Thursday, April 24, 2008

Ramiele Malubay: Always the Idol

Ramiele Malubay may have bowed out a little early as a contender on the TV series American Idol, but to her fans at Goldilocks Corporation, the 20-year-old singer from Florida was already a Filipino-American idol long before she even landed a spot on the show’s top ten and eventually got eliminated soon after.

Last Tuesday, April 22, during a surprise visit to Goldilocks’ corporate office and production plant in Santa Fe Springs, Ramiele further endeared herself to the company’s employees when she personally thanked everyone for all the support and votes she received while competing on the show.

For more than two hours, Ramiele accommodated anyone and everyone who wanted to be photographed with her, patiently waiting as everyone made a mad scramble for the color printers so she could autograph their photos with her. She also chitchatted with employees while sharing their lunch of Filipino food, gushing at the assortment of freshly-baked pastries that employees kept bringing out for her straight from the plant’s ovens.

“I don’t think I could have reached half of where I got on the show without all your support,” Ramiele told Goldilocks Director for Operations Menard Leelin. Ramiele also took the opportunity to thank everyone, both in the U.S and the Philippines, who voted for her and effectively sustained her run as one of the show’s top contenders.

Accompanied by an entourage that included her uncle Lito Batino and a coterie of cousins from California, Florida and Canada, Ramiele also met privately with Goldilocks executives Mendrei and Cecile Leelin. The Leelins are well-known for producing hit concerts featuring Lani Misachucha, Society of Seven, Martin Nievera, former American Idol contestant Jasmine Trias and other famous Filipino entertainers.

“It is our goal to help and support Filipino artists and entertainers,” Mendrei Leelin told Ramiele. “Goldilocks wholeheartedly supported you and will continue to support you because we are all very proud of your accomplishments and because you take pride in your heritage as a Filipino. The mere fact that you were able to land in the top ten speaks volumes about your talent and potential. By itself, it is already a remarkable achievement. You have shown the whole world what Filipinos are capable of.”

Through the Leelins, Ramiele was able to contact her own idol, Filipino entertainer Lani Misalucha, whom she has been calling regularly for advice since her elimination from the show. Lani Misalucha, also known as Asia’s Nightingale, was recently named Best Singer during 27th annual Best of Las Vegas poll conducted by The Las Vegas Review-Journal. “Ate Lani is now giving me tips and helping me pick songs for the tour. I’m so grateful to her for that” Ramiele said.

According to Ramiele, she intends to pursue a career as a professional singer and possibly as an actor. She has had some offers, she said, but she is cautiously weighing all her options, including the possibility of holding concerts and making guest appearances in the Philippines after the American Idol Tour of some 50 cities this summer. As one of the show’s top ten contestants, Ramiele is bound by her contract to join the tour from July to September, pushing her plans to travel to the Philippines for the latter part of this year.

Ramiele, who said she fronted for Kuh Ledesma and Martin Nievera during their concerts in Florida several years ago, is determined “to go to the Philippines soon so they won’t forget about me.” “I don’t think Kuh or Martin would even remember who I am,” she said humbly.

Aside from the timeline, Ramiele also said she is still restricted from giving TV interviews and performing publicly unless sanctioned by American Idol producers.

Meanwhile, the Saudi-born singer says she has temporarily settled in her uncle’s house in Fullerton. Asked if she still plans to move in with former co-contestant Danny Noriega, Ramiele said tersely, “Not gonna happen.” Any boyfriend right now? “No,” she answered without hesitation.

Life as a nursing student in Florida now seems eons away for Ramiele, who will turn 21 on September 6 while on tour with the show. “I’ll try to go back to study again, but not right now,” she shrugs as her voice trails off. Asked how her parents were doing, Ramiele said jokingly, “They’re still alive.”

Businessman Roger Malubay and his wife Alice, a registered nurse, had placed their lives and work on hold while their daughter competed on the show, alternating with one another as they tirelessly commuted every week between Florida and Los Angeles to chaperone Ramiele and provide emotional support. They have a younger daughter whom they describe as being also musically inclined but more shy than Ramiele .

“I’m staying here in L.A. because this is where everything’s happening,” Ramiele said. In June when rehearsals start for the tour, she said she will have to move back to the American Idol apartment along with the other contestants.

Ramiele said she misses all her friends on the show, especially her former roommate Syesha Mercado, also of Florida, with whom she formed a special bond. Her best friend however, is David Cook who still stays in touch. “We text each other all the time. I always text him after he performs on the show and I always tell him he’s doing really well. He is doing really well. I think he’ll win,” Ramiele said.

“People still think I’m making things up when I say that we (the contestants) were all really close on the show. But it’s true. We were all such good friends. We still are, and I can’t wait to be with them again when we go on tour,” Ramiele said.

Gary V: Rebirth at 25


There's more than just Gary V's boyish good looks on the cover of his newest album 'Rebirth'. Just released under Universal Records, it is the 25th in a remarkable 25-year career the man known as Mr. Pure Energy celebrates this year.

The agelessness comes from a clarity of purpose that rings like a pure note. While his electrifying live performances dare viewers to remain stuck to their seats or be unmoved by the grace of the music he creates, he remains solidly focused on inspiring others to be the better person they never realized they could be.

"I appreciate life more because of your work, and how inspiring it is," wrote Eric Sembrano on the message board of Gary's website (www.garyv.com). Eric, a registered nurse from Los Angeles, California, mused, "How easily we forget that there are other people that have worse problems than ours. Others complain about relationships, some complain about financial hardships, and others are just not satisfied with their lives. In reality, I have patients who can't even scratch their noses; are bedridden and just don't have the quality of life that most people have. I just want to thank you for all the humanitarian work that you've done, you bring so much joy and happiness to everyone and that is the greatest gift that you have."

For his part, Rainier Julius of Cebu confessed, "I always remember your message, 'Sometimes we are hit in the highest peak and the deepest valleys of our life, but don't forget that those valleys are needed to appreciate the great heights of that life.' Dyan ko hinuhugot ang lakas ko pag may problema ako."

Gary's new album, 'Rebirth' explores new depths of the wellspring that sustains him and the audience he has always held in high esteem. It has 15 tracks consisting of interpretations of some of Gary's favorite and most meaningful songs like Mandy Moore's "Only Hope," a Michael English song originally recorded by Lea Salonga called "Mary Did You Know," and his perennial show-stopping version of the classics "Lean on Me" and "Stand by Me" as well as some of the most emotive songs including "He Won't Let Go," and "When I Hear You Call," both instant classics.

"Rebirth is not about trends but rather it hopes to cater to the rhythms and beats, harmonies and melodies played out in real life, filtered by emotions nestled in the human heart," Gary writes in the liner notes.

Even as 'Rebirth' soars with the evocative, it also rips out the beats that make every Gary album jump for joy. In fact, son Gabriel's remix of "Shout for Joy" is both exhilarating and propulsive and gives props to Michael Jackson's "Wanna Be Starting Something." The self-penned "Ohhh" is old school funk that has Gary flawlessly scatting midway.

Fittingly, 'Rebirth,' which opens with "Only Hope," ends with a stripped-down acoustic version of the same track.

Although fans had a sneak peek of 'Rebirth' while it was still in the works via pod casts on Gary's website, the full album was launched on April 13 on 'ASAP 08,' ABS-CBN's Sunday noontime variety show.

Fans abroad will have their taste of 'Rebirth' as Gary leaves for the first leg of his 2008 World Tour to coincide with his Silver Anniversary. He is scheduled for spectacular shows on June 7, at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles; June 13 at the Stockton Arena in Stockton, and June 15 at the Comcast Arena in Seattle Washington. Gary's 25th Anniversary American tour is made possible by State Farm Insurance, Tribune USA, Alas Cargo, Home Sweet Home Improvement Inc., PH Care, Mami King, SM Realtors, Smart Pinoy and Western Union. B&B Management, All Access Promotions and Kewlit Co Productions are the forces that proudly stand behind Gary's milestone celebrations at the prestigious venues. Gary will perform with sons Paolo and Gabriel together with Jason and Joshua Zamora and Mico Aytona, his band Powerplay and musical director Mon Faustino, and very special guest Martin Nievera. For tickets call toll free: 1(888) 937-1998 or log on to www.AllAccessConcerts.com.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Distinctly Side A

February 2007

By Jackie Regala

Side A is a group of multi-awarded and certified platinum recording artists. The band is considered the most durable in the Philippines today and continues to be an innovative musical force in the industry.

