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Posts tagged ‘law santiago’

New Music Transmission – Episode 16

Early April our single “The Sight Of Love” was featured download at a British website/podcast New Music Transmission. Followed by a discussion feature I downloaded a week after which I decided to share with everyone by inserting the mp3 file. We felt honored with the nice commentaries injected with very constructive criticisms. I transcribed some excerpts from the podcast episode for easy reference.

Episode 16: The Sight Of Love – The Camerawalls

Steve: We have The Camerawalls’ The Sight Of Love coming out on Wednesday. They’re a band from the Philippines.It’s kinda like an indie band very much of British influences. And this song seems very tight, seems pretty good. Let’s dive straight into it. What are your thoughts? What are your feelings, Jack?

Jack: Ah yes.. a very pleasant indie track from a Filipino band.

Steve: Yes, new for us!

Jack: New for us. We’re branching from different countries although maybe we haven’t branched out into a different sound which is maybe we would like to have done going out so far felt.

Steve: Yea, I see what you mean. It’s interesting to go to the other side of the world pick up something that’s very native to the U.K.

Jack: Certainly. Very native. And uhm.. yes, we said it’s very pleasant. I think the track was very reminiscent of enjoying summer, having a laugh with your friends…

Steve: Yeah

Jack: …enjoying the sunshine. It’s a very summery kind of music.

Steve: It’s a nice summery track. I think it’s quite a nice pleasant one to ease us back into the system but you do raise an interesting point with the potential issue. It does sound remarkably like British music… They’re in the Philippines where, my understanding is, Western culture is viewed as being very positive. Western culture sells very well in a place like Manila which is where the band is from. Now they’ve, I’m not saying they’ve purposely done this, although they may have well done, they’ve could’ve taken the sounds from things like The Beatles and The Smiths, and Echo & The Bunnymen who still sell records in areas like the Philippines. And most of, kind of Australia/Asia, that kind of area has taken that sound and is selling really well. They are gigging everywhere. If you look, they’re gigging almost every day through April and many of the days through May. Sounds like a Western band and they’re doing a good job. However, do they want to be a band who sell well in the Philippines and can knock out Philippines or do they want to be an internationally known and accepted band? Because no one in the U.K. is gonna really buy it. We got wealth of it already. Do you see what I mean?

Jack: Yea, we have a wealth of it already and maybe it’s arguable that mainstream has moved on from that sound. It’s doesn’t really sound like UK Top 10.

Steve: No, because this is indie. This is indie circle at 1980.

Jack: Certainly is. And you know, as pleasant as it is, I think you’re right. I think they’re trying to sell well within.. Their produced sounds.. They are popular within their very close surroundings. Uhm.. In so, you know, I think they’re probably in the right place for their sound. Because if it is popular and it’s.. they’re getting gigs in the place they are then they are probably producing appropriate music because, like you say, it’s very, very remarkable if they would ever make it if they were in U.K. surrounding for example.

Steve: I think in their current form they would struggle. Now, this is what they do have going on their side. As we said, they’ve got an established root, like almost a tour root, which they can play in various places within the Philippines. They have very healthy foundings, typically English speaking and southasian is the impression I get. And they’ve got some very well produced songs. They’re not amateurs. I think they produce pretty well. And musically, they all seem very competent. What they need to add, what I would urge them to do if I was their advice-giver if I was giving them some form of management, I would urge them to try and get something original and ideally from their own culture, from their native culture into their music to mix with it and blend and that would sell in the U.K. Because whenever we have bands have been imported here from America or from Spanish speaking nations or from Germany, the ones that do best are the ones who really incorporate their own culture into their music and add something different for our market…

Jack: (cites an example)

Steve: You need to keep some elements of British or Western music within what you do purely so that it has a slight level of familiarity and can be understood as music by the Western audience. But at the same time you really need to inject just a bit of something different. Because it’s ironic the more you sound like you’re a British band, the less popular you likely to be in Britain.

Jack: Because we have a lot of British bands here.

Steve: Like I said if they wanna be big in the Philippines and in other places in South Asia and Austra-Asian islands probably even in places like South America and to some extent.. Middle East. If they keep up sounding a lot like a Western band and fully commit gigging in those regions, then they can make a whole a lot of money.

