To examine Bamboo’s story so far is
to take a microscopic view of the local music scene. It all starts with a dream. Taking inspiration from all the demigods
that sang to them from their crabby speakers, spewing wisdom and good vibes out of worn out cassettes long before an apple
gave birth to a pod, they pick up an instrument, string up some riffs, weave some melodies, sing a few songs. Before they
knew it, they had sold their soul to the music, and the mistress exacts a high price. The goal—first, an album; a single
on radio; do some gigs; then dream of playing the foreign shores. The cycle should grow exponentially, in theory. Yet as the
proverb goes, many are called but only a few (and fewer still) are chosen.
Bamboo’s story is one that many admire and aspire to duplicate,
yet would never fully admit. It started with a simple phone call. Bamboo Maņalac, who at that time had been living
and studying in the U.S., made a call to an old friend back home who, he learned, had quit the band he had once fronted. Nathan
Azarcon, in fact, had been out doing his own thing for almost a year already, and had been playing with bands like Kapatid
and Makatha. “At some point in the conversation, I asked
him, what do you think of me going back there,” Bamboo recalls.
Mincing no words, Nathan bluntly tells his
former band mate, “Things are tough here right now. It’s not as easy as you think. The music scene isn’t
up to what you remember before.”
But once their conversation turned to music, it was like old times. “The
funny thing, even when we were miles apart, we were still pretty much listening to the same thing,” says Bamboo.
And the devil inside stirred once again.
Nathan then tapped Kapatid band mate, guitarist Ira Cruz, and
drummer Vic Mercado. Both had played in Passage before, and by then had been gigging as the rhythm section for Makatha
with Nathan. As soon as Bamboo got back to Manila, he went to see Makatha in the now-defunct Sanctum bar in Intramuros; the
following day, only they bore witness to the makings of a new band, highlighted by a pivotal jam session in a small studio
in the house of Ira’s dad, the latter himself a pillar of Pinoy music as the sax player of the band Anak Bayan. “From
that first jam, we knew it was something special… saan-saan na pumupunta ‘yung mga kanta,” Bamboo remembers.
Cut My Heart Out For A Souvenir
In the meantime, the band that would later be called Bamboo (“It sort of just came about, after
months of figuring out a name,” the vocalist admits) played small clubs and, as Ira recalls, would sometimes do
it for free beer, the company and a chance to play. By the first quarter of 2003, however, they had begun seriously working
on their first album. The band had written songs and soon had three to shop around to record labels—“Pride
and the Flame,” “Take Me Down,” and “Noy-pi.” The reaction they got was less
than enthusiastic, given the shaky financial grounds on which the industry stood. Some said their songs were “nice,
but there’s no hook.” Others wanted to strip them of control and pick the singles for them. But the band was
resolute. As Ira puts it, “By hook or by crook, we knew we were putting our album out.”
Taking
matters into their own hands, they approach veteran producer Angee Rozul and, wrangling studio time from him owing to the
fact that he listened to the material and liked it, they went to work.
“Naalala ko lang, that time I kept
saying over and over again, may butas (sa eksena) eh,” Bamboo avers. “We could fill in the gap, whatever
that was.”
And it was indeed filled in more ways than one.
Better Days Ahead
Fast forward to when they had finally inked a three-year, three-album deal with EMI Music Philippines. “Noy-pi”
signaled the arrival of Bamboo as a musical force the likes of which was both admired and resented. To those who think they
hit it too big, too fast, or those who say they were not really the Pinoy rock n’ roll Messiahs they never really claimed
to be, they pegged Bamboo as the capitalist dream set to a pseudo-earnest soundtrack. Others, still, were waiting for local
music’s prodigal son, Bamboo, to simply fail. But what some failed to see was the fact that you could never really choose
success, it chose you. Besides, thousands of people could not all be wrong.
Powered by the strength of the carrier
single, “Noy-pi,” the band’s debut As the Music Plays, released in February 2004 success; it later
spawned other hit singles in the power chord-driven “Mr. Clay,” the slow-burning “Masaya,”
and the radio single-only, groove-infested “These Days.” By December of the same year, they had released
a repackaged AVCD version that included their music videos and a bonus cut—the re-recorded version of “Masaya”
featuring Ria Osorio on piano. They had also won a slew of music awards, not the least of which were MTV Pilipinas’
Best New Artist and Song of the Year for “Noy-pi”—punctuated, of course, by their performance at
the awards show.
By June 2005, Bamboo had delivered a second album, much to the delight of fans and the people ready
to rip it apart. According to the band, Light, Peace, Love was, “sort of a response to the success of the first
album. The first one was like gangbusters, eh. All of a sudden, boom! Life changed. We got busy, things got crazy. It was
a roller coaster ride for us… personally and professionally. So the second album was like a diary. It was more of a
personal album for us,” Bamboo points out.