They’ve reaped gold and platinum awards and as the Philippines’ premiere band, has inspired a lot of up and coming groups. In the course of their meterological rise to stardom, band members have helped shape the course of the music scene in the country today.

Known for their romantic ballads and sold-out live performances, the group never stopped reinventing itself. Its members have worked hard to give their very best in both recordings and live concerts.

Formed in 1985 and the group started playing at the Calesa Bar from 1986 to 1989.

Although they have achieved commercial success with their WHITE (Hold On, 1991) and BLUE (Tuloy Pa Rin Ako, 1992) Albums, it was in 1987 that their very first recorded song (Eva Marie by Joey Benin) was played in the airwaves and became a turntable hit and paved the way for the band’s self-titled album. But their critical success came largely as a result of the release of “Forevermore” as a CD single, again written by the band’s bassist Joey Benin. The song has won them numerous awards and accolades including Song of the Year award in the prestihous 8th annual (1995) Awit Awards. It was also during the same year that they packed the Cuneta Astrodome for their 10th Anniversary Concert. A live recording of that concert has reached phenomenal sales of 8x platinum to date.

After numerous sold out major concerts and twelve (12) albums, in 1998 Side A decided to record OPM hits (Ating Awitin) from different notable composers of the country including works of national artist Lucio San Pedro (Ugoy ng Duyan) and George Canseco (Kailanagn Kita) as their tribute to the masters of original Pilipino music. Their own interpretation of the classic Filipino compositions have earned them the respect of their peers.

The vocal harmony and a positive outlook in their lyrics instantly gave them a distinct sound that set them apart from other groups.

Until now, Side A continues to dominate the club scene with SRO audiences. They continue to perform in sold-out concerts among Filipino communities in the US, Canada, Japan, UK, Untited Arab Emirates and Southeast Asia.

Side A members are Joey Generoso, lead vocalist; Joey Benin, lead guitarist; Naldy Gonzales, music director and keyboardist; Ernie Severino, drummer and its new addition, Lee Von Cailiao, bass guitarist.

Lea Salonga: 'Dakilang Ina'

February 2007


By Ricky Lo

“I’m not in a normal profession but I’m normal in it,” says Lea Salonga, who’s turning 36 on Feb. 22 (she’s a Boar and this is her year), in an exclusive Conversation last Friday in connection with the launch of her latest album, Inspired (produced by her brother Gerard and released by Sony BMG).

Yes, indeed, normal – if that means keeping a happy balance between being wife (to Robert “Rob” Chien) and mother to Nicole Beverly (fondly called Nic for short, turning a year older on May 16) and a demanding career that brings her around the world.

On her birthday, Lea will fly to New York to start rehearsals for Les Miz in which she’s playing Fantine whom she describes as “ang dakilang ina ni Cosette,” so dakila (noble) that she would do anything to keep body and soul for her and her daughter, never mind if she turns prostitute.

It’s Lea’s second outing with Les Miz. In 1993, she played Eponine in the same long-running musical. What’s different is that Lea has become a mother since then, so she can tackle the Fantine character straight from the heart. She did play a mother in Miss Saigon (as Kim, the role she originated in London’s West End in 1989) but, according to Lea, “I didn’t really know how being a mom was like back then.”

Motherhood has radically changed Lea’s outlook in life. You can sense it in the way she sings (“More feeling,” she admitted) the 12 selections on Inspired, all of which are her personal favorites (including a few originals exclusively written for her, such as To Hear You Say by Jim Brickman, Do You Hear It by Lani Macaraeg and Two Words, her official wedding song, by Louie Ocampo).

“She’s the sunshine of my life,” she said of Nic.

Lea will be in New York practically the whole year, coming back early next year to prepare for the Asian tour of Cinderella. Out there, she’ll have her hands full – and those of her mom, Ligaya Salonga, and a nanny – playing mother Cosette on stage and to Nic in real life.

How has motherhood changed your perspective as a singer?

“Hmmmm. I don’t know if motherhood has necessarily changed any perspective but emotions are deeper because there’s a certain kind of love that no one knows even exists until a child comes. It’s something you can only imagine, something you can think about, it’s something that you know isn’t there until your child arrives. And then you know love like you’ve never known love before. It’s amazing and incredible! Incredibly special. If ever, my perspective in life has changed in that my daughter is far more important than a lot of things in the world – more important than my career, more important than a show that I could ever do. Her comfort and her happiness, just her and everything about her, are more important than anything and anyone.”

Now you know why mothers are so protective of their children.

“My mom kept telling me before I became a mother, ‘Iha, you won’t understand until you have a child of your own. You won’t know how it feels like until you have one.’ Blah, blah, blah, blah! Yes, now I know. When I see Nicole in pain, when I see her in any discomfort, when she cries, when she’s happy, when she’s whatever, I feel just...different. It’s bigger than anything I’ve ever experienced.”

Different from how you felt when you played a mom in Miss Saigon?

“Different! I didn’t understand it because I wasn’t a mother yet at that time. I would probably have been more protective of that little boy than I ever was but then I could only imagine how it was to be a mother. Being a mother is something that no one is ever really prepared for. It’s difficult but it’s the kind of difficult that feels good. Mahirap na masarap. It’s unlike anything else.”

Are you bringing up Nic the way you (and Gerard) were brought up by your mom?

“No. She wins; she’ll always win! I’m probably more laid-back than she is. My mom is the type of mother na hindi puede madapuan ng langaw ang anak, hindi puede hipuin ang braso. You know, magpa-panic, ‘Ang balat, ang balat!’ Things like that. I’m different. If Nic falls and gets hurt, it’s okay! Nic has actually gotten hurt to a point that she was crying, crying, crying! It wasn’t a fun day. At that moment, there was nothing more important than comforting her.”

So Nic and Rob are going with you to New York.


“Yes, they are, along with my mom, We might bring along a yaya. We’re leaving on Feb. 22 which happens to be my (36th) birthday. I’m gonna have a long birthday because when we arrive in New York, it’s still Feb. 22. And then Rob will come back after two weeks and go back maybe after two months. It will be a tight fit as far as sleeping arrangement is concerned but it’s better to have several hands on deck for the baby. You see, I’ll be working every night.”

How soon will you start rehearsals for Les Miz? And how soon will it open?

“My rehearsals will begin the day after I arrive and the show will open on March 6. It runs, at the very least, until summer. But if it’s extended, and I hope it would be, it might be until October. I’m staying for Thanksgiving with Rob’s family and I spend Christmas na there. But I’ll be back for the New Year.”

I heard that you’re going on an Asian tour with Cinderella.

“That will begin in the second half of 2008.”

Let’s talk about your new album. Why Inspired as the title?

“I’m responsible for the title. One day, the word ‘inspiration’ just entered my mind and I said, ‘Oh, that’s a nice title. Inspired.’ In one way or another, all of us who worked on the album was inspired. I was inspired by listening to different singers and vocal styles using different kinds of music...experiences...good days, bad days. My brother was inspired by listening to the orchestrations and music of different orchestrators, and letting it inform how he in turn would do his own interpretations.”

Are the songs on the album your personal choices?

“It’s a collaboration. If we felt that the song was right for the album, we included it. If It wasn’t, we didn’t include it. There’s one song, Sing, which I’m recording for the second time. The first time I recorded it, I was around 10 or 11. The arrangement and the vocals were very different. On this album, it’s a more adult arrangement, a more adult interpretation, very relaxed and very laid-back.”