Jack: Yeah, I think that is certainly the case.

Steve: It’s a difficult one to call.

Jack: Obviously for us as a Western audience, we are so used.. that you know, our music is saturated with this kind of sound. For me it’s the usual, if we were to hear this in London or some place we would bypass almost instantly. But I think it was the distinction of, I think certainly on first glance, their image is what stood out. That is the case when we were choosing the band.

Steve: Yeah, the song I came across those weeks, so we end up or not, which is lucky for us is The Sight Of Love which I thought was quite catchy and quite nice, I thought it’ll be a nice way back in. But, yeah, I see what you mean though, if you see them live or if you hear them… they’re good enough to be heard on the radio in the UK… But it wouldn’t kinda jump high, and I think that’s what we’re trying to say, it can pass you by a little too easily here in the UK.

Jack: But, if they did incorporate just something, something different, something that a Western band wouldn’t usually incorporate… something outlandish. I can’t think of any Filipino instrument for example.
Steve: I see what you mean. It could be an instrument. It doesn’t necessarily have to be. It can just be a different way of thinking about music. There’s a number of different things they can incorporated it there. Instrument is the most obvious one. I can’t think of anything specifically… but it’s hard to say without quite detailed knowledge, you know, about the Philippines. I’m sure there are things they can slip in where it can be identified that this is an indie band from the Philippines instead of being an indie band and then you go, “oh my god, they’re from the Philippines.”

Jack: I think what doesn’t help is if you look at their influences for example. They have no Eastern influences at all. All of them homegrown bands or bands that continue to sell abroad… majority of them are from England. We got John Lennon, Beatles, Morrissey, Paul Weller, The Cure…

Steve: Yeah, you can hear that so…

Jack: I think probably too much sometimes. It’s just crying out for, just a little bit, of something different.

Steve: Yeah, I agree. I was just looking at Wikipedia now about the music of the Philippines. I think it’s something quite common there to be heavily influenced by America and the UK. But they do have a wealth of traditional music and different kinds of folk music as well. There’s probably elements in there whether rhythms or types of backing vocals. One or two things, you put them in and suddenly you got something really original. Will spice it a bit, it’s tempting for a listener. The thing is they’ve got everything there, they’ve got the structure there in place to do good thing, big things… and they’re doing well. So, we’ll see. It’s definitely worth checking out. So we’ll give you some of their details.

As I said they’re called The Camerawalls, you check them out on myspace/thecamerawalls. They’re on Lilystars Records. So the story behind this is that… our point of contact is somebody called Clementine, basically seems to be the brain behind the project. That’s my understanding. And he used to be in a band called “Orange and Lemons” which is I kind of think is a similar style of band and he’s gone and set up a record label called Lilystars Records and a new band and using all the contacts he built up initially with his first musical venture. And from looking it there, myspace, from like gigs, from their reviews and things, and definitely knows how to make things happen.

Jack: Definitely….

Steve: Same with the videos. Videos is very professional looking. So a great shout, if they can just find that little panache.

Jack: Panache indeed.

Steve: We’ve had 16, 15 bands now, where does this rank?

Jack: Its probably middle to bottom, I think. It’s just nothing stands out about them. They blend in too much into what is already available in our culture. Say if we put them in all the bands that we featured, I think they would probably be in the middle of the run… They’re still an enjoyable band. They’re still easy listening, which is in some people’s mood what they are looking for.

Steve: They are also I think one of the best produced bands we had. The sound’s very.. there’s a very clean sound. Very good.

Jack: I think at times it maybe overproduced like the vocals for instance.

Steve: You can hear on the vocals a bit of auto tune I think. It’s very commonly used now, if a singer is slightly flat or sharp you kinda just ping them back into spot. I think it has been used on the record there, which is okay. You don’t really want to know it. It’s a difficult skill, very hard to do without sounding obvious. Which is why it’s been incorporated in some music as being an actual sound.

Jack: Yeah, because clearly… or you can just talk poetry and then it will sound…

Steve: You know what, unless it’s specifically about that then you don’t really wanna know it Is happening. It’s okay to use it but don’t let it be too obvious. Or maybe to other less vigilant ears maybe it’s not so bad, I don’t know… or look half bad, it’s up to you. For the rest who don’t know before we started our podcast what we did, I was a vocalist. And I guess you hear stuff that Jack is a drummer. So do you ever hear stuff on drums?

Jack: Oh yeah, what I don’t like hearing is a triggered drum sound. It’s a very similar idea as a auto tuning a vocal. Instead of hearing the drums that sounded normally, it’s triggered. What that noise triggers is another sound, which is a pre-recorded drum sound. It’s like all the drum tracks are at the same level. It just sounds too electronic and I don’t like it. I have heard that in similar bands that we featured. I think, a lot of these things are pretty standard studio techniques now.

Steve: Yes, cause we are in an industry now that technology is used a lot. If you look at the general quality of recording today, compared to the 80s and early 90s, there has been a massive improvement, sometimes at the cost of genuineness.

***thanks to steve and jack for the wonderful feature and commentary. – the camerawalls

The Polarizing Effect

Over the past sixteen years as a musician I have witnessed, read and followed some of the most significant band break-ups and issues of leaving members including my own with Orange & Lemons that did not end well. I have learned that finding solutions, amicable settlements and establishing communication is the proper and most decent route to any misunderstanding or in-fighting in a band instead of promoting a continuous he-said-she-said playground that oftentimes produces a polarizing effect amongst the fan base.

Recently I find myself again in another situation involving my ex-drummer. After a sit-down and discussion of issues which I believe were amicably responded to, we shook hands to an irrevocable acceptance of his resignation. Only to find out after a couple of days he was posting false and malicious statements on facebook prompting our management to release an official statement.

Instances like this added up to my further disenchantment with how social networking sites like facebook and twitter are being used for posting wars. Practically a pointless issue to dwell upon, I resigned to the fact that a lot of people have this inkling desire to release tension, stress or anger over facebook finding out how many so-called-friends in their list will hit the like button, or comment and sympathize. Bad vibes after bad vibes.

Nevertheless what pains me more than the break-up and strained relationships is how some artists carelessly out of pride, prejudice and self-interest creates ripples that engages and affects common friends especially music fans. A detrimental effect to whatever great beginnings and sure-fire way of causing misery and upset to music fans and sometimes can also be unknowingly self-deprecating.

I have no wish to engage in such issues but when a fan goes up to me in a manner which I feel I have to at least give light to the situation, the following exchanges in our facebook page happened:

What can you say about what Ian’s saying about you? Will we ever hear you defend yourself from what he’s saying? I was kinda hoping you would say something…and say that what he was saying isn’t true…blimey… I don’t even know why… I know it has nothing to do with the music since it’s all about the music… But i don’t know… It’s just that i’ve put you on this pedestal… And adored you like some form of god… and i just don’t know what to believe now…so there… – Kristine (a fan)

To which I replied with:

I really appreciate your concern. But i hope you understand that the way I see it, acknowledging the petty issues being raised against me will give it existence and credibility. I have gone a long way with these people who are making derogatory remarks against me and to retaliate is not an option since I still care for them and value the friendship we created over the years.

A lot of things untrue and unfair has been said about me and my label out of bitterness and spite. And the unwillingness to communicate issues personally and verify convictions may have resulted in an inconsiderate option to hang me thru public opinion. For whatever reason (to gain attention/sympathy or promote a new act), I think it is not within the boundaries of decency.

As sad as it may seem, over the years, I have learned that friends may betray you more quickly, for they are easily aroused to envy, becoming spoiled and tyrannical. Just like you I’m just a regular person, very human, so please do not put me on any pedestal. I feel honored already when people appreciate the music I make. Little joys that can’t be bought and little joys that makes every difference in the life I lead. To you Kristine and to all who continue to support and believe in me, I sincerely thank you and assure you that people may come and go, but the music will stay. – Clementine

As I pondered on the situation, I can cite the lack of managerial figure and business problems as the reason of the split. I figured it must be hard on a member’s perspective to separate me as a band member/leader and at the same time as the acting artist/label manager. When we started the band, money doesn’t really come into it. It was all about the musical passion we all shared and it was bound to be a fantastic journey. I didn’t feel we should end it so Law and I will continue on. I feel I have worked so hard after the demise of Orange & Lemons to even consider.

