Philippine Daily Inquirer

Musicians sing their way out of poverty

- AFP

ON A MOCK-UP stage in a local music studio, a single mother, Joanna Talibong, is singing for her life. The former church choir member is nervous, struggling to stay in key through more than a dozen takes of a syrupy Olivia Newton-John ballad, “Suddenly.”

If she and her keyboard-playing friend, Jason Panggoy, get their video demo right, they stand a chance of securing a series of gigs in South Korea that may enable them to start a long journey out of crushing poverty.

“I did not finish college, so I don’t have many job options … overseas I can earn a lot more,” Talibong, a carpenter’s daughter, says during a break from singing at the studio in a

rundown quarter of Metro Manila.

Roughly 9 million Filipinos, or 10 percent of the population, work overseas because there are so few job opportunit­ies in their poor country.

While many overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) toil as largely anonymous maids, sailors, constructi­on workers and laborers, tens of thousands also stand under spotlights entertaini­ng crowds as singers and musicians.

From high-class hotel bars in the Middle East to Las Vegas casinos, ex-pat pubs in Asia and luxury cruise liners sailing the Caribbean, Filipinos are often found performing near-perfect cover versions of almost any music genre.

Talibong is desperate to join the OFWs, or she will be forced back to a bar in a small northern Philippine city where for the past three months, she and Panggoy have played to tobacco traders and traveling salesmen for P150 ($ 3.50) a night.

Adding to her problems is her 9-monthold son, who has a clubbed foot and lives with his grandparen­ts while Talibong pursues her musical career.

Singer’s priority

A talent manager has lined up a sixmonth booking for Talibong and Panggoy at bars in South Korea that would pay them $800 a month each.

The aspiring singer knows exactly where her first paychecks would be spent.

“My priority is an operation for my son’s clubbed foot. That’s really my goal. That’s what’s pushing me to work really hard,” says Talibong, who just turned 21.

But first, the duo’s demo tape—which includes Taylor Swift and Matchbox 20 numbers—must pass muster with the artist review board in Seoul, a process that takes about a month.

The duo’s manager, Wilma Ipil, who has been sending an average of two bands to South Korea every month since 2008, concedes Talibong and Panggoy may not get the gig amid growing competitio­n from other Filipino talents trying to make it overseas.

“Previously, even inexperien­ced musicians got hired,” says Ipil, who sang in Hong Kong, Thailand and China herself before going into band management.

“But now, with the wealth of talent available, promoters have become more discrimina­ting,” she adds.

Enormous demand

Neverthele­ss, the demand for Filipino performers overseas is enormous, according to Jackson Gan, the head of the music studio where Talibong is recording her demo.

“Our only competitio­n is ourselves. The whole world knows that if you have a low budget but need quality, you get Filipino talent,” says Gan, who also acts as an agent for other export acts.

Gan says between 25,000 and 30,000 Filipino musicians and singers play in 3,000 clubs, hotels, cruise ships and restaurant­s around the world at any one time. The pay generally ranges from $ 800 to $ 1,500 a month, according to Gan.

He says even Malaysian, Indonesian, Australian and Chinese bands tend to recruit Filipino lead singers.

Part of local culture

Gan attributes the success of Filipino performers overseas to the deep roles that music and dance have in local culture.

Singing contests are often the highlights of village fairs and beauty contests, while song and dance are a staple of the most popular national television game shows.

Karaoke is one of the country’s most loved forms of entertainm­ent, with guests at weddings and birthday parties expected to be able to belt out songs behind a microphone to entertain their hosts.

It is also a mainstay at bars, restaurant­s and shopping centers.

“Some of my singers were discovered at karaoke joints,” says Gan, a 20-year veteran of the business, whose scouting regimen sees him serving as judge at singing contests in remote villages across the country.

Not just plain singing

Gan says local musicians are also well known for their warm audience rapport, a reflection of a general easygoing nature for which Filipinos are famous.

“That is a very important part of the music. It’s not just plain singing,” he says.

But Gan says most performers have a short shelf life overseas, particular­ly the female lead singers who often have to end their foreign sojourns when they have babies or for other family reasons.

And although many can copy perfectly the world’s most popular songs, few band members will ever get a recording contract.

Success stories

But there are some inspiratio­nal success stories for Filipino musicians who continue to dream of making it big.

The most famous is Arnel Pineda, who for many years fronted Filipino bands in Manila bars and in Hong Kong.

His big break came in 2007 when members of a US rock group, Journey, were looking for a new lead singer and saw clips of him singing the band’s songs on YouTube.

Pineda was hired soon after an audition in the United States, and his first album fronting the band debuted in the Top 10 of the American Billboard Charts. Pineda and Journey continue to perform at sold- out concerts around the world.

 ?? RICARDO RAGUINI / CONTRIBUTO­R ?? INJURED Herman Balmores, one of the fishermen rescued after a Chinese ship rammed their boat off Bolinao, Pangasinan, rests at the hospital in Vigan City.
RICARDO RAGUINI / CONTRIBUTO­R INJURED Herman Balmores, one of the fishermen rescued after a Chinese ship rammed their boat off Bolinao, Pangasinan, rests at the hospital in Vigan City.
 ??  ??
 ?? REHEARSAL Joanna Talibong, a single mother singing for her life, practices on a mock-up stage in a music studio as she and Jason Panggoy (center) are coached by a music director.
AFP ??
REHEARSAL Joanna Talibong, a single mother singing for her life, practices on a mock-up stage in a music studio as she and Jason Panggoy (center) are coached by a music director. AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines