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The Lennon Wall
Credit: http://hk-magazine.com/
Music has always been in the forefront of social movements. With its ability to move people, songs have become an important vehicle for musicians and composers to express their political views and to inspire the masses. Hong Kong’s civil disobedience movement kicked off on September 28, 2014, when hundreds of thousands of people filled the streets, paralyzing Admiralty, Causeway Bay and Mongkok, in desperate calls for democracy and the freedom to choose the city’s next leader. Since that time, until the end of the occupation on December 15, 2014, a number of songs have sprung up, sung aloud at protest areas and recorded by local artists, to raise awareness and drive the movement forward.
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Credit: http://itsthewanderlust.com/
“Many times I’ve faced the cold shoulder and ridicule/ Never have I given up my heart’s hopes and ideals.”
“Forgive my life of uninhibited love for freedom/ Although I’m afraid that someday I might fall/ Abandoning hopes and ideals/ Anyone can do it/ I’m not afraid that one day there will only be you and me.”
Another popular song is an adapted version of Do You Hear The People Sing from the musical Les Miserables. The plot of the Schonberg and Boublil musical revolves around a student-led protest in 19th century France who fight to give a voice to the poor and downtrodden. Unfortunately, in the musical (which was inspired by Victor Hugo’s novel), all the students end up dying defending the barricades.
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Credit: http://img.qz.com/
Local artists in Hong Kong also teamed up to write ‘Raise the Umbrella’, in tribute to the incongruous tool students used to defend themselves when police launched tear gas to dissipate crowds on September 28.
Local singer Denise Ho, a long-time supporter of the students, formed “Hong Kong Shield’ along with other members of the cultural industry. She told the South China Morning Post that she really wanted to do something for the students, to give them inspiration after spending many nights at the protest sites.
“A young songwriter called Ah Pan sent me a song he wrote about the movement and his feelings about it,” she told the SCMP. After giving it a listen, she decided that it would be the perfect way to show protesters their support. In 48 hours, the song was recorded and complete, and it was well received by all pro-democracy supporters.
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Credit: http://www.visiontimes.com/
“Together we hold up an umbrella we hold our hands up/ Bravely fight for what should be ours/ Are you afraid?/ Whatever storm might beset us/ Our determination will not fade/ Umbrellas are like flowers/ They won’t wither or tear apart.”
There is power in music that makes a much stronger statement than a mere slogan or chant. Weeks later, these songs continue to resonate in people’s minds, and continue to fuel the movement even as the occupation part of it comes to a close.
Beyond
Do You Hear the People Sing