It’s a bright time to work on a new album. Now that is something worth looking forward to.

Our Baguio Exploits (Day 1)

Things are pretty busy lately since the release of our new single “The Sight Of Love.” Also we just recently launched a music video to support it. You can view it Here.  And if you still don’t have a copy, you can download the song for free Here.

But this entry isn’t about that. I’m picking up the pieces where I last documented happenings involving The Camerawalls. As I rummage in our backlog of experiences I came across our pics from our wicked trip to Baguio with label mates Turbo Goth and The Bernadettes.

Day 1 – February 5

The night before we left Manila, Lilystars hosted a POP Shoppe! event that featured acoustic sets by Lilystars’ artists to go along with Outerhope – our special guest band for that night. It was laid back and a perfect send-off for a long trip to Baguio. After the event we hit the road at around 3am and found ourselves waking up to the sights of Baguio pines at around 7:30 am.

The famous haunted house along Leonard Wood Loop near Teacher's Camp.

We passed by a famous hunted house in the area which was already used many times in local films. I wanted to stop and stand against the gates to have a picture taken but no one in expressed any interest (out of fear i bet) so we moved along till we reached Antonette’s (our road manager) family rest house along Gibraltar St.

The house along Gibraltar St. where we all stayed over.

We rested for a few hours inside the house, some readily took long naps, and some (including myself) couldn’t take the building hunger as morning turns noon. Ian, Cheska, Sarah, Pao and I didn’t bother to wake up our driver and rode a jeepney towards the nearest Filipino restaurant to satisfy our craving for Beef Bone Marrow & Vegetable Soup locally know as Bulalo!

Bulalo (Beef Bone Marrow & Vegetable Soup) Sweet & Sour Fish & Pork and Grilled Stuffed Squid.

The food was great and not wanting the others to miss out I ordered some more for take out. When we got back, true enough, everyone was starving.

We have two gigs on that day. A late afternoon stint at SM City Baguio and a longer, more engaging set in the night at Chill Out Bar. The weather was just perfect in the high mountains. Not too hot and not too cold. The water on the other hand was close to being intolerable for baths.

We arrived at the mall around 4:30pm, did a bit of sound check and hang around a bit while waiting for our cue to begin the show.

Backstage enjoying the afternoon sun.

Law and Ian feeling the large stage.

Turbo Goth started the lazy afternoon followed by The Bernadettes. Small groups of crowd started building up from both ground and upper floor overlooking the stage. Notice how the sky in the pictures below turns from grayish white to black.

Turbo Goth kicking off the show.

Turbo Goth kicking of the afternoon show.

The Bernadettes

Doing our thing.

Finishing it high.

We played a few songs in the mall reserving energy for a long set at Chill Out Bar. A couple of music fans oblivious of The Camerawalls performing at SM chanced upon us while roaming around the mall not missing the chance to score our debut album. We had pizza after.

I always try to accustom myself with large venues for performing although we prefer intimate settings like small bars where the crowd is within reach and attended by real music fans, making us more excited for the event happening later in the night. Gary Martin, the owner of Chill Out, is celebrating the bar’s 7th anniversary and we’re expecting a lot of friends and music aficionados to come over. Joining us in the line up are friends from a Baguio based indie band — The Edralins. Enjoy the featured videos of The POP Shoppe! performances below:

The Edralins covering a song from The Stone Roses.

A yet to be release tune from Turbo Goth entitled Weather Report.

The Bernadettes with their song Let’s Make Babies.

Us covering a Cure classic. Just Like Heaven.

It was our first time to perform out of town with The POP Shoppe! and our second time as a band in Baguio. Last time we played in Chill Out was last year when we were still a trio, now almost the same crowd and much more witnessed us with our new guitar player.

Clinically Dead For 16 Hours

We immensely enjoyed the gig, met some new friends and felt like family with the way Gary and his friends treated us. Drinks and food were non-stop. The excitement and adrenaline wore off as soon as we went downstage after finishing the set with “Woman” by John Lennon as a final request coming from an engaged couple. All throughout the night I can’t help but notice a cute 3 year old little girl dancing around and seemingly trying to sing along to each song that was played. A kid enjoying the show – now that’s entertainment!

