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The anatomy of a love song

From the kundiman to the contempora­ry hugot, what makes a good Filipino love song?

- by Giselle Barrientos

“Uso pa ba ang harana

The opening lines of the Parokya ni Edgar song betrays where the serenade stands in the modern age. The harana seems silly, outdated. Gimmicky, even. “Sino ba ’tong mukhang gago frontman Chito Miranda sings, and one could already imagine a scene playing out: A nervewrack­ed man looking up at an expectant Maria barong Tagalog as his singing echoes through an empty street, his voice full of heartfelt sincerity, if quite off-key.

Filipinos are so enamored with expression­s of love that we see traces of our romantic nature peppered throughout our culture. Manifestat­ions like the harana are straightfo­rward, but romance is also found in the minutia of our vocabulary, with words like “torpe” or “kilig”— feelings that have no equivalent in the English language but are so commonplac­e they are seared into our collective consciousn­ess and experience­s. Our predilecti­on for romance spills out far beyond of local dialects and languages. “Pag-irog” is

pamalsinta in Pampanga, gugma in Cebu, amor in Zamboanga, pagkamoot in Bicol, and chadaw in Batanes. Even though geography separates us, love still is our common denominato­r.

So what makes a certain love song a

The kundiman was a cultural phenomenon that encapsulat­ed the infatuatio­n people felt back then—the kind of love that was grand and sweeping, one that moved you to tears. “Kung sakali ma’t salat / sa yama’t pangarap / may isang sumpang wagas / ang aking paglingap,” sang Sylvia la Torre in a 1952 rendition of “Pakiusap.”

It is a desperate, pleading song about a person’s willingnes­s to throw entire lifetimes away for the chance of holding the hand of their beloved. “Pakiusap ko sa’yo / kaawaan mo ako.” The music swells with violins as the singer climbs to an opera singer cueing the red velvet curtains to close and the applause to ring it out. It’s a slow and painfully doting submission to love, brimming with a do-or-die energy.

Following this was the iconic era of Manila Sound that planted the fundamenta­l roots of Filipino pop as we now know it. It was pioneered by the likes of Ryan Cayabyab and Rey Valera, and was dominated by a more down-to-earth and progressiv­ely playful approach to romance. Archaic Tagalog words gave way to more casual slang, and pop culture references found a niche within the traditiona­list form of ballads.

Rey Valera’s “Ako si Superman” is a rising proclamati­on of devotion. He feels almost superhuman, he sings, when he is with his love. Its recognizab­le hook is kept in time with a hi-hat against its 4/4 beat, while harmonies

nestled in Valera’s vocals. Cinderella’s “T.L. Ako

Sa’yo.” features colloquial abbreviati­ons such “T.L.,” which stands for “true love.” The record’s standout element is Cinderella’s airy vocals that elicit a gentle wistfulnes­s—a complete 180-degree turn from the heavy, operatic singing style that prevailed in the previous era of kundiman.

The era of Manila Sound was a catalyst for experiment­ation with foreign styles and breeding ground of formulaic songwritin­g. In an interview with The Guidon, APO Hiking Society’s of American music: “Everybody wanted to be called ‘ The Elvis of the Philippine­s,’ because [it was easy to] sound like Elvis,” he said. The out the secret sauce, because their songwritin­g worked—and with tremendous success. Bands like APO Hiking Society and Hotdog went on to become a mainstay in the OPM hall of fame, and their creations comprised the roster of classics in Filipino music.

Today, the key to a hit love song isn’t the same as an Elvis Presley hit. We’re living in entirely different contexts, and we can choose what to make out of the experience­s we have. This freedom, brought about by increasing­ly accessible tools and a boundless amount of inspiratio­n, keeps birthing new pockets in genre faster than we can label them. The internet age post-somethings of the love song formulas that can before it.

If we throw the formulas of the past out the window, what, then, makes the love songs of

The musicians who might know the answer are the music artisans of today—the ones who understand that achieving longevity will require a more thoughtful approach in the newage renaissanc­e of the love song. “Mastery is important,” says Armi Millare. The Up Dharma Down frontwoman, arguably on top of the list where contempora­ry pop is concerned, has penned songs for the lovelorn (“Oo,” “Sana,”

“Tadhana their way to listeners’ playlists for more than a decade already—no small feat, given that tons upon tons of new content is fed to the 21st century audience. “If we get that stuff right, then of a generation, and that’s a great contributi­on to society that nobody can take away from a craftsman,” she says.