So nobody and nothing, not even motherhood, can stop you from singing.


“I love to sing. It’s a gift from God, something to be shared and something that I must be generous with. God gave it to me and I have to give it back to Him. But while I still have it, I have to use it as best as I can, to reach as many people as I can, to hopefully inspire as many people as I can. I can’t be and I shouldn’t be stingy with it.”

You didn’t dream of becoming anything else but a singer?

“I was gonna be a doctor. I was a Biology student at Ateneo. I was doing fine until the offer for Miss Saigon came. Obviously, even though I had ideas of what I wanted to be, God had other ideas. And He was very pro-active that I stayed on the path that He wanted me to follow. No regrets.”

Do you sing Nic to sleep?

“Yes, I do. I hum her to sleep. I sing whatever feels right at the moment. I rock her and she falls asleep right away.”

Isn’t Nic a cry baby?

“Right now, she’s teething so she’s not having an easy time of it. Her gums are swollen. She’s turning a year old on May 16. I think she’ll grow up like me.”

Can you give us an idea what the real Lea Salonga is like?

“You mean the ‘me’ behind the makeup? If you ask people really close to me, they’ll probably tell you that, yeah, I’m crazy, I’m funny, I’m very simple and down-to-earth, very simple and very normal. Mahilig din ako manlait ng tao.”

Really? Sample, please!

“No, no, no! I don’t want to hurt anybody’s feelings.” (Adding with a laugh) “I do it behind closed doors. Seriously now, I’m a perfectionist. I’m infinitely patient especially now that I have a child. I have throw-up on my clothes, just like every other mother. I can be quiet. I do get upset but very, very rarely, and only when it’s a pretty big deal. Otherwise, I’m very calm and very cool-headed. I scream and hurl profanity only when it’s worth it. It has to matter before I do.”

By the way, how do you and Rob plan to spend Valentine’s Day?

“Apart.” (Followed by laughter) “I will be in Cebu performing for a whole bunch of people. But it’s okay. We might celebrate before or after Valentine’s Day. It doesn’t matter. Maybe we’ll have dinner. It’s a good excuse to try a really nice restaurant.”

How did you celebrate your third wedding anniversary last Jan. 10?

“Very simply and very quietly. It wasn’t any big deal.”

Did your wedding mark the turning point in your life?

“No, it did not. The change really happened when the baby came, and not so much after Rob and I got married. I guess that the real adjustment started when the baby came. That’s when the world as we knew it was no longer the same. We have to sleep at a certain time, and so does Rob. Everything revolves around the baby, down to how loud the volume of the TV can be. Nicole rules the house; she influences every decision we make.”

Does Rob help in the baby chores?

“He changed diapers for a while, until the yaya took over.”

Are you still breastfeeding Nic?

“Yes, I am... for eight months now. I will do so for as long as I can. The baby is healthier that way.”

One hard question: Describe Lea Salonga in one word.

(Thinks long and hard) “I can’t do it; I couldn’t do it.” (Thinks longer and harder) “If you ask people really close to me, they’ll probably choose any of the following: Grounded, perfectionist, loving, level-headed...”

...and normal?

“You’re right. I’m not in a normal profession but I’m a normal person in it. Yes, just one word: Normal.”



Ricky Lo is entertainment editor of the Philippine-based Philippine Star. He also contributes to several Filipino-American publications. (E-mail reactions to rickylo@philstar.net.ph)

Watch out, Evita...Here comes 'Imelda'

February 2007

“Here Lies Love,” a soap opera/musical on the life of the Philippines' former first lady, premieres at Carnegie Hall in New York City



By Eric Gamalinda

The bizarre, legendary life of Imelda Marcos has always been a soap opera/musical waiting to be told. It wouldn’t have surprised anyone if Tim Rice decided to write an entire musical around her, a la Evita, whose life she emulated.

What’s surprising is that it was David Byrne who decided to pick up the story. And in that sense, one can say Imelda has been done a great honor.

Byrne, avant-garde frontrunner of the boundary-smashing Talking Heads, performed the sold-out US premiere of “Here Lies Love,” his 23-song take on the life of the Philippines former first lady, at Carnegie Hall in New York City last February 3. He himself performed most of the sings, accompanied on stage by Filipina singer Joan Almedilla, who sang the parts of Imelda, Ganda Suthivarakom as her maid, a rock band and a small orchestra.

Described by Byrne as “a disco opera” -- he said he drew inspiration from Imelda’s love for disco music and the disco-era New York club Studio 54 -- rather than a possible Broadway musical, “Here Lies Love” features songs co-written with British Deejay Norman Cook, known as Fatboy Slim. The narrative spans the life of Imelda, her youth, her time as a beauty queen, meeting and marrying Ferdinand Marcos, living at the height of power, and later in exile after People Power kicked them out of the Philippines in 1986.

Byrne describes the music as “house, techno, vaguely Latin.” The musical was designed to be taken on the road, although Byrne recently told Time Out magazine he would like to see the show put on at Studio 54 itself. The club has been made over into a theatre.
The project is not, said Byrne, “artistic license” nor “reportage,” referring to the Marcos couple as the “Jackie and Jack in the Philippines at the time” when the Marcoses were popular in the country.
The multimedia project took Byrne to the Philippines in late 2005, where he talked to practically everybody who had anything to say about Imelda, and which he recorded in his web site (http://journal.davidbyrne.com/). The show, still in development, was performed as a song cycle in Australia last year. Two comparative unknowns played the key roles: Dana Diaz-Tutaan as Imelda, and Ganda Suthivarakom (who also performed at Carnegie) as Estrella.

Byrne explained that the title song, “Here Lies Love,” was taken from what Mrs. Marcos wanted quoted on her tombstone. The story is largely told through the eyes of Estrella, her yaya for many years.

To his credit, Byrne didn’t fall into the trap of the Imelda stereotype. There’s no number here, for instance, about shoes. “In this case, as the material is all thematic, and it tells a story — of Imelda Marcos and Estrella, the woman who raised her — I might be excused for not playing the familiar favorites,” he wrote in his blog.

“It’s easy to fall into categories,” he said. The Imelda in “Here Lies Love” is a complex, human character, not the caricature that media had been fond of portraying (and, it might be added, that Imelda herself is fond of exploiting). He explained that the shoes were discovered after the Marcos family had fled the Philippines, which was not the period covered in his work.

“Of course things got out of hand,” he added. “But it’s not as simple, whatever, as people might think. Her story is the timeless story of power, politics, and psychological needs.”

According to the British paper The Guardian, who had been given a peek at Byrne’s private journal, the musical was conceived on May 12, 2005, when he wrote: “May 12 - Write opera about Imelda Marcos! Call Fatboy Slim.”

He told the paper: “Some years ago I read some books about the courts of people in power. They behave in an artificial, theatrical manner. They have rules that have nothing to do with the real world. Then I read about Imelda Marcos and her going to Studio 54, and converting the roof of the palace in Manila to a disco. I thought, ‘Maybe this is a way in for me, maybe that music is an expression of what having that kind of power feels like.’ Not that people in a club after a few hours of dancing go, ‘Off with his head!’ But there is this heady feeling, and there may be some connections there.”

Byrne spent weeks in 2005 cycling around Manila on his fold-up bicycle, interviewing both people who suffered under the Marcoses as well as ardent loyalists. Already, of course, “Here Lies Love” has met some criticism, mainly for its refusal to address the human rights abuses and murders committed by the conjugal dictatorship, and of course the absence of those notorious shoes.

“For me, the darker side of the excesses are, for the most part, a matter of record,” Byrne told the Guardian. “A lot of the audience are going to come with that knowledge already. What’s more of a challenge is to get inside the head of the person who was behind all of that, and understand what made them tick.”