From talking about the passing of a friend to their response to critics,
a thank you to fans, and everything else that happened in 2004, LightPeaceLove produced a whopping five hit singles:
the anthemic “Hallelujah,” the defiant “F.U.,” the emotive “Much Has Been Said,” the stirring
“Truth” and the cool “Peace, Man.” By then it was undeniable that Bamboo, the band,
had become the true marriage of commercial viability and staunch band principles. In as much as they had earned the status
of a formidable concert drawer and commercial endorser, there were still lines that they never crossed. They still worked
with the same people—the ones they deemed as family, those they had come to trust over the years. They still refused
to sign off their songs to lucrative deals when it meant defying its soul. They declined corporate contracts when they didn’t
feel right. And none of them, thankfully, had become movie stars.
Glimpse of the Wild World
At the midpoint of the second album, EMI International announced they wanted to release their album in South East Asia.
LightPeaceLove was then repackaged, its Tagalog songs replaced with three English cuts from the first album—namely
“Mr.Clay,” “As the Music Plays the Band” and “War of Hearts and Minds”—and
sent off to Malaysia and Indonesia through the label’s affiliates. “Truth” was handpicked as the
international single. It was in Indonesia, however, where the album was officially released where the band stayed for a week
of promotional activities.
As if they are not busy enough, the band finally releases the long-awaited third album.
Described by the singer as the last part of a trilogy, it is an all-covers album featuring more obscure Pinoy folk/rock gems
and foreign classics. Bamboo points out, “When we started with the first album, we already planned to do something
like this. We just weren’t sure when. So the idea of this album is that it’s sort of a footnote.” In
more ways than, it was the continuation of what they had started when they recorded versions of The Doors’ “Break
On Through,” Bob Marley’s “Waiting in Vain,” and “The General” by Dispatch
in the repackaged As the Music Plays.
From the carrier single, “Tatsulok” (originally by
Buklod), and Anak Bayan’s “Probinsyana” to Paul Simon and Carole King, the band admits that this
is their hardest project to date. “Kasi ‘yung pinili naming mga kanta, magaganda na on its own. So siyempre
kung iko-cover namin, kailangan naming lagyan ng stamp namin, nang sound namin. Kasi kung kokopyahin lang namin nang ganun-ganun
lang, what for? (The song’s we chose were masterpiece’s in their own right. If we were to copy these songs note
for note then what for? We had to put our own stamp and sound to the material.) For us, it has to sound different but really
good. It has to stand up to the original,” Ira elaborates.
With the spate of covers and tribute albums of
late, this move would certainly earn more criticisms than plaudits given the jaded state of the industry, but the band is
undaunted. “If we did fluff or if we did crap, I’d be worried. But these songs can stand on their own. I’m
pretty confident. I mean, we are our own harshest critics, believe me.”
If you think Bamboo is ready to just
leave it at that, think again.
“We are already looking forward to writing original material,” Bamboo
comments. “We can’t wait to hear what the new songs would sound like.” The fans feel the same way,
for sure. But for now, We Stand Alone Together.
“The idea of the hand print came from a scene in Band
of Brothers,” Bamboo shares in parting, looking back at the previous two albums and how it ties to this new one.
Currahee, the mountain there, means ‘We stand alone together.’ So, it’s sort of symbolic of what we’ve
sort of gone through these past four years. And then there’s the believers—our fans or whatever you want to call
them. It’s not about us, it’s about the bigger picture.”
Music forges connections where there are
physically none, making friends of total strangers, sharing experiences through song. That’s the bigger picture. And
as any true music fan would know, music may choose you, but it is your openness that allows for a world of possibilities that
keeps emotions stirred and imagination alive.
Achievements and Awards
Gold Award (15,000 units) for “As the Music Plays” (August 2004) Platinum Award (30,000 units) for “As
the Music Plays” (November 2004) Double Platinum Award (60,000 units) for “As the Music Plays” (April
2005)
Gold Award (15,000 units) for “Light Peace Love” (July 2005) Platinum Awards (30, 000 units)
for Light Peace Love (January 2006)
Winner -- NU Rock Awards 2005 Vocalist of the Year for
Bamboo Manalac Album of the Year for LightPeaceLove
Winner – AWIT Awards 2005 Best Rock Song
for “Noypi” People’s Choice Favorite Song for “Noypi”
Winner – MTV Pilipinas
2004 Best New Artist Best Group Favorite Song for “Noypi”
Winner – 2004 NU107
Rock Awards Artist of the Year Song of the Year “Noypi” Vocalist of the Year – Bamboo Manalac
Drummer of the Year – Vic Mercado Listener’s Choice Award
Winner –89.9TM Year End Awards
(2004) Local Artist of the Year New Local Artist of the Year Song of the Year for “Noypi”
Winner – 93.1RX Year End Awards (2004) Song of
the Year for “Masaya” New Local Arist of the Year Local Group of the Year
Winner—2006
Awit Awards Song of the Year for “Hallelujah” Album of the Year for LightPeaceLove Best Rock for
“Hallelujah” Best Ballad for “Much Has Been Said” Best Performance by a Group Recording Artist
People’s Choice Award fro Favorite Song for “Hallelujah”
Winner- 2006 SOP Pasiklaband (GMA
Channel 7) Best Rock Band Best Vocalist for Bamboo Manalac
Winner- 2006 MTV Pilipinas Music Video Awards
Best Cinematography for a Video for “Much Has Been Said”
Winner- 2006 Aliw Awards Most
Promising Entertainer
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