King of Khmer Music 1953–1975 |
Sinn Sisamouth was born in August 23, 1932 in Stung Treng Province, the son of Sinn Leang and mother Seb Bunlei.He was the youngest of four siblings, with one brother and two sisters. His father was a prison warden in Battambang Province and was then a soldier during the Colonial Cambodia period. His father died of disease and his mother remarried, and the union resulted in two more children.
Sisamouth attended Central Province of Stung Treng Elementary School when he was five. At the age of six or seven, he started to show interest in the guitar, and he would be asked to perform at school functions. He was also interested in Buddhist scripture and other books, as well as playing soccer and flying kites.
Around 1951, he passed elementary school and intended to study medicine in Phnom Penh, but continued working at becoming a singer and writing songs. Just as he had in elementary school, he became well known in his school for his music, and was asked to sing at school ceremonies.
By the time Cambodia was granted independence from France in 1953, Sisamouth's fine singing voice landed him a spot on national radio as a regular singer. He also continued his studies, working at Preah Ketomealea Hospital.
Music career
After completing medical school, Sisamouth became a nurse and married his cousin, Keo Thorng Gnut in an arranged marriage.
The couple had four children. But he was also a very famous singing
star in Cambodia, and his life as a celebrity eclipsed his family life.
He possessed a clear crooning
voice which, combined with his own compositions about the pleasures and
pains of romance, made him an idol. He sang many ballads, as well
uptempo rock numbers that featured prominent, distortion-laden guitar,
pumping organ and loud, driving drums. Other arrangements were more Latin jazz-sounding, featuring woodwinds, brass, and auxiliary percussion.
In the early 1950s he became a protégé of Queen Nearyrath. He was
selected into the Vong Phleng Preah Reach Troap (classical ensemble of
the Royal Treasury) where together with Sos Matt, he performed at royal
receptions and state functions. A number of songs he wrote subsequently
bore the unmistakable melancholic melodies of traditional Khmer music he
performed in those formative years. In the mid-1950s a romantic ballad
"Violon Sneha", composed by violinist Hass Salan, catapulted Sisamouth
into stardom. In recent years the song has been re-issued by a large
number of modern performers, including Song Seng Horn, who comes from Rhode Island,
Mol Kamach (a singer and guitarist of the 1960s who escaped the Khmer
Rouge rule and is now living in France), Nay Sieng (a Khmer based in
France), and Him Sivonn (a female vocalist from Phnom Penh).
Most of Sisamouth's tape recordings from this period did not survive
the years of social upheaval however, although now and then some of
Sisamouth's 1950s and early 1960s hits are rerecorded successfully. One
such hit, "Srey Sros Khmeng", re-emerged from oblivion with Suong
Chantha's 2002 faithful rendition. Sisamouth's other hits of the same
period include "Anussavry Phnom Kravanh", "(Chett Srey doch) Chong
Srol", "Thngay Dob Pee Thnou", "Thngay Muoy Kakkda", "Teuk Keb", "Stung
Pursat", and "Prek Eng Oss Sangkhim".
Beginning in around 1963, Sisamouth started recording on the Vat
Phnom label. His "Champa Batdambang" won immediate acclaim across the
country. In a 1971 Phnom Penh television show, Sisamouth's interviewer
recalled that "Champa Batdambang" was the first song sung on the
inauguration of the station in 1965.
What captured Sisamouth's audience was the use of a four-piece, rock
and roll band instrumentation with guitars and percussion, a departure
from a backing band of wind instruments. He also experimented with Latin
music, an infatuation that may have started with Prince Norodom
Sihanouk's compositions such as "Reatry Del Ban Chuop Pheak" and "Phnom
Penh".
Sisamouth's popularity nevertheless did not eclipse the work of other
recording artists, notably those who sang at the National Radio such as
Eum Song Seurm and Huoy Meas. Meas Hok Seng, a voice artist at the
Phnom Penh University of Arts ("Sala Rachna") also achieved celebrity
status in 1966 with "Lolok Nhi Chmaul". Hits by these artists often came
from the pen of lyricist Ma Lao Pi, a talented poet and broadcaster now
living in California, whose masterpieces include "Day Samot Trapaing
Roung" and "Lolok Nhi Chmaul". Despite occasional hits such as
"Akassyean", Sos Matt on the other hand appeared to have been unfairly
sidelined in the commercialisation of music that took place with the
arrival of recording productions such as Vat Phnom and Chan Chaya.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Sisamouth sang the soundtrack songs to a number of popular films, such as Orn Euy Srey Orn, Tep Sodachan, and Thavory Meas Bong.