Of his impressions of the Philippines, he wrote in his blog: “I hope to catch and absorb some whiff of the Philippine ethos, sensibility and awareness -- by osmosis -- and by conversation, too. I believe that politics is an expression of the landscape -- the streets, eroticism and hum-drum lives -- as much it is of backrooms, ideologies and legislature. Geography, religion, sex, weather, music, food -- these all contribute to a national policy and how it functions.”

Byrne, a critic of the Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq, also compares the Marcos myth-machinery to that of the current US President: “Though the Marcoses’ conflation of national mythology with their own lives and political strivings was blatant, it’s also pretty obvious in the staged contrivances and the managed press of the Bush administration, among others. The ‘story’ of the inevitable triumph of democracy the good (and messianic Christianity too) is a potent one for a certain audience, a grand story that the media goes along with, at least until recently. Manifest destiny, the march of progress, of civilization. Once a ‘story’ is ‘in place’, believed in, accepted, one need only supply the appropriate images and little anecdotes to make it seem self-fulfilling and real. Living ‘in’ a story is more satisfying than not.”

“Here Lies Love” is part of a series of avant-garde concerts Byrne is curating for Carnegie Hall. Byrne has received the Grammy and Golden Globe for his score for The Last Emperor, written with Ryuichi Sakamoto and Cong Su. He has collaborated with Brian Eno, their album My Life in the Bush of Ghosts being one of the seminal, trend-setting new music collaborations which first used sampling. He also created The Catherine Wheel with choreographer Twyla Tharp and The Knee Plays with theatre director Robert Wilson.



Eric Gamalinda is the author of My Sad Republic, the novel that won the Philippine Centennial award in 1998. His latest collection of poetry, Amigo Warfare, is due for release in Spring 2007. His web site can be found at http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeslrlq/gamalinda.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

GLoria Estefan: Still in excelsis


By Ricky Lo

There are singers who can captivate a community. There are vocalists whose sound can deeply penetrate your soul. There are entertainers who can mesmerize, enlighten and entertain, all in one breath.

That’s how Gloria Estefan of the (disbanded) Miami Sound Machine (led by her keyboardist husband Emilio Estefan) is described by the background material from SonyBMG which has just released Gloria’s latest album called The Essential Gloria Estefan. With more than 70 million in worldwide record sales, she’s also touted as “the most successful Latin crossover artist in the history of pop music.”

According to her biography, she was born Gloria Fajardo in 1957 (or 1958) in Havana, Cuba. Her mother was a schoolteacher. Her father, Jose Manuel Fajardo, was a bodyguard to President Fulgencio Batista when Gloria was born. Soon, Fidel Castro and others overthrew Batista and installed a Communist government in Cuba. The Fajardo family fled to the US where Fajardo was recruited by the CIA into a band of anti-Castro Cubans sent to invade Cuba.

The invasion took place on April 17, l961, at the Bay of Pigs. It failed, and Fajardo was taken prisoner. After President John F. Kennedy won the release of the prisoners, Fajardo returned to the US and joined the army and served two years in the Vietnam War. His daughter Gloria grew up in Miami, Florida, where she started her phenomenal career.

The rest is history.

In 1990, Gloria suffered a broken vertebra in her back when the bus the Estefan family was in collided with a trailer on a snowy highway in Pennsylvania. After an extensive physical therapy, intense determination and the support of her family and fans, Gloria made what’s described as a miraculous comeback.

As a solo artist, Gloria continues to make musical history.

Conversations recently did an exclusive phone interview with Gloria. Here are excerpts:

The title of your new album is The Essential Gloria Estefan. What is the essential Gloria Estefan?

“Oh, that’s a good question because what I would consider essential may be different than what my record company and the fans might have in mind. But when you do a retrospective of 20 years like this (album) and realize that you have had so many hit singles, it’s really an honor.

There’s a couple of songs that I wrote, one is called Along Came You for my daughter Emily; and the other, Nayib’s Song (I Am Here For You) for my son. Both are in the ‘slow disc.’ I put them in even if they were not singles or hits because for me my being a mother is an essential part of who I am.”

Oh, that’s nice!

“What I also love about this album is that one disc is completely uptempo and dance, so you can put it on and have a party, or simply when you’re in the mood to dance; and the other disc consists of ballads, most of which I wrote. So it shows a lot about me as a writer. That’s, I think, why they call the album ‘essential’.”

How different is your music now from it was 20 years ago?

“Well, if you compare my album even as late as two years ago, I think as a writer I am much more at the forefront. I wrote all the lyrics and lots of the music on that album. It shows humor of the writer side of me. But I have evolved since then.

How do you reinvent yourself through the years?

“Well, fortunately, I am bilingual and I have really two cultures. So when you have that to draw on, you are able to write from one extreme to the other, or anywhere in-between. If you look at my discography, you will notice that one of my favorite albums is Gloria which is totally dance-oriented, with very sensual lyrics; and then there’s Mi Tierra which is totally roots-oriented and it really promoted our culture worldwide through music, and that’s important for me and also for people of Cuba to know that even though we were in exile and I grew up in the States, our culture and our music are very much a part of my life.”

How do you maintain your clean image, something not every artist can do?

“Well, you know, in the first place I’m a pretty private person. But I can assure you that I’m no saint by any means of the imagination. You know, we go to parties and we drink like any other people. But I think the key word is balance. I’ve been married (to keyboardist Emilio Estefan) for 28 years; we’ve been together for 30 years. I had my son when I was very young and my priority has always been my family. My husband has been very supportive. We live a very normal life, something which may be boring to some people. But it’s a great life! We travel a lot. My son is 26 and my daughter is 11. Family is the center of our lives. We try to stay out of the tabloids.”

Do you inject politics into your music?

“Well, not so much politics. A couple my songs have a social commentary, like Oye Mi Canto (Hear My Voice). I really can’t escape from politics because my father was a political prisoner in Cuba; he went to Vietnam. But I try to stay away from politics as much as possible.”

How does it feel to be declared persona non grata by your own country?

“Well, I’m proud of it. I was declared persona non grata not by the country but by a terrorist regime. But I know that Cubans love me and my music.”

You’ve been to the Philippines...

“...oh yes, I have. Three times. Filipinos are very similar to the Latinos. My hair and makeup guy is a Filipino. His name is Sydney Jamila. He’s wonderful. The nurse who took care of me when I had my accident was also a Filipino. I brought her home with me; she took care of me for two months. I love the Filipinos.”


Ricky Lo is the entertainment editor of the Manila-based Philippine Star and contributes to several Fil-Am publications.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Angel Locsin: For His Eyes Only

More than winning an acting award,
Angel Locsin’s fondest dream is to see her
78-year-old father get back the eyesight
he lost eight years ago.


By RICARDO F. LO



“I’ll do everything to make him see again,” said Angel who hasn’t lost hope even after doctors told her that the stem-cell treatment wouldn’t work in her father’s case. “I’ll never get tired trying. I’m working hard because I’m saving for my dad’s treatment.”

Ali Sotto, the mom of Angel’s boyfriend Mico Sotto, donated Mico’s eyes to a girl when Mico died. Why didn’t Angel ask for Mico’s eyes for her father?

“My dad’s case is different from the girl donee who had a problem with her cornea. My father lost his eyesight due to cataract. He’s also suffering from retina detachment. Up to now, wala pa yatang possible treatment for his ailment. But I never lose hope.”

Meanwhile, Angel acts as her father’s eyes, describing to him scene by scene when they’re watching her GMA teleserye Majika together. He follows the story by ear, memorizing the voices of the characters.

“My dad has a positive attitude. Even if he can’t see, he said he’s lucky that he can still feel the beauty of the world around him.”

Besides Majika, Angel is also busy shooting the movie TXT (Regal Films) with boyfriend Oyo Boy Sotto and Dennis Trillo (her Majika leading man).

She’s also a Commercial Princess endorsing, among others, Smart, Timex Watch (with Piolo Pascual), Eskinol, Avon, the new San Mig Coffee commercial called Dream (also with Piolo) and Head & Shoulders for which she and Dr. Pie Calayan and Fanny Serrano comprise TEAM H&S with a mission to rid Manila of dandruff the fastest time possible.

