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Here’s why your tito’s new favorite young band IV OF SPADES is also everyone else’s

- By DENISE FERNANDEZ Photograph­y by EDWARD JOSON

IT’S REALLY, really hard to miss the boys of IV OF SPADES the moment they enter a room. Clad in color- coordinate­d, turtleneck­s, checkered blazers—you know, the works), Zild Salonga all look like they exited a time machine from four decades ago and found themselves right smack in the middle match their entire getup. A week after releasing their charttoppi­ng track Hey Barbara, IV OF SPADES dropped by our

their set. He smiles with gratitude and points to the rest of the members.

lolas lolo and lola

modern era, there’s no denying that grandparen­ts, titos, and

titas everywhere are bound to fall in love with them. But do the kids love these guys just as much? Fuck yeah. In an era where both millennial­s and Gen Z- ers obsess over vinyl, analog photograph­y, old cartoons, and retro aesthetics, IV OF SPADES couldn’t have entered the game at a better time. Playing at this year’s Scout Music Fest, the band emerged as the crowd’s surprise favorite performer, impressing both audiences and veteran musicians alike. Though some may easily dismiss them as an eccentric and manufactur­ed pop band, the inevitable rise of IV OF SPADES is here and they’ve only just gotten started.

Like most struggling bands in the local music industry, the four- piece group was far from kicking off with a bang. IV OF SPADES formed in 2014 when their manager, Allan Silonga, was on a search for band members who could collaborat­e with his son Blaster, who would become the quartet’s lead guitarist. A musician himself who knew many people in the scene, Allan eventually tapped his friends’ sons who were around Blaster’s age—Zild (bass) and vocalist and rhythm guitarist not so long after the members remembered that he was already writing his own music.

scene as a band was at Wanderband in 2015. They played Ilaw Sa Daan, only to be beat out by Oh, Flamingo! to perform in the following year’s Wanderland Music and Arts Festival. This forced the band we kind of stopped, because it was really sad for us, with vulnerable hearts, trying to pursue music. For six months, we weren’t writing our own songs. When we played at

Scout Music Fest, we were just really surprised that people actually liked who we are while we were being ourselves. It In between, Zild and Blaster joined Eat Bulaga’s Music

Hero, an eight month- long televised competitio­n among musicians with talent for various instrument­s. Both competed using their bass and electric guitar respective­ly, with Blaster eventually coming out as winner and taking home the P500,000 prize—which would help fund the couldn’t stay dormant and directionl­ess forever and shared his ideas for rebranding IV OF SPADES.

When Hey Barbara was released, accompanie­d by a bright and visually striking music video, it paved way for the band to gain more and more traction online. Music-wise, their funk and disco tracks are easy to dance to, thanks to upbeat melodies and contagious­ly catchy bass and guitar

riffs— though the band claims that it wasn’t their initial intention to sonically mirror the ’70s. Sa totoo lang ayaw namin ma- label na ’70s band.

Siguro ’yun talaga ’yung sa amin because whenever we read comments on social media, there’d be some old people saying that we’re reviving the Manila sound—VST & Co., Hotdog— disco, basically. We’re happy

Outside of their music, what makes IV OF SPADES quite literally stand out from other bands is their commitment to style and branding, as well as each member’s meticulous attention to detail. You’re probably never going to watch a gig of theirs where they aren’t all dressed in a similar fashion. In the age of Instagram and YouTube, music is turning out to be not just a listening experience, but a visual art. And we’re trying to communicat­e to people through art. So we want to visualize what they’re hearing. This is what we look like. The way we play our music—this is how you should portray it in your mind. We’re just dictating what we want them to see and feel. And we’re really just experiment­ing same time, we’re being natural about it. Maybe after two

For a group that clashed and underwent an identity crisis in the beginning (they even changed their band name to Ecclesia for approximat­ely two weeks), chemistry and songwritin­g come easy to IV OF SPADES, with various roles shared among members.

because I have a lot of ideas scattering everywhere, so he’s always trying to organize our thoughts. He’s the one who goes like, ‘Okay, let’s be realistic…’ I’m the impulsive person who keeps on trying new things and ideas—the perfection­ist! Sometimes, that’d be the root of some tension trails off and sighs. Zild tries to compose himself in between laughs. guy! His humor is just out of this world. He’s not from the earth. I mean, he knits and alters his own clothes sometimes. He’s our hairstylis­t, too. He’s from another world,

It’s moments of laughter like this that remind people that despite IV OF SPADES being a Warner Music- signed they’re still a bunch of kids who, with no better way to put it, just genuinely love the art of performing and making music.

rockstars! Then we realized, you know what? This is not us!

Nearing the end of the interview, I’m down to my last Future plans? I ask.

holding his phone up. He puts Blaster on speakerpho­ne and Anong future plan natin

Ano? Future plan ng replies with earnest confusion. The room bursts into more laughter when he responds like a high school student being Paanong

Blaster ponders out loud with long uhh’s and umm’s Eh ’di, mag- Saguijo nang habang

buhay Maglaro sa Lollapaloo­za, Madison Square Garden, ganun

and show that we have quality music. There’s a sense of culture in the Philippine­s that the world should hear. That’s

At their gig at Social House before the photo shoot, members of veteran band Cheats compliment IV OF SPADES on their music and knack for performing. By the time they’re themselves, of course, with some help from Blaster), each member poses so naturally you’d think these 17- to 20-yearolds had been doing this all their lives. Perhaps Zild’s— or who knows, maybe even Blaster’s—vision for IV OF SPADES isn’t so impossible after all.

“We’re not just doing music, we’re also making art. And we’re trying to communicat­e to people through art. So we want to visualize what they’re hearing...We’re definitely taking it seriously, but at the same time, we’re being natural about it.”

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