From L-R: Me posing with the bar owner Gary Martin, with the couple Jen Bautista (concert producer) and JB Bautista (the president of University of Baguio).

Of Mice & Men

After two and a half years I finally decided to sing an Orange & Lemons song via a tribute gig to remember what was once an exciting venture. The songs I have written for my former band still haunts me. And what better way to reminisce but invite musician friends to celebrate that journey.

Joining The Camerawalls on the 30th of January at Route 196 are label mates Turbo Goth, The Bernadettes, Your Imaginary Friends and The Gentle Isolation plus guest artist The Satellites as well as Ian Zafra who came all the way from Cebu to do a series of solo perfomances. The small watering hole was packed with roughly over 150 people that consists of music fans, families and friends. It was so much fun at The POP Shoppe! it was inevitable not to allow ourselves to be a little bit intoxicated. So we did.

The Satellites performed “Strike Whilst The Iron Is Hot” and “Rock-A-Bye.” A great start for the evening and kinda suited their indie rock sound. The Gentle Isolation did girl pop versions of  “Cycle Of Love” and “Days And Nights” while Ian Zafra did a stripped version of “Hey, Please” letting the crowd sing half if not the entire song. It was amazing how everyone knew the words to it.  “Heaven Knows (This Angel Has Flown)” and “Lihim” was the cover of choice of Your Imaginary Friends. Turbo Goth did a laid back version of Sarah Gaugler’s all time  favorite “Just Like A Splendid Love Song” with Paolo trying to impersonate my guitar playing at one point. The Bernadettes did a rocking version of  “I Feel Good, I Feel Fine.”  I immensely enjoyed all of it. Hearing my songs covered by my favorite bands is quite an experience. Too bad we missed the set of Patience Dear Juggernaut. He was too ill to perform.

We were the last band to play and by the time we were onstage I was already feeling a little tipsy from the scores of vodka shots I was helping myself from Jeff Saw’s table. (Jeff is The POP Shoppe’s official photographer). It was almost 2 in the morning. As I fix my guitar strap I looked around and there were still a lot of people inside the bar waiting for us to perform. Most of them standing. After a couple of songs from Pocket Guide To The Other World, we did a familiar tune from 2003. The first track from Love In The Land Of Rubber Shoes & Dirty Ice Cream called “A Beginning Of Something Wonderful” written during my college days in the late 90s.

To everyone who shared the night with us, it wouldn’t have been as much fun without you all. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts. To those who missed it, enjoy the video. In the future we will try to cover more of my songs from O&L. That I promise.

A Beginning Of Something Wonderful
Clementine
Orange & Lemons

Your gentle means
And all seems to commence
A brand new pace in me
Hope it’s not a blunder
Especially when I uncover, dig deeper
And I wonder

When I get near you
I feel something deep within me
You know you bring me to new heights
I’m like a big balloon filled with hot air
Ready to explode
Each and every time I kiss you

The more I’m with you
The more it feels like
This could be the beginning of something wonderful
Yeah, yeah…

Your lips are movin’
Your voice is so oh, so soothin’
You wear a face that lives in my dreams
Where did you come from
And I wonder

When I get near you
I feel something deep within me
You know you bring me to new heights
I’m like a big balloon filled with hot air
Ready to explode
Each and every time I kiss you

The more I’m with you
The more it feels like
This could be the beginning of something wonderful
Yeah, yeah…
The more I’m with you
The more it feels like
This could be the beginning of something really wonderful…

I have avoided singing my own songs in public for quite a number of reasons. After Orange & Lemons disbanded in a loathsome manner I just couldn’t allow myself to be reminded of the very people I once called friends, the very people who tried to fire me from my own band without proper decorum and stab me in the back by telling everyone lies. It was a situation unheard of. Sure, key leaving members in popular bands is everything but normal. Ely Buendia left The Eraserheads. Rico Blanco left Rivermaya. Johnny Marr left The Smiths. John Lennon left The Beatles. It would sound ridiculous and downright outrageous if Ely, Rico, Marr or worse John Lennon will be fired from their own band. It was like killing the goose that lays the golden egg.

