Band hopes its music will be ‘Manila Sound 2.0’ | Inquirer Entertainment

Band hopes its music will be ‘Manila Sound 2.0’

/ 12:26 AM February 10, 2015

DYSTOCIA Curve’s album

DYSTOCIA Curve’s album

“Manila, Manila/simply no place like Manila.” —Hotdog, circa 1970

For people in the 1970s and the ’80s, the song “Manila” was a “love song,” an ode not only to the city, but to the whole country.

ADVERTISEMENT

As a person who has lived in Metro Manila all his life, Bong Banal of indie band Dystocia Curve admits that his great love for Manila is now profoundly challenged by what he considers a deterioration in the quality of life. His band’s latest album, “Metro Love,” attempts to express and explore this.

FEATURED STORIES

The opening song “Kapag May Traffic,” for instance, hints at a certain weariness brought about by monstrous traffic jams: “Kapag may traffic, iniisip kong lumayo na sa ’yo/Gusto nang mauna/imbes na sakuna abutin sa’yo!

“Pasingit” is a song that pleads for leniency from an unforgiving lover whom Bong likens to an unmerciful, road-hogging motorist.

SINGER Bong Banal

SINGER Bong Banal

In “Jailbreak,” he daydreams of escaping to a better place: “Kailan kaya ako makakasulat ng tono/makakasulat ng todo/nang ’di naiistorbo?”

He contemplates leaving everything behind in the song “Ubos na Gas,” betraying a bitter sense of disappointment over a relationship gone horribly wrong. Meanwhile, “Hindi Ko Na Kaya”   outlines Bong’s fears of leaving the city.

“Maiintindihan” may be the most poignant number. It has Bong checking in on various types of people—their dreams, their aspirations—gently telling them that, while they may not understand it yet, there is a reason that their dreams have remained elusive.

While Dystocia Curve is not aiming to supplant the romantic view of Manila as this great city that we all used to love, it dares to raise the possibility that things may not be as romantic or as ideal as they once were.

ADVERTISEMENT

The album “Metro Love” is available in Fully Booked High Street. For delivery orders and bookings, call (0916) 4758957 or (0920) 9018910, or visit the Dystocia Curve Facebook page.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

TAGS: Dystocia Curve, Entertainment, manila sound, Music

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. To find out more, please click this link.