I sometimes write songs, and this one is from a proposed EP being put together by some wonderfully talented friends of mine. The collection of songs for the EP has a very chilled vibe, somewhat post-punk, and my topics are offbeat. This song, Mughal Lovers, is based on a beautiful Mughal Indian miniature, the original of which hangs in the Museum Rietberg in Zurich. It was painted in Himachal Pradesh in about 1780-1790 in watercolour and gold on paper. In the song, I compare the painting's martial alarm with the pastoral peace of a Hindu watercolour from the same time and place, of Radha and Krishna in a forest glade, painted about 1775. Though the music has yet to be decided on, in my mind's ear, it is a stoner-doom track ;)
Mughal Lovers
© Michael Schmidt 2016
Mughal
lovers
on the verandah
They turn
at the
sound of thunder
Lightning
rips the
fabric of the air
His musicians play on
murali, tambura
and pakhavaj
while six white birds
like hooked crosses
flee the threatening sky
a lone white bird
flies instead to the west
Clutching
his hand
yet she is unafraid
Bring me
my sword!
Orange-robed
woman complies
Green hills
succumb to darkness
In a
forest
Krishna and Radha
frolic on
a bed of leaves
His Sahasrāra
spouts golden filaments
his blue right hand
deep in her yoni
Mughal
lovers
trapped in wonder
They turn
at the
sound of thunder
Lightning
rips the
fabric of the air
He must go off to war
but Krishna and Radha
are rolling on the floor
Mughal
lovers
Mughal
lovers
Mughal
lovers
huh!
[ENDS]