In all the published works of O&L I have written lyrics for 32 songs, music for 39 songs plus 2 poetry. I sang 19 recorded tracks as main vocals, have painstakingly arranged, layered and recorded hundreds of guitar tracks alone. I have spent more hours in the studio during recording, mixing and mastering than any member of the band. Collaborated with sound engineers, directors, stylists, session musicians, advertisers, label people, etc. Booked and arranged all band rehearsals since day one.

I taught Mcoy how to play the guitar and how to fake it as a beginner during our early years of live gigging. He never recorded any guitar tracks in the album. I did. Ace Del Mundo auditioned to me and I was the one who hired him as a drummer and later on his brother JM to fill in for Law’s absence. I equally shared songwriting credits in the first two albums of O&L with Mcoy Fundales as a gesture of goodwill although he hasn’t contributed anything to most of the songs in terms of composition and intellectual property. So until now he has been receiving royalties for songs he did not create. I spent a year recording and conceptualizing and developing the last album Moonlane Gardens only to be fired a week after the album launch. I dedicated 11 years building the foundation of O&L and seeing it rise to the top and falling hard face-flat on quicksand. A classic example of losing heads in the clouds.

I cite these facts not out of bitterness nor anger but to answer the question a lot of people have been asking: “Why don’t you sing your songs from O&L and perform it with The Camerawalls?” Clearly my response is an emotional one. When I fought my way from preventing my ex-bandmates from using the entity Orange & Lemons without me (which i eventually succeeded), I posed a challenge to myself  and unto them to start from scratch and create our own music instead of banking on the success of O&L music. A challenge I knew they will not accept as they continue singing the songs they did not create during live gigs after disbanding mainly for profit.

The human spirit in me obliged to the challenge. An innate drive to create something unique and new from my raw individual experience with O&L and the desire to overcome the painful journey. The need to be challenged is so strong that we sometimes make things more difficult than they need to be just so we can rise to the occasion and overcome the obstacles we ourselves have created.

I refused to sing O&L songs during the early stages of The Camerawalls nor use any of my existing and unpublished recordings or demos or songs I’ve written during my stint with O&L. I started from scratch and with the help and collaboration of my new band mates we were able to produce songs that will eventually be the tracks for Pocket Guide To The Otherworld. I’m proud to say the tracks in Pocket Guide is the most recent and most mature work I ever did. They may not be as catchy or as youthful as the songs I contributed for O&L but it sure is a beginning of something wonderful once more.

THE BEST LAID SCHEMES OF MICE AND MEN.  A popular phrase which means the most carefully prepared plans may go wrong. As did my plans for Orange & Lemons. Taken from Robert Burns‘ poem To a Mouse, 1786. It tells of how he, while ploughing a field, upturned a mouse’s nest. The resulting poem is an apology to the mouse:

But, Mousie, thou art no thy lane
In proving foresight may be vain:
The best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men
Gang aft a-gley,
An’ lea’e us nought but grief an’ pain,
For promised joy.

The poem is the source for the title of John Steinbeck‘s 1936 novel – Of Mice and Men.

+Clementine

KOC, Banchetto, Atbp.

If you find the title baffling:

KOC – stands for Kings Of Convenience (a Norwegian pop duo we admire).

Banchetto – an Italian word for “feast.” also refers to a weekly overnight street food fiesta located at Emerald Avenue in Ortigas Center (Fridays to Saturdays) and inside the roadside premises of Forum Robinson at Pioneer St. cor EDSA (Wednesdays to Thursdays).

Atbp – Filipino abbreviation for the English “and others” and Latin “et cetera (etc.)”

A little over two weeks ago, musician and fashion designer Kate Torralba notified us to participate in a “We Want Kings Of Conveniece in Manila Night” and cover a KOC song. A sort of a fete for the upcoming performance of KOC in Manila on March 31 and Kate is part of the production team who will bring them to the Philippines. The most exciting news I’ve heard in while being one who seldom gets the chance to watch a foreign band I love.

