinese Morning
I'lls - Speak Low (Wabz Remix)
Absolute Boys - Twin Spirits
Koresma - Clouds
Oliver Wilde - Penny (Feat. Lucas & Caelia)
The Delta Riggs - Star Eyed Families
Emiliana Torrini - Tookah
Jesse-Davidson - Big Bois Gotta Eat
The War On Drugs - Red Eyes

Play the whole mix on Soundcloud here.


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What Makes “Gollum’s Song” So Great

If you are familiar with Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings film trilogy, you will know that for each of the three instalments in the franchise an accompanying theme song was written, to be played during the credits of each film. These songs include Enya’s “May It Be”forThe Fellowship of the Ring and “Into the West” by Annie Lennox, which plays at the end of The Return of the King. A song that appears to be largely overlooked, however, is “Gollum’s Song”, performed by the Icelandic singer Emilíana Torrini for The Two Towers. Unlike the aforementioned two, this song has a rawness and a darkness to it, owing to the subject matter with which it deals. As you can probably tell by its name, Gollum’s Song is a manifestation of Gollum’s inner mind process, detailing the ever-present conflict between the two sides of his psyche: the ‘good’ side (which is to say, the little that remains of his old self) and the ‘bad’ side (the side created by the Ring). Now, I personally consider this song as a bit of a masterpiece in its own right, which is why I will be sharing some of my thoughts on what I think makes this song so great. However, seeing that I am not from a musical background, I just want to put it out there that I will be focusing on this song mostly from a lyrical point of view, as opposed to going into any of the composition, which is beyond my area of expertise.

Where once was light

Nowdarknessfalls

Whereonce was love

Love is no more

So, the song begins by showing Gollum’s transition over time. In other words, highlighting the contrast between the then and the now. Through the word choice employed here, we can infer that this has been a negative transition.

Don’t say goodbye

Don’t say I didn’t try

This second stanza, I think, serves to demonstrate Gollum’s helplessness. It is almost as if he is pleading with us. In many ways we cannot be expected to blame him for not being able to withstand the power of the Ring, which nearly all of its bearers have succumbed to before the end.

Thesetearswecry

Are falling rain

For all the lies

You told us

Thehurt, the blame!

The third stanza is essentially a summary of the torment that has been inflicted upon Gollum by the Ring over time. Notice the repetition of negative word choice, which suggests this idea of continuous agony. Additionally, I’m assuming that by “You”, the ‘good’ side of Gollum is addressing his ‘bad’ side (the side created by the Ring) upon which he naturally blames all his pain. Or perhaps he may even be addressing the Ring itself.

And we will weep

To be so alone

We are lost!

We can never go home

In the fourth stanza, there is a continuation of this idea of torment, again, realised through the choice of negative words. More than that, however, it also introduces the idea that Gollum cannot undo what the Ring has done to him over all this time. He is, once again, quite helpless in this matter.

So in the end

I will be, what I will be

No loyal friend

Was ever there for me

The fifth stanza sees us heading in a slightly different direction. Here is where there begin to be rumblings of this idea of gradual acceptance. Perhaps Gollum believes himself to be so far-gone by this point that he may as well continue to wade in. He no longer sees the use in resisting the evil that has troubled him for so long. As such, he starts to give in to the ‘bad’ side.

Now we say, goodbye

We say, you didn’t try

The sixth stanza sees a continuation of this idea of newfound acceptance. This very much contrasts with the earlier “Don’t say goodbye/Don’t say I didn’t try”.Indeed, there has been a reversal of roles, with the evil gradually taking charge once more.

These tears you cry

Have come too late

Take back the lies

The hurt, the blame!

By the seventh stanza it becomes apparent that the ‘evil’ side of Gollum has reassumed its control over him. Additionally, this idea of resentment has also started to kick in by this point, which will ultimately lead him to renounce the ‘good’ side entirely.

And you will weep

When you face the end alone

You are lost!

You can never go home

You are lost!

You can never go home

The last stanza is perhaps the most eerie within the entire song, as it gives way to utter despair, reinforcing this idea that most likely there may be no hope for Gollum. What I am especially interested in, however, is the repetition of those last two lines at the end. Indeed, you can’t help but feel that they are perhaps meant tauntingly, thus serving as a final reminder of the abusive relationship that exists between the two sides of Gollum’s psyche. Aside from this, there also doesn’t seem to be any hint of a potential recovery or consolation for Gollum, forcing us to conclude that he is indeed “lost”.

As a last remark, I would also like to mention Emilíana Torrini’s unique voice, which, I think, suits Gollum extremely well. Together, her high-pitched voice and her gravelly, drawn-out kind of singing almost sound like a form of wailing, thus giving life to Gollum’s pain and torment. Indeed, the whole song manifests itself as a kind of cry, or plea for help, even if there is no one there to hear it. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if this kind of thing is what keeps Gollum up at night, all alone in the dark, with nothing but his conflicted inner dialogue for company.

At first glance, it may indeed be very easy for us, the audience, to dismiss Gollum as a mere villain altogether, even though, in reality, he is so much more than that. I would even go as far as to say that he is easily the most interesting character within the entire story of The Lord of the Rings. Even after what has been nearly 500 years of torment, the little that remains of Gollum’s old light is still fighting the darkness inside of him, continuing to resist it. As most of it has been quenched by the Ring’s influence, there may not be much goodness left in Gollum, and yet what fascinates me is that the little of it that remains still continues to put up a fight, even if it knows it’ll never win. It is something that Tolkien referred to as “The Long Defeat”, and it is a notion that pervades much of his work. This idea of fighting even if you know that you will lose in the end. This makes Gollum a rather tragic figure really, and I think “Gollum’s Song” really embodies that. A piteous lament for one of Middle-earth’s unsung heros, for lack of a better word.

Emiliana Torrini (with The Colorist Orchestra)(photo by Vanina Moreillon)

Emiliana Torrini (with The Colorist Orchestra)

(photo by Vanina Moreillon)


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