“I use Head & Shoulders because it has been tested to remove more dandruff in just one wash versus what other shampoos do in three washes,” insists Angel. “H&S products are certified by the Los Baños-based UP Biotech, a center for excellence in biotechnology and microbiology.”

Angel stands 5’5”, weighs 110 lbs., measures 34-25-35, and wears small-size T-shirts and size-7 shoes.

With your tight schedule, do you ever find time to relax?
“When I’m free, like today when the taping of Majika was packed up, I stay home and watch DVDs. Or catch up on sleep. It’s nice to wake up late when there’s no work.”

Sleep is a luxury with you, I’m sure. How much sleep do you normally get per night?
“Two to three hours.”

Doesn’t lack of sleep adversely affect your acting?
“It does – sometimes – especially when the shoot is continuous. Sometimes, I go blank and forget my lines during a ‘take.’ Otherwise, I get the script in advance and memorize my lines.”

What time do you usually go to sleep and wake up?
“When I have no taping or shooting, the earliest I go to sleep is 2 a.m. I think I’m insomniac. When my call time (for out-of-town location) is 8 a.m., I wake up at 5 o’clock so I can leave the house at 5:30.”

What’s the last thing that you do before you go to sleep?
“Pray. I ask God to help make my dad see again. I also thank God for all the blessings and for me not to hurt anybody, not even unknowingly.”

And the first thing that you do when you wake up?
“Do some stretching to perk me up, para maibalik ang ulirat ko dahil nawiwindang ako as soon as I wake up. And then I pray.”

What’s your favorite sleeping wear?
“Loose T-shirt.”

Do you follow a diet?
“I don’t. I should cut down on my carb intake but I don’t. I need carb because my scenes in Majika involve a lot of fighting. Very physical. Di ka puedeng lalamya-lamya (softie-softie). But when I feel that I’m gaining weight, I don’t take too much rice; I avoid sweets and salty foods.”

What’s your favorite food?
“Filipino food. Hipon, adobo, litson-kawali. But I don’t eat dinuguan. Or any fish with soup because it seems that the fish is alive and swimming. But fried or grilled fish is okay with me.”

What about vegetables and fruit?
“Before, I didn’t eat vegetables. But now I’m learning how to, starting with salads. I used to take out the vegetables in sinigang and nilaga.”

Oh, so you’re carnivorous.
“Sobra!”

Beef or pork?
“Any kind!”

How much liquid do you take every day?
“Water? I’m trying to drink more, that’s why I always carry a bottle of mineral water with me. I take more juices and coffee.”

Do you have time to work out?
“None. But I’ve already enrolled in a gym.”

But you’re into sports, aren’t you? You’re a swimmer, aren’t you?
“I used to compete in swimming. I want to resume diving so I can get a license. I’ve tried night-diving.”

How do you condition your body?
“At home, I do some stretching in the morning. Part of my conditioning is the rehearsals for my fight scenes.”

What part of your body do you think needs some improvement?
“My abs. I want them firmer. Naa-astig-an ako sa mga babaeng firm ang abs.”

Have you become more conscious of protecting your eyes since your father became blind?
“Yes, I am. Once I underwent laser treatment because my vision was becoming blurred. It turned out that, according to the doctor, my left eye was being shut off by my brain dahil hindi ko na nagagamit. The grade on my left eye was 750 and on the right eye only 50. The doctor told me to have my eyes checked twice a year; he reminded me to refrain from rubbing my eyes.”

What part of your body is most vulnerable?
“My head. I get a headache when I’m under stress. Sometimes, when I’m too tired, the muscles at the back of my (shin) harden (napupulikat). They said that I lack potassium and advised me to take more bananas.”

Name three women you think have nice bodies.
“Angela Velez (before). Aubrey Miles. And Zsa Zsa Padilla who looks good even at 40-plus. Sana I’ll have the same body when I am her age.”

And three men...
“Oyo Boy has a nice body. Dennis Trillo. And Wendell Ramos.”

Using only body language, how would you make a guy know that you admire him?
“I blush a bit and I steal glances at him.”

( E-mail reactions at rickylo@philstar.net.ph)

Alessandra de Rossi & Jeremy Marquez: First Time/Last Time

By RICKY LO

They realized that they really loved each other when they broke up last June. The cause: A third party (said to be Jennylyn Mercado). Jeremy Marquez, actor-son of Joey Marquez, had to court Alessandra “Alex” de Rossi all over again before she relented. Jeremy sealed their reconciliation with a 10-carat ring he gave Alessandra, promising never, never to do it again – that is, swap text sweet nothin’s with any other girl.

Alessandra admitted that Jeremy was her crush even at the time when she was going steady with Oyo Boy Sotto. “I even told Oyo, ‘Crush ko yan, type ko ‘yan!’ and Oyo was only amused.”

When they met in January last year during a Nivea event in Palawan, she was free and so was he. They instantly hit it off .

“I didn’t care about his past,” said Alessandra. “I was concerned about our future.”

Opposites do attract. She’s talkative and he’s quiet. She can be brutally frank while he’s reserved. She’s straight-forward while he’s secretive.

Asked what she likes about him, Alessandra said, “None!” She’s joking, of course! Then, she conceded, “His looks. Kung hindi siya guapo, friend na lang ang tingin ko sa kanya o kaya brother!”

“That’s what I like about her,” said Jeremy, “’yung ugali niya. Totoong tatoo siya! There’s never a dull moment with her.”

She’s not his first girlfriend and neither is he her first boyfriend. Only time will tell if they are each other’s last – lasting – sweethearts.

Come to think of it, what are the other “first times” and “last times” in the lives of the couple?
Stand by.

Cried Really Hard

Alessandra: The first time was when I was born. My mom told me that I cried really hard, as if I was protesting. The last time was two Sundays ago. Don’t ask me why. (Stealing a glance at Jeremy.)

Jeremy: The first time was when our family moved to Reno, Nevada, from Los Angeles. I was just a kid then. I was born in the Philippines but I migrated with my family to the US when I was four years old. I grew up in L.A. and I cried because I didn’t want to leave my friends behind. It was in Reno that I became a “bad boy,” so my parents brought me back to the Philippines. The last time I cried really hard was last month and I guess you know why.

Prayed Really Hard

Alessandra: The first time was when my grandmother was hospitalized for lung cancer, in Italy. She died soon after. The last time was also two Sundays ago. Don’t ask me why. (Stealing another glance at Jeremy.) Not because you cry doesn’t mean it’s about love. I just sorted things out about myself. (Addressing Jeremy: “Bakit ang sama ng tingin mo sa akin? Masama ba maging honest?” Looking submissive, Jeremy said, “Hindi.”)

Jeremy: The first time was when I was in high school at Benedictine (Alabang). I failed in all my subjects and I prayed hard that my dad wouldn’t punish me. How does my dad discipline us? Not with the rod but with hurting words, masasakit na salita pero hindi mura. The last time was also last month. I prayed hard that I would win her back. God never fails those who seek His help. (Side remark from Alessandra: “Wow, galit sa akin ang Diyos!”)

Kissed a Guy/Girl

Alessandra: The first time was when I was five years old. It happened in Italy. Ginaya namin ‘yung napanood namin sa TV. The last time was... just now... when you turned your back!

Jeremy: The first time was when I was seven years old. We were playing bahay-bahayan. It was just an innocent kiss, nothing serious. The last time was... well, just now... when you were not looking!

Felt Really Sad

Alessandra: The first time was when my younger sister Margarita was born (In Italy where Alessandra and her siblings grew up; she was born in England to an Italian father and a Filipino mother. – RFL) Feeling ko hindi na ako masyadong pinapansin ng parents ko. The last time was when Jeremy and I broke up for the first time. That was last year, I think. We’ve been going steady for one year and something, since January 2005.

