Trying to Not Let a Bad Movie Ruin an Old Favorite
No real need to see this movie |
The other day I went to my local multiplex to see Transcendence, the new techno-thriller
starring Johnny Depp. As a movie about the possibilities and consequences about
replicating or transferring intelligence and consciousness into digital
networks, it had the potential of exploring many scientific, sociological, and
philosophical issues raised by our actual current technological environment. As
a big budget Hollywood movie, of course, it did none of this or did so in the
most cursory, and/or ham-fisted ways. This did not surprise me, of course, nor
was I surprised by the ponderousness of the script, or the heavy-handed use of
religious metaphors. What I was surprised at was hearing Jorma Kaukonen’s beautifully
wistful 1974 song “Genesis,” playing throughout the movie.
My first thought was, hey, good for Jorma. It’s a beautiful song
and he deserves the windfall of royalties that he’ll be (or should be)
receiving due to its prominent placement in a major motion picture.
My second thought was specifically about how the song was
used. Though it seemed like an odd choice at first, the pastoral song seemed to
be a nice, albeit completely unsubtle, counterpoint to the paranoid techno-fear
theme of the movie. The characters seemed to recognize this. The song is heard
in the film when the main characters of Dr. Will Castor and his wife Evelyn
(played by Depp and Rebecca Hall respectively) repeatedly play the LP on their
portable turntable as a way of distancing themselves from the technologies to
which they devote their lives and work. In fact, the actual physical record is
shown to be a prized possession for the couple and, as the film goes on, a nostalgic
artifact of their earlier simpler lives before murder, robotics, and other
amusements intervened. There was one thing that bothered me, though, and that
was that the filmmakers or set-designers or whoever is in charge of these decisions,
decided to give the LP a different, older looking label.
Does this label seem too modern? |
I was almost embarrassed to write that last line. I mean,
what kind of geek would care about something like this? Here’s the thing, I
think it matters more than some other trivial inaccuracy that only a sexually
frustrated overgrown child living in his mother’s basement would point out. The
reason I think it matters is that by making album look older, it seemed as
though the filmmakers were trying to make the practice of playing records and
cherishing them appear to be an even older and more antiquated practice than it
already is. One that is more associated with industrial revolution era luddites than
something from our own childhood memories. Why did they have to make it seem so
foreign? Why do they have to make me feel so damn old?
My last thought was that the song was somehow being taken
away from me. If Transcendence gets
to be widely seen, the song will become far better known than it was a few
weeks ago. Now, I wouldn’t say that the song “Genesis” is all that obscure a
song. In fact, most of my friends would even consider the song to be a bit of a
classic. But then, many of those friends are people who spent the bulk of their
twenties going to hippie music festivals and have a preference for, how shall I
say it, post-psychedelic roots music.
Jorma Kaukonen, circa 1978 |
My own introduction to the song was when I saw Jorma perform
at The House of Blues in Cambridge, Massachusetts, sometime in the summer of
1998. I was already a fan of Jorma’s through his work with the bands Jefferson
Airplane and Hot Tuna, but I did not know any of his solo work. In the middle
of Jorma’s set of masterful finger-style blues, he dropped in the song. Its
lilting melody and contemplative lyrics set it apart from the rest of the
pieces, even in an all acoustic show. I was taken aback. I asked the guy next
to me what the name of the song was. “Genesis,” he screamed into my left ear.
(Prior to that, when I was hearing audience members shouting
“play ‘Genesis,’” I thought they were drunks who thought that the ensemble in
front of them was a cheesy bar band taking requests and were just dying to hear
“Invisible Touch” at that very moment.)
Quah - 1974 - Grunt Records |
I went out the next day and bought a copy of Quah, Jorma’s first solo album which
opens with the song. I immediately began to play the song for everyone who
would visit my studio apartment. I would put it on mix tapes for friends. The
song was my gift for them.
Now it’s just “that song from Transcendence,” and utilized in the movie in such an overly dramatic way as to
make the song seem even more saccharine than it is, and I guess that irks me a
bit. I always feel the need to say that I am not a hipster, but maybe I share
some unfortunate traits with that group, namely the feeling of
self-satisfaction that comes from knowing something that is not common
knowledge in mainstream circles. However, I will defend myself by saying that
while hipsters guard their stockpiles of useless information like Masonic
secrets, I like to turn people on to things that I have discovered, and I guess
I just resent the fact that Transcendence
has taken away my ability to play someone “Genesis” for the first time.
On the other hand, it was nice to see the song used in a way
that reaffirmed the importance of the musical artifact as a thing to be
treasured in of itself. It also illustrated how the power of those objects lies
not only in the ability it give to replay and relive music, but also to share
it with others in a more intimate way than via networks. I know I’m a bit out
of touch, but “Hey man, I want to play you this record” will always trump a
link to a Spotify track or YouTube clip any day of the week. So, in spite of
the fact that I heard the song probably one too many times throughout the
movie, I still went home and played it one more time for just my girlfriend and
myself.
And at any rate, the movie isn’t doing so well. With a bit
of luck, maybe the song will maintain some its semi obscure status.