Question: How Do You Define A Good Piece Of Art?
My lame attempt at a Maieutic (Socratic) Response: "What is Art?"
For me, it is an expression manifested in form of a piece
of literature, a song, a video clip, a photograph, a painting. But that's not it!
Good art has to be capable enough to:
- start a dialogue; trigger an action or reaction,
- generate different views from a different sect(s) of people &
- generate a set of views (conflicting or non-conflicting in nature) from the very same person
Miley Cyrus, a pop artist (who millions of girls have seen on TV as Hannah Montana in our teen years) dropped her much anticipated and teased new
music video with Mark Ronson this morning (at 5:30 AM in my country, LOL).
It goes by the name ‘Nothing Breaks Like A Heart’!
First Impression of Miley's song:
Must be about a heartbreak. (Oh, wait. This isn't Taylor Swift, pfft. Boo!)
Second Thought:
Could be about how she lost her beloved Malibu beach-house (the one that she's previously written a song about) and Rainbowland Studio, in the recent Woolsey Fire. Her house, where she lived with her loving fiancé, Liam, burned down to ashes. (Hence, the lyrics "This burning house, there's nothing left").
A closer look at the (now deleted) 9 mini-teasers Miley had posted on Instagram:
- A broken heart hung from the ceiling (could be inspired from the WRECKING BALL?)
- A little girl playing with bullets
- A stranded car with numerous toys laying about in the room
- Lustful gaze of a man at a stripper performing in a club
- Protesters with placards "All Or Nothing", "Fight for Miley"
- 2 little girls standing in a firing range, pointing & nodding at the prop-board (these boards little girl figurines, not the usual ones of a man)
- More protesters and placards (the one with '#MeToo'.... is it a man, a lady, a trans? You decide)
- A car being chased by numerous police cars and a helicopter
Lets get to the video itself:
My Interpretation of the music video:
(Everything is a personal interpretation, especially those in green)
It begins with a car chase.
It's been made clear at the
very start that "the destination remains unknown". People, supporters alongside the roads, standing with placards that state "We Are
Miley" "Fight for Miley". She's referring to herself as a metaphor, perhaps.
The 'various law enforcement vehicles' are chasing her vehicle.
There's a bunch
of Christian nuns standing in support. Next, we see a strip club and numerous
girls performing. There's a priest here. A man who has been introduced before. He has a lustful gaze.
Meanwhile... the lyrics,
"We're broken, we're broken,Mmm, well nothing, nothing, nothing gon' save us now"
Next, Miley's looking right into the camera, as she sings
these lines-
"Well, there's broken silenceBy thunder crashing in the dark (Crash in the dark)And this broken recordSpin endless circles in the bar (Spin 'round in the bar)"
Something about Miley's gaze towards the camera and the
content of these lyrics make me think if she's referring to this song as the
one that's gonna do rounds in these very bars, and is a call for these
strippers to 'break their silence'.
Her car crashes through a wall. This is my favourite
part. I interpret it as the wall of Ignorance, breaking apart, to reveal what's
actually happening inside. We see two young girls standing on the other side of this wall. These
2 happy girls (engaged in clicking pictures of themselves with filters, the filter of social validation?) represent innocence that exists outside of these walls, perhaps. Completely unaware about what's happening inside.
Next, the car breaks into a second wall where there are 2 under-training girls in the dark alley,
separated by this wall, of neglect towards the 'darkness' that this alley is representing. The darkness is a metaphor for the circumstances that led
upto it. From innocence, to violence.
Could this represent mental health? Lack of recognition of
severity of the situation? That's how
I interpret it. Young children exposed to 'social validation' at a very ripe age, turning them
from the victims of that darkness, to the culprits behind another form of
darkness: Gun Violence, happening inside schools.
Miley,
representing all of us, who're willing to take an action, stands in the way of
these bullets being shot at their own peers (metaphorically represented by those unusual shooting
placards).
Next up, another crash into yet another wall that shelters two female lovers
in a hot tub. Chasing by the 'law-enforcement' continues.
We spot a man here in the crowd, with "Miley For President" tattoos. No, it's highly unlikely that Miley's gonna stand against
Trump despite having openly opined against him multiple times.
When Trump was first elected president, a crying footage of
her had surfaced. A very bold interview with Billboard magazine soon after. Although she did make it clear in that interview
that she wanted to be taken seriously, and that's when she decided to get past
the hippie-pop phase.
Another metaphorical message for all of us? This Miley standing for what she's voiced against time to time, aka, the Trump ideology.
(This very moment that we speak of this breaking-walls metaphor...
there's the Mexico-American border thing going on. Now I don't really have a
stand for or against this one. Migration is a pretty serious issue, for any given country.
I think that it needs to be pondered upon that WHY HAS MEXICO COME TO THIS POINT
where emigrants do not care about being open-fired at! What has been happening in
that country, and why isn't this debate replacing the entire anti-or-pro Trump
debate altogether? Is one country's supremacy so much important as to over-shadow the actual cause of the consequent debate?)
There's more, NFL players kneeling in support of the
car, as it approaches towards the 'destination unknown'.
Prison inmates,
fighting over, hugging, clutching on to the toys we saw in the teaser. They're
soft toys. What do these American prison inmates represent? Tell me what you think in the
comments section below!
The car finally crashes. Miley and Mark approach the protesters where she's finally crucified to this car, something that she stood for.
Some major themes that Miley and Mark covered in this 4 minute video, and how they’re related to the Indian context:
- Religious fanatics and all the problems that they lead up to
Corruption within these ‘sacred’ bodies, sponsorship to moral policing with utter disregard to self-policing, etc - The un-defined code of moral social conduct
The issue of 'appropriateness' when it comes to clothes, behaviour, respect towards certain people of certain professions (Strippers, Sex-workers)
Who exactly is supposed to be the judge of these said morals? - All that is wrong (or, right. You decide) with the #MeToo
campaign
- LGBTQ Supreme Court Judgement: scraping of Article 377
And the rightist-rage/lack of ground level recognition & acceptance towards it - Gun violence isn’t an issue in India, yet
But incidents like the Ryan International, Gurugram incident with the DEPRESSED school kids (I cannot stress this enough) - This artist has been criticised so widely against
the “wild” phase of her life: which is something every Indian kid is put through!
In light of constant scrutinising of every action by the society.. how is one supposed to grow, if not by experiments or trial and error, or whatever approach one deems to consider as right for themselves?
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