Contempora­ry pop love songs are given form and arrangemen­t. Structure is always a challenge for me,” says Coeli. Maybe that’s why

To dissect and deconstruc­t the anatomy of a modern love song, is to understand its songwriter.

her music works. She, as a writer, may wrestle with a certain mold, but it continues to come out unbridled and unapologet­ically her.

UDD’s writing style often steps out of the familiar Manila Sound formulatio­n as well, and so it’s interestin­g to note how their music is so well-received in the mainstream. “Paalis at pabalik / May baong yakap at suklian ng halik / Magpapaala­m at magsisisi / Habang papiglas

ka ako sa‘yo ay tatabi,” goes their 2006 song “Indak the mold of a garden-variety pop song. Sonically, the song registers like a push and pull, much like its narrative. The instrument­al’s rhythm listener to move in sync with its palpable inertia. It feels almost as if UDD writes from their own world, but instead of abandoning their songs’ intricacie­s for simpler tunes, people follow suit like orbits.

UDD is one of the music groups that sounded the foghorn for a new pop landscape. As they had shown, there was no more need to pander to factory-like standards to gain a following. In turn, one could also assume that it is the listeners who have evolved to be more accepting of something that’s a little different.

Different, in contrast to the two extremes of the dramatics of kundiman and the gimmicks of Manila Sound, can be something as simple as sincerity—but at a gut-wrenching level, of found its audience with the mainstream in the music channel Myx was saturated with records from the likes of Kitchie Nadal and Hale. Looking back at songs like “Same Ground” and “The Day You Said Good Night,” the given structure of a pop song was there, but the words carried with it a severe dose of heartache.

This transparen­t vulnerabil­ity has carried onto current music. “My music is raw and honest,” says Coeli when asked to describe her times within myself. There’s always a need for me to let it out.” This kind of soul-baring seems to mark the recent crop of indie folk acts: Ethereal yet intimate, but never abrasive— like a fresh, green pocket of humanity that is protected from, or maybe stays curiously naive about, the harsher realities in the world.

Argee Guerrero, the mind behind solo reached sincerity to a breaking point. “It was up breaking down during the songwritin­g and the recording for the demos,” he says about his experience writing “Pity Party” and “Before You.” my emotions,” says Coeli. Vulnerabil­ity seems to be a price paid by today’s songwriter­s.

It’s a delicate balance to strike, honesty and songs to write about are situations I cannot personally relate to, or songs I can relate to too much.” Honed by years of experience, she has the skill of a veteran. Younger songwriter­s like Coeli are still on their way to acquiring this. “I’m currently learning to know when to step into [being in touch with my emotions] and when to step out. It’s not healthy to always be out of control.” Argee’s tactic is to detach his lyrics from particular details. “The hardest part about

songwritin­g,” he muses, “is trying to hide certain as not to disclose whom I’m writing about.”

Sincerity, to the point of pushing personal boundaries, reveals itself as the common thread. Anything less than the god-honest truth can evidently be sniffed out. “’ Yung ibang mga ‘hugot’ parang wala namang pinaghuhug­utan,” observes Shirebound and Busking’s Iego Tan, who writes the way a poet would write a on the power of its words, in true poetic fashion. “Alamat lang ba ang pahinga ng dalawang puyat sa / Pira-pirasong mga bugtong, nagtatanon­g / Sagot ay ’di mahalaga / sapat na sa ’king nariyan ka.” The melody cradles each verse as Iego performs the song with the help of a lone piano. “Paumanhin, paumanhin, salat sa kasanayang

linawin.” The lyrics sound almost like a secret whispered to a lover under the sheets, and yet here it is, out in the open for all to hear. And we eat it all up.

Maybe in a climate where the truth is so often sanitized, selectivel­y presented Technology can be so devoid of soul at times. These screens feel cold to the touch, and so we long for a raw piece of humanity. To dissect and deconstruc­t the anatomy of a modern love song is to understand its songwriter, which might be why we’re so drawn to understand their stories.

It is an elusive authentici­ty, one that allows us to navigate our own internal turmoil. No wonder then, that while we clutch closely our unsorted feelings, we willingly sway to these songs in time.

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