Sun.Star Cebu

New government

- MEL LIBRE librelaw@yahoo.com

Among the most prominent children’s choirs in the Philippine­s in the last 50 years is the Las Piñas Boys Choir (founded in 1969) and the Loboc Children’s Choir (founded in 1980). Both have performed in many festivals and won accolades nationally and internatio­nally. It was not until Huni alumni Dennis Gregory Sugarol returned from his formal music studies in Manila in early 2000s that a homegrown children’s choir has joined the ranks as among the best in the country.

The Mandaue City Children ‘s Choir gained initial notice when it won first prize in the National Music Competitio­n for Young Artists (NAMCYA) on Nov. 27, 2004. And there has been no stopping ever since, including its winning the Grand Prix of Choirs at the World Choir Championsh­ips in Gyeongnam Province of South Korea and, in July 2009, the top prize of the Georg Friedrich Handel Internatio­nales Kinderchor Festival in Halle, Germany.

The group, which has evolved into the Mandaue Children and Youth Chorus, performed in June this year in the Internatio­nal Children’s Festival in Nha Trang, Vietnam and during the inaugurati­on of the Mactan-Cebu Internatio­nal Airport Terminal 2.

Which brings me to another cultural group, the Philippine Barangay Folk Dance Troupe (PBFDT) that toured New Zealand with their Sayaw History Through Philippine Dances as part of their 70th anniversar­y celebratio­n. I caught the performanc­e of the group in Hamilton.

While the Bayanihan Philippine National Folkdance Company and the Ramon Obusan Folkloric Group have better name recall, the PBFDT can stand on its own based on what I experience­d.

Its first set were brave interpreta­tions of Cordillera dances, including balambang, dap-ay and tachek. The second set of dances during the Spanish period were colorful and festive, while the third set of Muslim dances were magical and elegant. But it was the final set that had everyone smiling, as the dances told stories of hunting and healing (B’laan) and courtship (that included binasuan and latik) finally closing with tinikling.

The thesis written by Kanami Namiki in 2007 for the National University of Singapore recalled how Ramon Obusan presented “authentic” dances of “puro matatanda at matataba” dancers in the production number that closed the Asean Summit in Cebu, despite objections from the organizers who preferred younger and beautiful dancers in front.

Obusan was known to be perfection­ist and head-strong and I guess that separates the masters from the rest. Masters such as Belmonte and Sugarol. And their works speak for themselves.

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