In "Peou Chhouk Sar", a 1967 success directed by Tea Lim Kun, Sisamouth
captured the poignant breakup of lead actors Dy Saveth and Chea Yuthan
with his "Neavea Chivit". Over his long career, Samuth recorded many
duets with female singing partners including, in the early 1960s, Mao Sareth, Keo Settha, Chhunn Vanna, Huoy Meas, Ros Sereysothea, and Penn Ron.
Penn Ron began recording with Sisamouth in 1966. Ros Sereysothea
started her career in around 1967 with the hit "Stung Khieu". Her high,
crisp voice nicely balanced the deeper-toned voice of Sisamouth.
Nevertheless the quality of Sisamouth's songs deteriorated rapidly in
the 1970s, save for a few notable examples written by lyricist Voy Ho
who had been a long standing colleague. Over that same period Samuth
adapted a number of Thai songs into his repertoire.
From 1972 to 1973 music publisher Kruorch Bunlyhe issued A Collection of Sentimental Songs,
which contained 500 of Sinn Sisamouth's songs. It is estimated that he
wrote thousands of songs, possibly at least one for each day he was
famous, his son Sinn Chaya has said.
Along with his original works, Sisamouth also introduced many Western pop tunes to Cambodia, simply writing new verses in Khmer language. Examples include "The House of the Rising Sun"
as "I'm Still Waiting for You" (a particularly good showcase of his
sustained phrasing and baritone voice), "Black Magic Woman" (drawing
influence from the Santana version) under the title "I Love Petite Women", "Sugar Sugar" and "Quando My Love".
By this time he had remarried, to a dancer in the royal ballet, who was pregnant with the couple's second child.
The circumstances of his death in the Killing Fields are unknown, but he had connections with the old government, was highly educated, and was an artist – all trappings of a society that Pol Pot sought to eradicate. One apocryphal story is that before he was to be executed, Sisamouth asked that he be allowed to sing a song for the cadre; but the soldiers were unmoved and after he finished singing, killed him anyhow.
Although all the master tapes of his studio recordings are thought to have been destroyed by the Khmer Rouge, his work lives on in recordings created from cassettes and LPs that have subsequently been transferred to CD, and are often heard on Cambodian radio stations.
Sisamouth, his frequent duet partner Ros Sereysothea. and other Cambodian singers of the era, including Meas Samoun, Chan Chaya, Choun Malai, and Pan Ron, are featured on the soundtrack to Matt Dillon's film City of Ghosts. Tracks by Sisamouth are "Mou Pei Na" and "Ne Te Fache Pas".
Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Sisamouth
The Killing Fields
In the aftermath of the coup d'état by the Lon Nol government on March 18, 1970, which saw the overthrow of the rule of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Sisamouth started to sing propaganda songs in support of the fledgling Khmer Republic. One such song that became an enduring classic was "Mae Owy Ao Yoann", telling the story of a mother giving a mantra-covered magic vest to her soldier son on his way to battle. Referring to communist troop movements over Cambodian territory during the Vietnam War, a verse in the same song said that the deposed king had sold out Cambodian land to the Viet Cong. Such criticisms of the royal family were unprecedented, not least given that Sisamouth had been a protégé of Queen Kossomak Nirirath, mother of Prince Sihanouk. The Khmer Rouge takeover of Phnom Penh on April 17, 1975 saw Sisamouth forced out of the city, along with millions of other residents.By this time he had remarried, to a dancer in the royal ballet, who was pregnant with the couple's second child.
The circumstances of his death in the Killing Fields are unknown, but he had connections with the old government, was highly educated, and was an artist – all trappings of a society that Pol Pot sought to eradicate. One apocryphal story is that before he was to be executed, Sisamouth asked that he be allowed to sing a song for the cadre; but the soldiers were unmoved and after he finished singing, killed him anyhow.
Legacy
Because his presence and influence on Cambodian music was so great, he is still a household name and remains popular to this day in Cambodia. Three children from Sisamouth's first marriage survived the Khmer Rouge and one son, Sinn Chanchhaya, became a singer for the Cambodian Radio, though he himself has admitted he could not be compared to his father.Although all the master tapes of his studio recordings are thought to have been destroyed by the Khmer Rouge, his work lives on in recordings created from cassettes and LPs that have subsequently been transferred to CD, and are often heard on Cambodian radio stations.
Sisamouth, his frequent duet partner Ros Sereysothea. and other Cambodian singers of the era, including Meas Samoun, Chan Chaya, Choun Malai, and Pan Ron, are featured on the soundtrack to Matt Dillon's film City of Ghosts. Tracks by Sisamouth are "Mou Pei Na" and "Ne Te Fache Pas".
Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Sisamouth
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