Yesterday on the web I unexpectedly came upon the soundtrack of the old French movie Le Rapace. I downloaded it, gave it a quick antivirus check – even though only a French user could have made this track available and everybody knows that French viruses are spread out on an honor basis only
– and opened it with Winamp.
Thunder. Lightning. Stars exploding in giant supernovae. The darkest of black holes suddenly opened around me and I fell in, helpless, as if a distant electro-magnet was pulling me down the memory lane through space and time. They say that in a life-or-death situation your life flashes before your eyes. Mine was safely tucked away in a Main Street coffee shop, but the music triggered the flash all the same.
I’ve written many a time about the power of music. This is probably the most amazing side of it. It would seem our brain stores information in layers like a cake being baked and then put aside in the fridge, where its atoms slow down, its flavors fade and its core hardens, until it must be pulled out and served again. Of the many layers a memory gets recorded with, music is often forgotten and yet I’m amazed at the tremendous power it yields over the intensity of the memory itself. The clearer the musical association, the more vivid the imprint.
I wasn’t even a teenager, had longish sun bleached blond hair and was thin and shy. We lived in Antibes, Côte d’Azur. All kinds of rather international music would play on the family turntable, national anthems, Russian Army Choir, Tahitian songs, Morricone soundtracks, French classics and classical masterpieces like Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmuzik and Tchaikovski’s 1812 Overture.
And then there was Le Rapace. I had seen the movie very young; it was harsh and talked about faraway lands and foreign languages, about war and adventure, about epic lives and ordinary people. It had the charismatic face of Lino Ventura as Le Rital and a parrot that would quack « Viva la revolución! »
But to me the old 45 rpm record didn’t just relate to the movie, it equaled to much more. The movie was only one vision of its many faces. I would listen to the music over and over again, traveling across oceans, seeking shade in burning hot South American deserts, pretending to be an adventurer, fighting the odds, trying to understand human conflict and suffering, from my young and innocent point of view.
The movie was barely younger than I was. We still both had to make our way through life and age as well as we could, hoping to last and be remembered as the stuff of legends. The movie has.
As for myself, I have traveled, explored, learned, forgotten, tried to understand. Still trying. Maybe, as NewYorkAngel was writing recently, will I always be 12.
But there I was now in 2006, listening to the brilliant musical score with tears in my eyes, looking back at all the years that have slipped past me like sand flowing inexorably through fingers, escaping to rejoin the immense beach of time.
As if to finish me with an ultimate coup de grâce, the coffee shop took over playing oldies, Charles Aznavour’s La Bohème, Harmonium’s self-titled Harmonium, Charlene’s cheesy I’ve Never Been to Me. The last one carried me back to the flying years in Chicoutimi; it was Jean and Mireille’s favourite song. Jean went on to fly for Air Canada, Mireille moved to the States and changed careers. I wonder what has become of them. We all had such magnificent dreams. We were conquerors of worlds, making history as we lived it. We were also completely unprepared for the dangers that laid ahead, for the many tricks of life. I wonder how many of those dreams have shattered along the way. Des héros Toutatis trompait l’espérance.
As Gandalf tells Frodo, « All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us. » But how does one decide such a thing before even knowing a decision is required? Of course it’s never too late to learn, never too late to take a new start. But how much extraordinary substance have we failed pouring into our lives because of a simple lack of information?
What if we had known all along how precious our time down here really is, how dreams are meant to be lived and pursued with undying faith and passion, and then lost and then reinvented again? What if we had been able to live every single moment of our life for its own uniqueness rather than foolishly looking too far ahead or painfully looking too far back?
The past ends up being a lifelong minefield across which we wander endlessly while fighting present battles, seeking some buried or forgotten secret weapon that will alter the balance of power in our favor. It is stained with scattered defeats, mortal injuries and terrible retreats. Our own corpse lays back there and then on so many battlefields, along with the bodies that have fallen at our side, or on the opposite one.
I guess it’s only proper then, that my childhood memories are so intense. They shine like as many campaigns in a General’s march towards glory. They were in turn bloody, brilliant, terribly painful and as sweet as honey. None of them leave me unmoved, they make my heart beat faster and fill me with nostalgia. They have lead me, ever so slowly but surely, to the battlefield on which I am standing today, to my most glorious battle to date: the one that still hasn’t been written.
So I raise my flag up high into the deepest blue sky, glance back at the old days while the music is playing, in search of inspiration; and then I turn to face the present, draw a shiny sword and spur my horse towards the endless loosing battle of life.























« Monday morning, 7 am, my first coffee not even drunk, and you slug me. Man you just slug me. Why do trips in the past tear my heart out?
Date of comment: 2006-08-07 07:18 •The last time we talked about Le rapace was in a well-known appartment in Marseille, not yet deserted. I can still feel the softness of the 45-tours cover, with Ventura half hidden in a dark corner.
What will be lost, when there is no one to remember the feel of that 45-tours cover? »
« Euh, désolé de t’avoir ébranlée si tôt avant le café... Mais n’oublie pas qu’une fois au fond du ravin tu ramasses les morceaux et tu remontes. Le passé, c’est comme une râpe à sanglots; tu les récoltes, tu les mets sur la pizza du temps et tu passes tout ça au four...
»
Date of comment: 2006-08-07 15:18 •Tu comprends? Il lui dit « au fond du ravin tu ramasses… ». Le gars, il lui dit « au fond du ra- vin-tu-ra -masses », tu vois ? Et il dit « une râpe à sanglots ». C’est comme ra-pace-anglots, hein? Il dit, « c’est comme une râpe-à-sanglots » ? Non, mais le mec... Le mec il lui dit : « c’est comme une râpe à sanglots » ? C’est comme, c’est comme le phare à On…
« Oh and you’re so right. What was I thinking? Image added!
»
Date of comment: 2006-08-07 14:47 •« Speechless I am, looking at you two looking back at your childhood.
Date of comment: 2006-08-07 18:43 •I wish I could improve your memories.
I wish I could alter the course of time
and alter the course of life.
But then you wouldn’t be what you are now,
and what you are now is SO good. »
« I forgot : I love your shinny sword.
»
Date of comment: 2006-08-07 20:26 •« Comment fais tu pour écrire et décrire aussi bien les émotions, les pensées, les sensations??!!...
Date of comment: 2006-08-08 04:11 •C’est juste BEAU. Thank you. »
« Hehe, finally caught the shinny...
»
Date of comment: 2006-08-08 09:10 •« M’oui ben moi je vais me contenter de dire merci à la vie, je lui dis merci et je chante la vie, je danse la vie, je ne suis qu’Amour! etc »
Date of comment: 2006-08-08 11:18 •« Eh ben voilà !
Date of comment: 2006-08-08 16:45 •Quand tu dépoussières l’âme des gens,
elle brille comme un soleil.
Ne t’en prends qu’à toi si tu es ébloui. »