Jeremy: The first time was when I came back to the Philippines. I was depressed. The last time was last June and I guess you know why.

First/Last Memorable Toy

Alessandra: I once had a baby doll with a feeding bottle in her mouth. When you laid her down, the milk in the bottle would disappear. Assunta and I used to fight over that baby doll. The recent toy that I have is a PSP (Portable Play Station).

Jeremy: My first toy was a Nintendo when I was six years old. My favorite game was Blue Mines. My latest toy is...

Alessandra:... Me! I’m now his favorite toy!

Got Really Angry

Jeremy: When my mom’s boyfriend would quarrel with her. I was 10 years old then and my mom was already separated from my dad. My mom was my dad’s first wife. I got so angry when I saw my mom crying kapag inaaway siya ng boyfriend niya. The last time was also last June. Don’t ask me why and for whom.

Felt Heartbroken

Alessandra: The first time was when I broke up with Biboy (Ramirez), my first boyfriend. It was painful! I cried and cried. It took me five months to get over him. It was my first heartbreak and I didn’t know what to do. Since then, I’ve broken up with a few others at alam ko na kung paano i-handle ‘yung situation. I knew the feeling already. The last time was, of course, last June when I broke up with Jeremy. At that time, I thought it was for good.

Jeremy: The first time was three years ago when I broke up with Phoemela (Barranda). She left me. The last time was last June when Alex and I broke up. I thought we wouldn’t be able to patch things up.

He/She Was Unfaithful

Alessandra: The first time was five years ago. I wasn’t happy with my relationship so I got attracted to another guy. The last time? That was the first and the last time.

Jeremy: The first time? (Alessandra butting in: “When he was born!”) The first time was when I was in high school. I don’t remember the details anymore. The last time was... a long time ago! (Alessandra again butting in: “That was almost two months ago. Ang tagal na nga!”)

Latest Car:

Alessandra: A Starex.

Jeremy: A BMW.

Ricky Lo is a columnist for Philippine Star and also writes for several Fil-Am publications.
He can be reached at rickylo@philstar.net.ph

Monday, August 21, 2006

Gloria Diaz: Gorgeous at 55



By Ricky Lo

If a man on the moon would come down, how would you entertain him?
“I guess since he has been in the moon so long he would enjoy anything that an ordinary man would.”
With that witty answer to a question popped to the five finalists by host Bob Barker, Gloria Diaz, 18, bagged the country’s first Miss Universe crown, with the headlines saying America conquered the moon, because Neil Armstrong took the first ever human step on the moon at the time the 1969 Miss Universe Pageant was being held in Miami, Florida (37 years ago this month), but “the Philippines conquered the Universe!”
It was the first time that the Miss Universe Pageant posed the question to the five finalists. The final question was an off and on feature of the pageant until in 1990 when it had taken root and every pageant since then had the finalists answer a final question.
If asked the same question today, how do you think Gloria Diaz , 55, would answer?
Laughed Gloria, “I would say, ‘I’ll give him a cellphone so he can text me’.”
Cellphones were not even a seed in the electronic mind of inventors during that “Gloria in Excelsis!” era. Since then, so many things have changed.
Gloria joined showbiz after she relinquished her crown and introduced the “wet look” with her first movie, Ang Pinakamagandang Hayop sa Balat ng Lupa; survived a marriage to best friend Bong Daza with whom she has two beautiful daughters, Isabelle (named after Gloria’s character in Pinakamagandang Hayop), 18 a Child Psychology sophomore at La Salle; and Ava, 15, high school junior at Assumption (which frowns on students whose photos appear in the media); plus adopted son Raphael (22, a second year college student at La Salle) who has made Gloria and Bong lola and lolo twice over.
Many other milestones have happened in the life of Gloria who is now happy with her beloved Mike de Jesus (a banker), a very private person who is the exact opposite of all the men linked to Gloria.
In the following conversation, Gloria recalls those days of glory and what else happened between then and now – and why she wouldn’t let any of her daughters follow in her Miss Universe footsteps.
What comes to your mind when you watch a beauty contest, especially a Miss Universe Pageant?
“You know, it’s funny but I don’t relate to the whole proceedings; I relate to the whole thing only when the winner’s name is announced. When I watch a beauty contest, I think of my kids, but not of myself joining. It has nothing to do with me. You know, if Isabelle ever joins a contest... I hope she never will. Even watching fashion shows, hindi ako maka-relate; I only think of my kids in it.”
How did you feel at that moment when the spotlight suddenly focuses on the new winner as soon as you put the crown on her head (her successor was Marisol Malaret of Puerto Rico)?
“That’s the reality. Just before the pageant, you are the focus and the center of everything. But as soon as you pass on your crown, you’re out; nasa sidelines ka na lang. I think they give you 48 hours to vacate the suite and you’re on your own. Baka ngayon, with Donald Trump, baka they give the Miss Universe only 24 hours. In fact, on the night you crown the new winner, you lose your limo; they give it to the new winner.”
Did you feel, you know, rejected?
“No. It’s just... how do you call it?...an awakening – reality striking back. When you are Miss Universe, everything seems so unreal, parang fairy tale. You can have anything you ask for. And then, after one year, it’s back to reality.”
What’s the best thing about being Miss Universe?
“I guess having done my best for the country.”
You’ll forever be the first Filipina Miss Universe.
“You know, the pressure during my time was not that big. The country had never won the crown so I, and the girls before me, were expected to do so. I think the pressure on the girls now is much, much more.”
And the worst, if any?
“I was 18 then and at that time uso ang mga disco and hanging around. I never experienced that phase of growing up. Parang that never happened in my life. Right away, I was working and traveling. I missed all the parties that girls my age were going to.”
Do you realize that that was 37 years ago?
“I know! Isn’t that awesome? Thirty-seven years and we are still around!”
What were your vital statistics when you won?
“34-24-34.”
And now?
“36-27-37.”
Has any part of your body been, well, “enhanced”?
“‘Renovated,’ you mean?”
In a way.
“Not yet, not yet! I don’t want to say never because that’s very difficult to say. But if I hit 60 and I haven’t done it, I guess I won’t. Not that I don’t need it. Nowadays, I’m not basically aware of beauty; I give it na to Isabelle and Ava – you know, sa inyo na ‘yan. I think I’m more aware now of my health. I eat mostly vegetables. I try to avoid fats and sugar.”
You are not the type who dwells on the past, are you? You know, like your failed marriage (to Bong Daza).
“No, I’m not. Bong and I are still good friends. But you know, don’t think that I don’t regret a few things.”
Like what?
“Maybe the thing about Vic Vargas (Who died a few years ago. – RFL). When I think about it now, I get cross, you know. But aside from that, only very few. My marriage to Bong? It wasn’t that bad.”
And you’re happy with Mike now.
“Of course! In fact, if not for Bong, I wouldn’t appreciate Mike.”
He seems to be the exact opposite of Bong.
“Yes, they are exact opposites. You know Bong, tell him that you want to have a party and he can organize one in 15 minutes. You can be sure that all those he invites will come. But Mike and I, even if we plan weeks in advance, if we invite 20 people baka five lang ang sumipot. Mike and Bong are okay. Sometimes pa nga the three of us eat out together.”
Which is more fulfilling, winning a Miss Universe crown or winning an acting award?
If you didn’t become Miss Universe, what would you have been today?
“Maybe I would have finished Law and become a lawmaker and a politician. Maybe I would have joined an NGO and done public service. But definitely, I would be married to somebody rich so I would be honest.”


Ricky Lo is a columnist for Philippine Star and also writes for several Fil-Am publications.

Monday, June 12, 2006

Martin Nievera

As he celebrates 17 years in showbusiness, Martin Nievera talks about the ups and downs of his career; his regrets; his failed marriage with equally-popular singer Pops Fernandez; their kids; his father’s profound influence on his life and his continuing


JOURNEY TO FOREVER


By Marisse G. Abelgas


Martin Nievera teases a group of men, women and children as he invites them to his upcoming concert in Los Angeles: “Darating daw si Ricky Martin...pero i’m not sure ha...”

