While mulling over what to do this week, I realised that it was high time we had another Quotable on Viggo and music. Not – as you would probably think - about Viggo's musical creativity (although I do love to highlight the fact that Viggo can play a motorcycle muffler), but about listening to it. What goes in the CD player, what gets hummed or sung. What songs did he play in his youth,? Which have got stuck in his head? What music helps with a creative mood or fires up his spirit. I've been trawling the Quotables Vault (yes, I really do have one), and come up with quite a mix...
© Miramax Films/Village Roadshow.
Viggo Mortensen talks so eloquently about the joys of getting lost that 10 minutes into the interview I'm lost as well. The actor likes cutting loose and roaming free: partly for research but also for his own enjoyment. Maybe he'll browse around some out-of-the-way bookshop, or drop in at some museum, or visit some old-time record shop and listen to the music from times gone by. Try as I might I can't drag him back on track.
"What music does your dad listen to?" he asks.
My dad? My dad likes jazz, I tell him. Old jazz, trad jazz; 30s and 40s stuff.
"Chet Baker?" says Mortensen.
Er, that's probably too late for him, I say, with a nervous eye on the clock. Now, about your new film ....
"Coltrane?" says Mortensen.
The Happy Trails Of Viggo Mortensen
By Xan Brooks
The Guardian
17 April 2009
Didn't you live in South America for about nine years as a kid?
Yeah, I was 11 when we moved back to the States. I couldn't believe the swear words, the slang, the music - all the kids were into Blue Oyster Cult and Grand Funk Railroad. I was a closet Carpenters fan. I'd sing 'Top of the World' to myself on the way to school, but when I got close to campus I'd shut up.
The Hot New 39-Year-Old
By Dennis Hensley
Movieline magazine, 1998
"I still keep a collection of old tango songs and I listen to them all the time. I also listen to some other Argentine singers of the moment."
Viggo Mortensen Goes Back To His Roots For 'Everybody Has A Plan'
Static
19 April 2013
"...I like to sing tangos every now and then, in private... I don't want to bother other people; I bother them enough with my movies."
Viggo talking about his Argentinian Childhood on Radio Cooperativa, Chile
By - transcribed/translated by Graciela
Radio Cooperativa
27 March 2007
"I love this Argentine song from the 1930s called Envidia by Ada Falcon. It's very special."
Viggo Mortensen Goes Back To His Roots For 'Everybody Has A Plan'
Static
19 April 2013
And in music, what are your essentials?
I don't know if I have essentials; the selection depends on the moment. This morning I've been listening to Ray Barretto, The Ramones, Andrés Calamaro and Janis Joplin.
Viggo Mortensen: "If I'm lost, it's because that's how I want it."
By Juan Luis Álvarez - translated by Ollie, Rio and Zoe
La Vanguardia
9 September 2012
[John Doe] is an outstanding "live" performer, unique in his ability to connect with the words, the tune, and the audience in just the right heartbeat as he builds the long, exquisite moment. You'll hear it and feel it tonight, and you will be so glad you were here.
Viggo's programme notes for John Doe's performance at the Lincoln Centre
Americana
By Viggo Mortensen
American Songbook at Lincoln Center
28 January 2011
What kind of music do you enjoy while you are reading?
It depends what I'm reading, where, and when--and what music is on hand. No music is good sometimes, too. At moment I am listening to selected opera arias sung by Mark Reisen, the great bass voice of Russia, recorded in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Before that I was listening to Buckethead's Colma.
ForeWord Magazine.
31 October 2007
"There's a YouTube footage where we were singing outside the Belvedere [in Austria]. We used to sing a lot. That's something I do a lot of, anyway. It's like somebody will say a phrase and I'll sing the rest of the line. It's like a way to be relaxed."
What songs did he and Viggo sing? "Anything really," said Michael, "like 'Young Girl'" (by Gary Puckett & The Union Gap). He was told that the song's refrain, "Young girl, get out of my mind," was a fitting one for his characters in both "Shame" and "A Dangerous..."
"I remember Viggo and I came bursting into the makeup room and singing. Keira (Knightley) was getting her hair done. We made her and the makeup artist jump out of their skin," said Michael.
Michael Fassbender
No 'Shame' in Michael Fassbender's sex-addict role
By: Ruben V. Nepales
The Inquirer
5 January 2012
"Should I stay or should I go?", is what the famous song from the The Clash's "Combat Rock" album asks. Below I put a link to the song, in case Caruso Lombardi or any other people working for CASLA feel plagued by existential doubts before the key match against Tigre (or the two other very important matches we have left in this tournament) and they need to psych themselves. I recommend listening to the song at an excessive volume, maybe together with some mate with gin to stand the cold of the fall´s early morning."
Viggo Mortensen
"Should I stay or should I go?"
By Viggo Mortensen - translated by Ollie and Zoe
Club Atlético San Lorenzo de Almagro
1 June 2012
What about music, what kind of music makes you happy?
It depends. I do like the Swan of Tuonela by Sibelius. Aren't swans supposed to be like geese, in that they mate for life? That's the ideal. So be careful before you kill a swan because you are probably killing a very important relationship.
Viggo Mortensen: The New Box Office King
By Jenny Ewart
Bent
January 2004
Q: How did the screen test go [For To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything, Julie Newmar]?
A: I asked if I could sing 'When I Fall in Love' a cappella, figuring if I could make that much of an ass of myself I'd be less embarrassed saying the dialogue.
The Hot New 39-Year-Old
By Dennis Hensley
Movieline magazine
August 1998
We break up; collect nicely all out stuff, all orange peelings, bottle tops, and plastic glasses, and head back to his car, a Dodge Ram 2.500 pick-up diesel. On the dashboard lies dried flowers and what seems to be an Indian rosary, in the CD player is fusion music (new age and jazz), and Viggo Mortensen puts on a classic ranger hat. He seems to be very much at ease, as he sits here well above the driving lane and like a pinball navigates us through the brutal traffic.
Viggo from Hollywood
By Poul Hoi
M/S (Danish magazine)
August 2001
"Like others who grew up in the 1960s and 1970s, I took an interest in not only Kerouac, but also in what supposedly inspired them - apart from literature - during those post-war decades: the jazz figures (Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk?), painting (Abstract Expressionism), and movies (Italian Neorealism, Nouvelle Vague, etc.)."
Viggo Mortensen: Furrowed Burroughs
By Aureliano Tonet - translated by Anita Conrade
Trois Couleurs
May 2012
After that, [Viggo] came two more times, always dressed in the San Lorenzo colors or with something related to the club (he brought the flag twice, and he used it as a tablecloth...), until one day he made a reservation for the "end of shoot dinner". So he came again with David Cronenberg and a group of people who don't seem to sleep very often, to wrap up the shoot. What's more, towards the end of the night I played some music by Ray Barretto, and Viggo shouted at me from his table: "Acid!" For a moment, I froze because I thought he was asking for dessert, but then I remembered that Acid was the name of the Barretto disc I had just started playing, which is not only one of my favorites, but also one of his. Twin souls, shall we say.
Letter from London - Behind the Scenes on Eastern Promises
By John Rattagan - translated by Graciela
Clarin
5 March 2007