As for the cover song, the most obvious choice would be “I’d Rather Dance With You,” which is one of the few full band, upbeat and groovy tracks of KOC. Two weeks is enough leeway for us to learn the song but being predictable procrastinators we were only able to rehearse it as a band during the night before the gig. A fact that made us a bit nervous. I originally planned to capture our skittish performance, too bad my handy flip cam’s battery died during the first few seconds of our set.

I know a lot of people are anxious to see us cover that song so the best we can offer as of now is a clip taken during our rehearsal. Please excuse the lyrical blunders and off-key moments.

Some pics from the actual gig taken from the camera I manage to bring with me.

Let the music begin.

Getting into the swing.

Result of too much swinging.

Swinging till the end. Producing less prominent focal points.

Posing with Sarah Gaugler and event producer Kate Torralba. She's holding a big logbook filled with pledges/requests of people reserving tickets for the KOC concert.

With the Channel V staff and crew who covered the event and interviewed the bands.

Post Gig Food Trip

We were the last to play after Waya, Kate Torralba, Outerhope and Us-2 Evil-0 ending our set at 1:45am. The night still seems young so we rendezvous at Banchetto-Forum checking out the street food and indulging ourselves to whatever our eyes and bellies hungrily agrees to chow down on.

Isaw ng Manok (Chicken Intestines marinated and grilled)

The place was mouth watering. Upon arriving the first thing that caught my attention was the Isaw Manok (grilled chicken intestines) which I’ve been craving for quite some time just recently. I readily asked the vendor to prepare two sticks for little taste test. They were very good and tender. Before we decided to order some more we set off to a nearby convenience store to buy the perfect match for street food — an ice cold beer! Sarah, Pao and Law stayed behind to look around for food choices and reserve a table for all of us.

Isaw taste test. A little dip on special vinegar with spices for the kill.

Joining me in sampling the Isaw Manok are Ahmad (Your Imaginary Friends), Ian and Cheska.

When we got back, a quick survey led me to score half a kilo of Lechon de Leche (suckling pig roasted in charcoal), Betamax (grilled cubes of coagulated pig’s blood on stick) and a grilled Tilapia (a freshwater fish) stuffed with onions and tomatoes. Sarah and Pao got some hotdogs, rice toppings and what seems like pita bread with cheese fillings. I wasn’t paying attention to what they were having being engrossed with appetizing dishes right in front of me and the beer bottle I was clutching and chugging in between bites. Ahmad of Your Imaginary friends bought some Hungarian sausages while Ian and Cheska settled for Liempo (grilled pork belly) with rice and a few more Isaw Manok.

Lechon de Leche (Roasted suckling pig) - a typical Philippine cuisine with Spanish origin.

Betamax (Grilled coagulated pig's blood), Tilapia and Hotdog!

Law squeezing some gravy sauce. On the foreground beside the Lechon is our favorite beer - a Philippine made San Miguel Pale Pilsen.

Betamax! Betamax! Betamax!

After a while a security guard with heavily set eyes approached our table to inform us that alcoholic beverages aren’t allowed in the area. Maybe he noticed the look of disbelief on our faces, or the amount of food we have on our table, or my quick offer of a solution to try our best to conceal it by wrapping the bottles with plastic bags that made him shrug and walk back to his post. That was almost disappointing had he insisted.

We spent the remainder of our time enjoying the food and booze while playing word games. Connecting silly phrases consisting of three words that’s goes around counter-clockwise forming long sentences that means nothing like fart in a wind storm. By the time we got bored with the nonsense we moved on to a name game choosing a letter and taking turns in naming every local or international celebrity we can think of whose name begins with that particular letter. Failure to name one is punishable by a bite on cold leftover pieces of Lechon dipped in different sauces (gravy, vinegar, soy sauce). And every time someone makes a mistake we proceed with the next letter in alphabetical order. It was hilariously crazy and everyone was forced to put on their thinking cap and participate. We reached the letter “Y” before deciding to call it day.

Cheers to the most boisterous group and only table in the vicinity with alcohol!

It's already 5am. Final shot before we hit the road homeward bound.

There’s a saying that goes “Man is richest who’s pleasures are the cheapest.” Indeed, cheap pleasures made our day. – Clementine