The people are delighted with his banter, and applaud accordingly. Here, on a warm fall afternoon at the Seafood City in Carson where his concert producers ( the Law Office of Michael J. Gurfinkel and Creative Concepts International) had chosen to hold “Fans’ Day,” Martin Nievera is in his elements. Garbed in black tees, black pants and sporting a dullish hair color that seemed totally incongruous with everything he was that day (“My hairdresser is dead. I killed him,” he wisecracks.), Nievera is -- in contrast to his monochromatic attire -- every bit the colorful superstar. For more than two hours, Nievera graciously entertains his fans who huddle around him, struggling to take photos, shake his hand or ask for his autograph.

Earlier, during a press conference at the Carson Hilton where he received a key to the city from Mayor Pete Fajardo and Councilman Manny Ontal, the irrepressible Nievera managed to unleash his famous wit and humor. Five minutes into the press conference, Nievera had practically all members of the Los Angeles-based Filipino-American media eating from the palm of his hand -- a remarkable feat, really, considering that most of them hardly looked up from their plates of roast beef and braised chicken when the superstar ambled hesitatingly into the room.

Sitting comfortably on a swivel bar stool in the middle of the room with only a solitary microphone stand in front of him, Nievera expertly and effortlessly fielded a steady stream of questions. As he cracked jokes one minute and waxed philosophical the next, one had to listen closely to catch every nuance of his more emotional statements -- or risk quoting his dead-panned joke na pala instead.

It mattered little if the newsmen around were too polite to needle him about his failed marriage to equally-popular singer Pops Fernandez, a seemingly ideal showbiz alliance that began romantically on television and ended rather ignominously in an annulment court, not to mention in all the magazines, broadsheets and tabloids from the Philippines to here and back. Nievera, the master showman, still managed to deftly squeeze in some tidbits about his ex, their kids, and his feelings about the break-up. He even managed to feed the newsmen an unexpected “scoop.”

“I never told anyone this. But my second CD album (entitled “Forever”), wasn’t meant to be a commercial project. I recorded it as a gift to my wife; it was supposed to be this I-love-you-I-still-want-you-take-me-back gift,” he confides. It was meant only for her, he explains, originally meant to be a very personal token of his love for the woman he had lost and wanted back. The CD, he asserts, was never intended to be sold to the public.

But. “It didn’t work,” he says emphatically now, “it didn’t work. So I just told my producers to release it.”

The CD, which contains the couple’s favorite songs, was completed in a fraction of the time it normally takes to record an entire album. Nievera says it was such a down-to-earth-no-frills CD so they simply decided to use one of his old file photographs for the cover, instead of having new and more glamorous studio photos taken. He says he didn’t even bother to promote it. Yet, to his -- and everyone else’s -- surprise, the CD shot through the charts, eventually becoming the No.2 best selling CD of all time in the Philippines.

Ironically, Nievera’s marital woes ,which served as fodder for the gossip mills, also provided a second wind for his singing career. To celebrate his 17th year in show business, Nievera has been holding a series of concerts (all entitled Journey to Forever) since July. His Manila performances were all sellouts, prompting one Manila-based entertainment editor to remark that the public had apparently “forgiven” him for the “sins he committed against his wife, Pops Fernandez.”

His November 12 concert at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles (also billed as XII: Journey to Forever) is the last leg of his concert tour in the U.S. According to his concert producers, Nievera will sing love songs that women especially, love to hear. He will also sing love songs dedicated to, and meant for, his ex-wife, Pops Fernandez.


Forever is a word that carries significant weight in Nievera’s life and career. “When Pops and I were together, she would always sign autographs with Always, Pops and I would sign with Forever, Martin,” he says.

“Forever,” a hit song by American singer Kenny Loggins, became a signature song of sorts for Nievera, and he counts Loggins’ appearance on his television show some years back as one of the highlights of his career.

He also admits that the tandem of Martin Nievera and Pops Fernandez was -- professionally --the “best team ever” in Philippine entertainment. But in the next breath, he says he also accepts the fact that it would be impossble at this time for them to get together that way, either professionally or personally. He takes his own personal shot at the moon: “I would love nothing more than to be able to perform with her again in the future.”

Nievera reveals that despite his personal failures -- and in fact, now, more than ever -- he still believes in “forever,” referring to this ideal both poetically and literally, and referring to it in terms of both his controversial personal life and thriving career.

“I believe there’s a place called forever. I’m still on this journey to that place. I believe in forever,” he muses.


The son of balladeer Bert Nievera and Conchita Razon, Nievera grew up idolizing his father, while constantly being discouraged (on the sly) by his mother whenever he showed any inclination towards show business. Nievera’s success has apparently changed his mother’s attitude towards the profession. In a promotional material released by Nievera’s agents for a previous concert in Manila, his mother wrote a touching and personal note: “I have tried, sometimes unsuccessfully, not to be a stage mother. When people introduce me as ‘the mother of Martin Nievera,’ I try to look humble. But my heart bursts with pride.”

Nievera’s destiny as a singer seemed pretty much cut and dried. “In my time, you had to follow your father’s footsteps. You had to become what he was. If your father was a plumber, you had to be a plumber. Thank God, my father wasn’t a plumber,” he quips.

As the son mimicked the father, watched the father perform and learned the father’s repertoire, the young Nievera would tell himself : “That’s me. That’s what I want to be when I grow up. That’s what I’m going to do.”

Despite this self-determination, however, Nievera says he ended up taking a business course in college, and still regrets having given up higher studies in favor of a budding career in entertainment during his teens. And because his career took off faster than expected, he has always regretted never quite taking the time to take formal music lessons.

“I should have stayed in school. But you know how it is in showbiz, you have to strike while the iron is hot. I even wanted to be an architect when I was young,” he recalls wistfully.

Then : “Did you know that when I was little boy, I used to make dollhouses?”

But he credits his father for having encouraged him to go the way of music, and more importantly, for teaching him how to dream. “ My father gave me my first minus-one tape, (The Greatest Love of All)” he says affectionately. The older Nievera was already a successful singer then, spicing up his acts with magicians’ tricks while solidifying his family’s future by going into the restaurant business.

The young Nievera became quite the father’s shadow, going regularly with him to the restaurant which they owned and managed, even learning the rudiments of cooking. “ The people who came to the restaurant would always watch us because my father and I would always sing while we were cooking,” he says.

Coming into his own as a singer, Nievera recalls dreaming of that day when he would perform duets with his father. When the opportunity came, he says, all he could think of was, “I’m singing with him. I’m onstage with my idol.”

It’s this emotional connection with his father that Nievera carries with him onstage on his U.S. concert tour. Being onstage with Bert Nievera is, for the son, the greatest honor of all. Even the younger Nievera’s current repertoire reflects the father’s extensive influence on his son’s musical direction and preferences.

Ballads, love songs, songs from Broadway musicals, and OPMs (Original Pilipino Music), including his own compositions, have been the staples of his concerts, and Nievera has indicated that his November 12 concert in Los Angeles will feature most of the songs that have made him the superstar he is today. Together with Bert Nievera and special guest Agot Isidro, Martin Nievera says he will treat concert goers to a night of mostly “70s and 80s remakes.”

Another revelation: “I’ve written about a hundred songs,” he says, “but only two of them became hits. Sad, ano?”

And while he rarely uses fancy footwork a la Gary Valenciano to get his audience up and dancing, or a lot of hip-shaking-head-shaking a la Ricky Martin during his concerts, Nievera nevertheless throws in another teaser. “I’ll surprise you on November 12,” he announces.

Nievera is also expected to be his usual glib, spontaneous self. Known for carrying on hilarious conversations with members of his audience during concerts, Nievera says, “My concerts are unscripted, except for guidelines for the songs. My spiels are you (the audience). I rely on my rapport with the audience. Once, when I gave a concert, I knew everyone’s name in the audience by the time the concert was over.”

