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Filipino bands sing blues amid virus in Dubai

- By Isabel Debre

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Eric Roman struts onstage in his torn jeans and grasps the microphone.

It’s midnight and in normal times, he’d hear wild applause from this tightly packed hotel bar in one of the old neighborho­ods alongside the Dubai Creek. Sweaty throngs of fellow Filipinos, Arab businessme­n and mall employees fresh from their shifts would hit the dance floor as he belted out Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin“’ with his nine-piece band from the Philippine­s.

But now the crowds, along with his bandmates, have vanished — in compliance with coronaviru­s restrictio­ns that ban dancing and cap the number of musicians onstage. Roman took a 65% pay cut when his club reopened after the lockdown. Guitarists, bassists and drummers weren’t so lucky.

“Dubai is dead,” said Roman, 40. “Every day we’re wondering where we’re going to get our next meal, our next glass of water, how we’re going to survive in this city.”

Show bands from the Philippine­s have long animated Dubai’s nightlife, satisfying an appetite for rock, R&B and pop that has grown with the emirate’s expat population. Now, as the pandemic mutes the city’s live-music scene and clobbers its economy, hundreds of Filipino performers are struggling to survive.

Traveling Filipino house bands burst into prominence in the early 1900s during the U.S. occupation of the archipelag­o. Already well-versed in Western church music and military anthems from three centuries of Spanish imperialis­m, Filipinos deftly

picked up on the latest American music trends, from jazz to rock ‘n’ roll, said Mary Lacanlale, an assistant professor of AsianPacif­ic Studies at California State University Dominguez Hills.

By the century’s end, karaoke was a national pastime. Filipino performers — with an uncanny ability to imitate Western music legends — became a mainstay in the nightclubs of emerging entre pots throughout Asia and the Persian Gulf. Dubai drew legions of Filipino cover bands to fuel its rapid transforma­tion froma desert pearling port into regional party capital.

“Our music builds Dubai’s reputation as a place that transcends political, racial and geographic­al divides,” said Paul Cortes, the Philippine consul general in Dubai, who also happens to be a singer.

An uncertain fate now awaits the musicians, plucked from impoverish­ed

provinces towork in smoky lounges and hotel bars overseas.

“Agents promise you heaven and give you hell,” said AJ Zacarias, a singerkeyb­oardist and president of the UAE’s Filipino Bands Alliance, an advocacy group. “We’re some of the world’s most sought-after artists, and they treat us like garbage here.”

British vocalists can earn close to what Filipinos make in a month, Zacarias said. Managers reserve “the good hotel suites” for traveling Indian dancers, while Filipinos are often packed eight to a room in unsanitary accommodat­ions, he added.

“It’s unfortunat­ely the reality of the market. It’s cheaper to hire a band from the Philippine­s,” said Ricardo Trimillos, expert in Asian performanc­e at the University of Hawaii.

When clubs closed in Dubai, dozens of Filipino musicians living in dormitorie­s

at the mercy of their employers were kicked out with nowhere to go.

According to the band associatio­n, 70% never received their promised gratuity to buy food and other basics. Some are selling their clothes to survive. Out-of-work dancers, like 33-year-old Catherine Gallano, have taken to livestream­ing their routines — gyrating, backflippi­ng and blowing kisses to followers who send them money.

The UAE’s Filipino Bands Alliance said some 80% of Filipino artists have had their visas canceled by their employers, a consequenc­e of the UAE’s “kafala” labor system that links expatriate­s’ residency to their jobs.

For the millions of lowpaid migrant workers from Asia, Africa and elsewhere that have built up the UAE as a hub of the global economy, the virus has magnified decades-old abuses

like wage theft, delayed salaries and dire living conditions, saidHiba Zayadin, a Gulf researcher at Human Rights Watch. That’s especially true for domestic laborers, sheadded— another precarious job that Filipinos dominate.

When the virus struck in March, Jhune Neri, a 38year-old singer and standup comedian, was trapped — literally. As a “public health precaution,” he said, his manager bolted all the doors and shut down the elevator of his crowded dormitory, locking the 11 performers inside for months. Living off just weekly deliveries of rice and red sauce, the bands pressed on, cranking out renditions of Whitney Houston’s hits.

“I was thinking, at least I’m still singing, at least still I’m alive,” Neri said.

Weeks later, hewas jolted awake by the landlord cutting the electricit­y and evicting everyone. He’s still determined to make it in

Dubai, though he said most of his friends have “given up hope” and gone home.

But quitting the city isn’t so simple. Like thousands of other Filipinos, Rommel Cuison, a 30-year-old guitarist at a hotel bar, has languished for months on a repatriati­on waiting list, his employer unable to pay his way and the Philippine­s unable to quarantine masses of returnees. When Cuison’s cash-strapped club brought back only solo singers from lockdown, he sold his cherished guitar to afford food.

For performers fortunate enough to have a gig these days, Dubai’s newly resumed music scene looks very different. Hotels struggle to fill rooms. Partygoers are dwindling as the pandemic hits everyone in their pocketbook­s. Undercover health inspectors patrol clubs and threaten $13,600 fines for violations. Nomore reveling into the wee hours — the speakers switch off at 1 a.m.

Marino Raboy, a rock singer in Dubai’s workingcla­ss district of Deira, said his club feelsdesol­ate. Some nights, he performs only for the hostesses lined up at the bar waiting to serve pitchers ofHeineken.

Dubai’s live shows and big convention­s, including its Expo 2020, have been pushed back. S&P Global, a ratings agency, predicts the city-state’s economy will shrink 11% this year, recovering only by 2023.

Roman, with a voice like Journey’s former frontman Steve Perry, said the new realitymea­ns fewer tips and meager pay— not enough to cover the bills for his aging mother and four kids in the Philippine­s.

Still, he feels he has “no choice” but to hope.

“This is theworst time of my life,” he said. “I have to believe at some point it will end.”

 ?? KAMRAN JEBREILI/AP ?? The Filipino show bands that long have animated Dubai’s storied nightlife are being disproport­ionately squeezed.
KAMRAN JEBREILI/AP The Filipino show bands that long have animated Dubai’s storied nightlife are being disproport­ionately squeezed.

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