Current location - Music Encyclopedia - QQ Music - What is the name of the song that Frida sings while drinking in the movie "Frida"?
What is the name of the song that Frida sings while drinking in the movie "Frida"?

Original Soundtrack-"Frida Original Soundtrack" [MP3!]

Chinese name: Frida Original Soundtrack

English Name: Frida Original Soundtrack

Resource Type: MP3!

Release Date: 2002

Album Artist: Original Soundtrack

Region : United States, Mexico

Language: English, Spanish

Introduction:

Album introduction:

The 75th Oscar for Best Original Winner of the Film Score Award, Mexican-style music that is definitely worth listening to again and again. I have been looking for the original CD of this disc for a long time, and finally got it in a store specializing in original CDs in Guangzhou. I can only describe my feeling at that time as "excited" It seems that’s not enough anymore, haha.

Good things should be shared with everyone. I saw many friends on the Internet asking about this disc. I recalled the pain and confusion I was looking for at the time. It would be a sin not to share it with everyone:-D< /p>

◎The brilliance of Latin American music culture

Without music, the movie "Frida" would be much inferior. At first listen, this soundtrack will make you think it is Almodovar's movie soundtrack. Because those flamenco guitars, those sonorous and powerful rhythms, those matador-like passions all have Spanish characteristics. When I listen to it again, I will think of the vicissitudes of the piano and guitar of those old Cuban artists in "Buena Vista Social Club", and it will also bring back many musical memories from Brazil.

In fact, this is an authentic Mexican record, an authentic Mexican folk song, which shines with the brilliance of Latin American music culture. At this year’s Oscar Awards, the best original soundtrack for "Frida" The winner, Elliot Goldenthal, said excitedly: "I dedicate this award to our efforts to build a bridge to the Mexican people, artistic traditions, personal heritage and political art. For you, Mexico!"< /p>

In this film about crazy passion and artistic inspiration, music sparkles everywhere. At the beginning of the movie, the cheerful guitar in "The Floating Bed" exudes a warm and lively Latin American atmosphere. Although Frida can no longer walk, she still has to participate in her art exhibition while lying on the bed. The music sets off her Stubborn and strong character. There are many impressive moments in the film, all of which are indispensable for the rendering of music. When Frida met Diego's photographer girlfriend at a dance, the two women danced a tango. In this battle of femininity and hidden edge, the flamenco-rhythmic songs seemed to turn the dance floor into a battlefield. When Frieda learns of Diego's affair, she cuts off her black hair angrily. The tough rhythm and the long hair flying under the scissors set off her angry and heartbreaking sadness. Even when Frieda arrived in France, the old jazz he heard had a touch of Latin American nostalgia. At the end of the film, the old singer's weathered face sings a song in memory of Frida's life. As Frida's life burns out along with the bed, the switching of the screen makes the intertwining of singing and life form segments like MTV. I can't tell where the inside and outside of the painting are, where is magic and where is reality.

When I heard the Mexican folk songs playing, I couldn’t help but think of the optimistic and music-loving old artists in "Happy Havana". They had the same persistence and passion as Frieda. Persistence, the acoustic records they produce are as beautiful as "Frida", and what shines in their art is the excellent culture of Latin America - passionate, bright and full of inspiration.

◎About the singer: She is the musical incarnation of Frida

I know Lila Downs because of the soundtrack of the movie "Frida" One of the songs, "Burn it Blue", was her first visit to Hong Kong to participate in the 33rd Hong Kong Arts Festival. I heard her singing on a drizzly night.

A woman was born in a mountain town in Mexico and grew up in Minnesota, USA. Her father is a Scottish-American photographer and her mother is an Indian singer.

Lila's father died when she was sixteen. Since then, she has been escaping her mixed-race identity, dyeing her black hair blonde, following the band "The Grateful Death", and spending a chaotic youth taking drugs and selling jewelry on the street. She later reinvested herself in her ethnic heritage, singing about Indian culture, immigrants from South America, female power and identity.

Lila on the stage wore two long braids and traditional Indian silver earrings on her ears. The song contains the passionate and gorgeous colors of South America, as well as the mystery of magic and reality. In her new album, the opening song "Viborita" sings about the green lizards unique to South America, a cover of Ritchie Valens's "La Bamba", Lila's child-like singing with African drums and Techno rhythms Party together.

Accompanied by harp and waist drum, you can perform jazz improvisation, and the background is changing video art. Lizards, traditional Chinese cloth tigers, cacti, and dark-skinned girls all change like a kaleidoscope, just like the brilliant colors on Lila's body. She sang "Perfume" in Mayan, a song about the magical power of perfume in love. Lila reminds me of San Mao and Qi Yu, wandering women with many rings on their hands. Sanmao also loves Mayan culture. She collects Mayan ceramics. Those dusty treasures have disappeared, and Lila's singing seems to open a door to time and space, allowing you to see the soul of South America.

I like World Music, but I have only been able to meet it intermittently. There are too many artists singing in every corner of the world, like pearls on the seabed, it takes fate to meet them. I like the independent and stubborn Frida. In the movie, she is the woman with a straight eyebrow in the self-portrait. Lila also painted her eyebrows very dark. On the stage, she is the embodiment of Frida's music.

Lila's music has become more mature in her fourth solo album "One Blood", from the distinctive national elements in the original "La Sandunga" to 2000's "Tree of Life" celebrates nature, and 2001's "La Linea" tells the difficult history of South American immigrants. She later moved to New York and sang in both English and Spanish on "One Blood". Lila injects elements of folk music into modern expressions, allowing the harp and electric guitar to collaborate, adding rich visual elements to her performances. She sings about the Mexican revolution, the lost years of being addicted to marijuana in the 1960s, the story of immigrants, and the hometown where she grew up. She said: "Singing allows me to find peace and harmony. If I were not allowed to sing, I would go crazy." It is such a colorful woman who continues to expand the territory of world music.

Album tracks:

01 - Benediction And Dream

02 - The Floating Bed

03 - El Conejo

< p>04 - Paloma Negra

05 - Self-Portrait With Hair Down

06 - Alcoba Azul

07 - Carabina 30,30

< p>08 - Solo Tu

09 - El Gusto

10 - The Journey

11 - El Antifaz

12 - The Suicide Of Dorothy Hale

13 - La Cavalera

14 - La Bruja

15 - Portrait Of Lupe

16 - La Llorona

p>

17 - Estrella Oscura

18 - Still Life

19 - Viva La Vida

20 - The Departure

21 - Coyoacan And Variations

22 - La Llorona

23 - Burning Bed

24 - Burn It Blue

EMule download address:

/topics/37612/