Nievera dismisses any possible professional rivalry between him and his father. Although he admits he is more popular now than the older Nievera, he qualifies that his father had also attained a different, yet parallel, superstardom at the peak of his singing career.

“During his time, the medium was more radio than TV,” he explains of his own comparatively mega-superstar status. “It (exposure) was more limited then.”

Bert Nievera’s profound influence on his son apparently extends to the younger Nievera’s attitude towards fatherhood. When Martin Nievera does talk about being a father, one gets the distinct impression that failure is not an option for the superstar, at least, in so far as raising his own two children is concerned.

“I may not be the perfect husband,” Martin Nievera declares, “ but I am the best father to my two sons.”

He describes his children thus: “My kids love to sing too. Robin, the older of the two is more like his mother. He’s shy and quiet. Ram is more like me -- talkative and very demonstrative.” As any typical proud papa would, he casually tells newsmen that Ram impersonates Jim Carey and a South Park cartoon character like a pro.

Marital discord notwithstanding, Nievera says he has become quite adept at long-distance parenting. “There are two things I always tell my sons: one, that I love your mother; I will always love her; and two, it is not your fault,” he says.

But while life has apparently granted him success in the area of parenting, failure in other aspects has humbled him It has also caused him to “reinvent” himself in terms of his career and his music.

When he started singing and performing fast songs like rock or jazz, Nievera says his career went on a down slide. Only when he reverted back to the ballads and love songs -- the ones he calls the “forever, straight-from-the-heart” songs -- did he begin to experience a revival in his career.

“Love songs suit my voice,” he explains. He adds that his longtime friend and musical director Louie Ocampo helped him “reinvent my music.”

The reinventing, he says, stops right there. Reinventing himself does not apply to his personal life, which he feels has been completely forfeited because of his failed marriage.

“When I say ‘personal life,’ I’m not referring to those nights out with girls or things like that,”he explains. “By personal life, I mean the happy times I have spent with my family, my wife, my kids. That’s all lost now. I have no more personal life,” he says with a tinge of sadness.

And because there’s nothing else left to reinvent but his music, Nievera says his career has become his priority. He is also bent on showing the good side of the Filipino persona when he travels and performs in other countries, on making “Filipinos stand out in a different way.”

“I’m a good example of what a Filipino is. I’ve been up there. I’ve failed. I’m trying to cope with failure. I’m trying to succeed again,” he says.

The Martin Nievera we see today, he reveals, is the Martin Nievera who has reinvented himself because of failure.

“When you’ve failed like I have, even the most simple things mean a lot. Life has become so precious, especially when you’ve failed,” he says unabashedly.

Feigning seriousness, the reinvented Martin Nievera advises: “You should try it sometime.”


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Tuesday, May 30, 2006

"Flip" side of a Fil-Am Singer

Proud of her heritage, Filipino American singer Yvette Ocampo says you don’t have to be Pinoy to appreciate her music


Nobody can claim they know how much hard work it takes to become a pop sensation better than the San Francisco Bay Area's own Yvette (Ocampo). After years of hard work (most of them focused on becoming something other than a singer) Yvette's highly anticipated debut album, titled simply “Yvette” has earned her recognition as one of the most successful Filipino artists in the San Francisco Bay area.

Yvette was never a stranger to music, having sung all her life since she was a small child. Most of her time in the spotlight back then was singing at political functions for family members running for office. From her family's perspective this was certainly foreshadowing, but not in the way Yvette's many fans might think.

Yvette earned a degree in political science and was destined for a career in Philippine politics, not unusual in the Ocampo family where almost everyone has held a political office at one point or another. But Yvette was still rather rebellious and, having already won numerous awards for her singing prowess, began what she considered a "side gig" in theatre. Most people would consider taking second lead to Lea Solanga in a Broadway production of “Grease” a big deal.

Not Yvette.

Holding true to her reputation for thinking big, Yvette then passed (as in no, thank you”) on the role of Kim in “Miss Saigon”.

Her reasoning was simple in her mind, “I wanted to get a degree in Restaurant and Hotel management”, she says.

But Yvette couldn't earn her degree from just anywhere, she had to earn it from the La Roches Hotel and Restaurant Management School in Switzerland, arguably the most well-respected school in the world. During a trip to Disney World her boyfriend dared her to fill out a general application for employment. Disney World called the youngster back within days, offering her over $60,000 / year to help manage one of their resorts.

She said, “No thank you.”

Yvette's degree did come in handy during a short stint running a family owned restaurant in Daly City, California, which finally brought her to the Bay Area. And what about the singing? Yvette didn't stop, and upon relocating to Northern California, she became more determined than ever.

Yvette quickly gained attention and eventually toured Asia and Western Europe. Ultimately, her success landed her a deal with Say Music Incorporated, a new record label based in Union City, California. This was Yvette's big break and for once in her life she decided to stop toying around with career options and settled on her true passion -- singing.

Her first release was the hit single “Rub A Dub Dub”, a catchy up-tempo pop tune for which she recorded two versions. A short rap section of the song has her rapping in English and on the “Flip” side (pun intended) she raps the same section in Tagalog.

“It just seemed obvious to me to do two versions," she says, certainly very proud of her Filipino background. “It doesn't matter if you speak Tagalog or not, it doesn't matter if you are Filipino or not. My wish is for the song to be enjoyed by everyone.”

With the attention gained from the single, Yvette followed up this summer with her self-titled album, a collection of hot pop tracks, classic ballads, and flashy dance tunes. While many upstart record labels find they must cut corners in order to handle the incredible expense of cutting an album, this was not the case with Say Music Inc. and Yvette. Yvette was spoiled with hit record producers who's cumulative experience has yielded more platinum and gold records than Yvette can count on her fingers and toes.

In fact, the song “Rub A Dub Dub” was originally recorded by the Backstreet Boys and slated to be released as a single.

“Apparently the Backstreet Boys' record label never actually got permission from the writers of the song so they had to take it off their album,” says Yvette. “Their loss, my gain!”.

Yvette has been busy this summer performing live to promote her album.

“It's wonderful!” she exclaims. “It's certainly fun to play in the recording studios and everything, but interacting directly with my fans is really the highlight for me”.

Yvette has become well-known for her stage show which currently is based on the Mission Impossible movie theme. “Well, I was an actress, so I thought it would be more fun for the audience if the whole show was more like a musical”.

“Musical” might be the understatement of the year. The show, which Yvette refers to as “MI:3 - Mission Yvette”, begins with a dance number to a freestyle version of the Mission Impossible theme music. During the music, an announcer on tape gives Yvette her secret mission: save the fans from a terrorist who plans to blow up the concert hall. Just as in the movies the tape blows up and out of the smoke comes Yvette singing the hit single “Rub A Dub Dub”. Oh yes, and let's not forget that the audience gets to see Yvette's mission instructions, complete with graphics and effects, on a video projection screen.

“Sometimes the venue doesn't have any way to project the video so the fans miss out on that part" states a sympathetic Yvette.

Through the rest of Yvette's show, in addition to singing a number of dynamite tracks from her album, the terrorist manages to plant the bomb on the stage, Yvette's “Rub Agents” find and dispose of the bomb, and Yvette ultimately saves the day with her Kung-Fu style skills when the foiled terrorist tries to take someone hostage. Who would have known being a singer could be so dangerous!

With a hit album generating waves of excitement and a stage show that makes other singers fearful of having to go on stage after her, Yvette seems to have learned that her first love, singing, is also going to be her last love.

On the schedule for Yvette are more shows in California followed by a short trip to the Northwest, several performances in the Philippines and a major US tour next spring.

Fans interested in the business side of her career can visit the Say Music Inc. web site at http://www.saymusicinc.com. Fans who want to learn more about Yvette, download photos and videos, and get a chance to win free Yvette merchandise can visit her personal fan site at http://www.yvetteweb.com.