Pen Ran Explained

Pen Ran
Birth Date:c. 1944
Birth Place:Battambang, Cambodia, French Indochina
Death Date:c. 1979 (aged 34–35)
Death Place:Trapeang Sab Commune, Democratic Kampuchea
Background:solo_singer
Native Name:ប៉ែន រ៉ន
Native Name Lang:Khmer
Alias:Pan Ron
Years Active:1963–1975
Associated Acts:Sinn Sisamouth, Ros Serey Sothea, Meas Samon

Pen Ran (Central Khmer: ប៉ែន រ៉ន, in Central Khmer pronounced as /paen rɑːn/), (c. 1944 – c. 1979) also commonly known as Pan Ron in some Romanized sources intended for English-speaking audiences, was a Cambodian singer and songwriter who was at the height of her popularity in the 1960s and early 1970s. Known particularly for her western rock and soul influences, flirtatious dancing, and risque lyrics,[1] Pen Ran has been described by the New York Times as a "worldly, wise-cracking foil" to the more restrained Cambodian pop singers of her era.[2] She disappeared during the Khmer Rouge genocide and her fate is unknown.

Life and career

Very little is known of Pen Ran's personal history. It has been established that she was from Battambang in northwestern Cambodia and attended the same school as the younger Ros Serey Sothea, another popular singer of the same era. Pen Ran had a sister named Pen Ram (sometimes Romanized as Pan Rom) who was also a singer in the later years of the Cambodian psychedelic rock scene.[3] [4]

In the 1960s, Cambodian Head of State Norodom Sihanouk, a musician himself, encouraged the development of popular music in Cambodia. Initially, pop records from France and Latin America were imported into the country and became popular, inspiring a flourishing pop music scene based in Phnom Penh and led by singers like Sinn Sisamouth.[5] Pen Ran was an early entrant in this music scene, with the hit song "Pka Kabas" in 1963,[6] but she became a national star when she began recording with Sinn Sisamouth in 1966. Starting in the late 1960s Ran recorded many collaborations with Sisamouth and other notable Cambodian singers of the period,[7] while continuing her solo career. The debut of the popular Ros Serey Sothea in 1967 had little effect on Pen Ran's career and perhaps even broadened her popularity as the second leading lady of Cambodian popular music.[8]

Style and legacy

Pen Ran was known for her unrestrained personality and western-oriented hairstyles and fashions, rejecting traditional demands on Khmer women and representing new and modern gender roles. Her onstage dancing and flirtatious lyrics were considered scandalous in Cambodia at the time. Translated titles of her songs indicate her risque focus on romance and sexuality (for example, "I'm Unsatisfied" and "I Want to Be Your Lover") and a rejection of traditional courtship (for example, "It's Too Late Old Man"). Near the end of her music career Pen Ran was still an unmarried career woman in her early thirties, which was also unusual for Cambodia at the time.[9] She addressed this topic in the song "I'm 31" which was an answer to Ros Serey Sothea's hit song "I'm 16."

Pen Ran was known to be a very versatile singer, having a repertoire consisting of traditional Cambodian music, rock, twist, cha cha cha, agogo, mambo, madizon, jazz, and folk. When discussing her vocal abilities, one researcher has said "Pan Ron hits notes that shatter glass."[10] Decades later, Nick Hanover described the unique combination of Cambodian and Western influences in the track "Rom Jongvak Twist" as "a Cambodian spin on American dance crazes that sounds less like Chubby Checker than Lydia Lunch."[11] Throughout her career, she is believed to have performed on hundreds of songs, many of which she wrote herself.

Pen Ran disappeared during the Khmer Rouge genocide of the late 1970s and her exact fate is unknown. Her younger sister Pen Ram said that she survived until the Vietnamese invasion of late 1978/early 1979 when the Khmer Rouge launched their final series of mass executions. Given the goal of the Khmer Rouge to remove foreign influences from Cambodian society, Pen Ran's individuality probably ensured her death. In a 2015 BBC documentary on the band Cambodian Space Project, who have covered many of Pen Ran's songs, it was alleged by an interview subject that she was tricked by the Khmer Rouge into performing one of her songs, after which she was led away and executed.[12]

Starting in the late 1990s, interest in Pan Ron's music was revived by the album Cambodian Rocks[13] and similar CD compilations, while the documentary film Don't Think I've Forgotten described her as one of the most influential artists of her era, as well as one of the most popular artists amongst younger Cambodians.

Discography

Some of the songs (from the hundreds) that she actually composed and sang herself or with Sinn Sisamouth or Ros Serey Sothea include:

Solo performances

Duets with Sinn Sisamouth and other artists

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Sydney Morning Herald. Dow. Steve. Golden era of Cambodian music given its second airing. 13 September 2013.
  2. Web site: The New York Times. 'Don't Think I've Forgotten,' a Documentary, Revives Cambodia's Silenced Sounds. 9 April 2015. Sisario. Ben.
  3. John Pirozzi and LinDa Saphan, liner notes, Don't Think I've Forgotten, soundtrack, 2015.
  4. Jeff Cole, liner notes, Cambodia Rock Spectacular!, 2011.
  5. Web site: Columbus Alive. Film preview: Director John Pirozzi Traces the History of Early Cambodian Rock 'n' Roll in "Don't Think I've Forgotten". 28 May 2015. Downing. Andy. 3 April 2018. 17 June 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190617142633/https://www.columbusalive.com/content/stories/2015/05/28/film-preview-director-john-pirozzi-traces-the-history-of-early-cambodian-rock-n-roll-in-dont-think-ive-forgotten.html. dead.
  6. Web site: Singing the Khmer Rouge Blues . adelsouto.com . 16 September 2019.
  7. Web site: Pan Ron at khmermusic.thecoleranch.com . 21 April 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101031105211/http://khmermusic.thecoleranch.com/panron.html . 31 October 2010 . dead .
  8. Web site: Saphan. LinDa. LinDa Saphan. Gendered modernity in Cambodia: The rise of women in the music industry. Khmer Scholar. 3 April 2018. 28 August 2016.
  9. Web site: Saphan. LinDa. LinDa Saphan. Cambodian Popular Musical Influences from the 1950s to the Present Day. ResearchGate. 3 April 2018. December 2017.
  10. Web site: Cohn. Nik. A Voice from the Killing Fields. The Guardian. 3 April 2018. 19 May 2007.
  11. Web site: Hanover. Matt. Loser City. Today We Drink Wine: Looking Back at the Tragic History of Cambodian Pop. 19 June 2015. 9 January 2016.
  12. Marc Eberle, "The Cambodian Space Project: Not Easy Rock'n'Roll" (6 June 2015)
  13. Web site: Cambodian Rocks (MP3s). 9 December 2007. WFMU blog.