Sunday, June 18, 2023

The psychological truth of 'Mirror Mirror'


We're now comfortably in the middle section of the KL set. Starting with 'Believing', the songs now come from their latest album, 'The Other One', which dropped in March this year. These new songs show a much more mature side to the band. Gone is the child-like playfulness of their earlier music and choreography. What remains is the commitment to hard-driving metal which is core to their identity, while the vocal line remains beautifully lyrical and melodic. The tunefulness of the vocals is catchy and tempting to sing, or at least hum along to, like as if we could keep up with SU-METAL.

'Mirror Mirror' is a weird combination of familiar references from Disney's version of 'Snow White' and Shakespeare's 'Macbeth'. SU's line references the wicked queen as she indulges her vanity while looking into the mirror. MOA replies with the chant of the 'weird sisters' before they show Macbeth the illusory vision of his ascension to royalty, motivating his descent into serial murder just to maintain a brief, heirless, and ultimately pointless rule.

The point is that the mirror lies to us. Need I say that the mirror could also be social media that we allow to dictate our identity? Focused on our mirror image, we are stuck where we are, this illusory superlative sense of self, being either the 'fairest', or the 'worst'. Instead, stop focusing on yourself, and turn your back to the mirror. Then you'll see life, and navigate through life as it really is. Wow. That piece of wisdom alone has saved me 10 to 20 years' of therapy down the road!

Going back to the choreography, it's clear that the band is much more confident that their music does indeed transcend borders, regardless of language barriers. They are no longer bound to literal storytelling in their movements. They are not above doing it when performing their older songs, but it's not who they are any more. Their choreo has evolved to be more aesthetically appealing, hence the synchronicity and overall symmetry of movement, generally suggesting the constantly shifting patterns of a kaleidoscope, with every nuance of gesture deliberate and rehearsed to perfection.

Letting the music tell its own story, the dance has become an additional instrument in the band, providing notes and rhythms for the eye, enhancing what the ear already hears. The dance now contributes to the music instead of trying to talk over it, like it used to. While many of us miss the controlled chain explosions of tiny chaos that early BABYMETAL used to be about, they have allowed for the progression of maturity, and instead of fighting change, the band has evolved with natural grace. Taking their own advice, this band isn't stuck looking at itself in the mirror.

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