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Music is the universal language? Think again

Jakarta’s public transportation may be something that can boil your blood with those poor facilities, infrastructure, management and so on. But there is something it offers: the juicy interaction between passengers.

A couple of days ago, on a public bus, I saw a rare competition among three parties: a street singer, a teenager and a couple of lovebirds. It was a pretty annoying fight but still, I couldn’t help but watch. There was too much to miss.

The air-conditioned bus I was in was heavily crowded. All seats were taken and about 10 people were already standing in the aisle. I was quite lucky to find myself a nice spot in the last row where I didn’t need to hold on to the bar. I just leaned against the seat.

Some minutes after I got on the bus, the competition began.

I think the street singer started it first. Standing in the middle row, with her crappy voice, she had been singing some songs from Ebiet G. Ade, a famous Indonesian balladeer. No matter how tortured the voice she produced (I guess she had an ability to not listen to her own voice), she kept singing off-key for near half an hour.

Heavily congested traffic combined with off-key ballad? Just not a perfect match.

So the lovebirds reacted smartly — or so they thought. First, the boy took his mobile phone out. He touched the keypad several times, then BAM, music came out, a song by Ungu.

Next to him, the girl looked happy. So happy that they started cuddling, which made for double the entertainment — a more familiar pop song and … a foreplay show for free.

But I was wrong for having thought the situation was better.

Behind the lovebirds, in front of me, a teenager was sitting with his earphones on. Maybe feeling annoyed at the lovebirds, he raised his MP3 player volume up until I could hear the sound coming out from his ears. From the rhyme and the way he nodded his head along with the beat, I guessed it was hip-hop. Or not.

Now everybody was confused. Which music would we listen to? Crappy ballad, loud pop or vague hip-hop? We could not listen to all three of them simultaneously as we are only human and have a limited hearing capacity.

And to make it worse, all sources of sound didn’t seem likely to back down soon. Maybe they thought their taste in music was universal, and that we, the rest of passengers, would like anything they “played for us for free”? I have no idea.

Indeed, at this point I began to question the common saying that music is a universal language. It’s not.

I remember a friend of mine who told me recently that every morning she started her day by putting on jazz in her apartment.

“I do it because I can’t stand my neighbor who’s been playing dangdut so loudly in the morning that I get a headache,” she said.

Another friend of mine told me she bought a karaoke set only to go into competition with her neighbor who had been singing karaoke without realizing that a microphone is supposed to amplify human voice so there is really no need to scream-sing.

Unfortunately my friend didn’t succeed in her revenge. She mistakenly bought a karaoke set that couldn’t be made to go loud enough to compete and I haven’t heard any update about the neighbor’s love-hate relationship since.

But again, is music really a universal language? If it is, then why do some of us get annoyed listening to some stranger’s taste in music? Is it really only because of the volume?

If music is not a universal language, then why do some us find it “compulsory” to share the music we like by playing or singing it out loud and not considering that Jakarta is a very dense city where people can bump easily against each other?

Back to the bus again, the street singer finished singing. Collecting the money from the passengers, she finally reached the back row to meet her competitors — who were still playing songs from their gadgets.

The street singer, as if to offer a cease-fire, asked the lovebirds where they bought the mobile phone. “The sound is nice. How much does it cost?”

The two didn’t reply. Instead, they just stopped the music. And so did the hip-hop teenager. He removed his earphones and spoke to the street singer.

“It’s quite costly. More than a million (rupiah).”

“Wow, that is expensive. I should save more money then,” she said.

I didn’t see the street singer get much money for her bad gig. But it was a pretty beautiful ending to the competition.

–Ikram Putra

#The Jakarta Post’s “Out & About”.


9 Comments

Waw, kolom yang keren. Serasa membaca kolom Joel Stein di majalah Time.

Posted by maulida on 6 April 2008 @ 9pm

Waduh, terimakasih Maulida. Oiya, selamat ya atas pernikahan kamu! Semoga berbahagia selalu…

Posted by ikram on 7 April 2008 @ 8am

wah udah deg-degan kram, takutnya berantem hahaa

Posted by achmadbiz on 7 April 2008 @ 8am

Kadang Tuhan menyentuh ranah kesadaran kita terlalu dalam sehingga sulit disadari.

Pemusik jalanan -menyanyikan lagu-lagu tanpa diminta, meski akhirnya meminta-minta (tapi cukuplah sebagai upah=rasa terima kasih)- , menurut saya, merupakan jelmaan sentuhan tuhan yang sulit disadari.

“Setiap rasa, suasana, bahkan lagu-lagu yang dinyanyikan para pengamen itu, merupakan penghiburan dari Tuhan yang patut disyukuri. ” Begitu (kira2) kata teman gw suatu hari di Bus.
Entahlah, yah, kita tdk perlu memperdebatkn selera: yg suka dangdut berselera rendah debanding grouphie-nya Radiohead? tidak perlu.

toh pada akhirnya pembelajaran lita sampai pada “bahwa lagu bisa menjadi bahasa”.
(bukankah dengan si lovebirds memainkn musik jg merupakan bentuk bahasa yang jika dibahasakan mungkin seperti ini :
“akh, berisik lu, nih dengerin lagu kesukaan guah!”)

:P:P

Posted by hendi on 8 April 2008 @ 8pm

bener kata hendi

dengan memutar musik mereka masing2 dengan keras, they were actually trying to tell something one to another

universal language, bro

Posted by andre on 8 April 2008 @ 9pm

weeh endingnya buagus

dan bukannya menjawab pertanyaan lo Kram? Musik memang bahasa universal yang bisa menyatukan/mendamaikan empat orang itu.

Posted by Wicak Hidayat on 9 April 2008 @ 4pm

Memang sudah “berantem” lewat lagu, Bis :)

Hendi dan Andre, itu juga maksud saya. Kalau memang musik itu bahasa universal, kenapa ada orang yang lebih suka jenis musik tertentu dan nggak suka jenis yang lain?

Kenapa bisa ada cacian terhadap Kangen Band?

Wicak: Begitukah? Soalnya gua juga nggak begitu mengerti apa sebenarnya yang bikin mereka damai. Semua terjadi begitu saja :)

Posted by ikram on 10 April 2008 @ 1am

“Kalau memang musik itu bahasa universal, kenapa ada orang yang lebih suka jenis musik tertentu dan nggak suka jenis yang lain?”

*sotoy mode on ^^

Lah Kram, bahasa universal kan bukan berati semua orang harus suka jenis musik yang sama.

Menurut gw, benar kata Andre dan Hendi, walaupun jenis musiknya beda tapi mereka bisa mengerti maksud satu sama lain–lewat musik.

Itulah kenapa disebut universal. Eh, iya nggak sih?

Posted by hapsari sekar adi on 10 April 2008 @ 4pm

Tapi kan musik yg satu belum tentu disuka sama yg lain. Selera nggak bisa dipaksa-paksa sama.

Nggak universal…

Posted by ikram on 27 May 2008 @ 10pm

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