FOREMOST KAPAMPANGAN artist Andy Alviz won the Best Original Theme Song at the recent Summer Metro Manila Film Festival for his composition Paralaya of the movie Apag.
Paralaya (towards Arayat, in Kapampangan) is the cover of an acoustic album produced by Alviz with his ArtiSta. Rita in 2007. In celebration of his triumph -- and the Kapampangan too -- I am re-sharing here this piece published in a Punto issue nearly 16 years ago.
THEIR MUSIC seared the psyche of a race long in search of its forgotten greatness: its culture maculated by the infusion of alien influences, its virtues devalued by the immoralities of flawed saviors, its very existence imperiled by nature’s rage.
That was ArtiSta.Rita, composed of home-grown talents shepherded by a
Kapampangan returnee from London’s West End, when it exploded into the local
scene a few years back with its maiden album. Kapampangan Ku, the title
song, defined the very identity of the race and inspired a celebration of
everything Kapampangan, from the cultural to the culinary, from the historical
to the mythical.
It did not come as any surprise then that in this May’s elections (2007),
it was Kapampangan Ku that likewise defined the very outcome of the
gubernatorial contest.
In its third outing, ArtiSta.Rita went beyond romancing the Kapampangan
character: Paralaya is a communion with the Kapampangan soul. The spirituality
of the race is celebrated here, even in the most mundane and ordinary of
places, things and events.
Can anything be extraordinary in that ubiquitous roadside sign Abe
Pakakalale? The simple caution for motorists to slow it down is lifted to
the high moral plane of right over wrong in treading the very road of life – “dadalan
kami king yatu,” to the ultimate destination – “parasan mi balen nang
indu.”
Akasya starts with but immediately transcends imaginings of Joyce
Kilmer’s famous ode to the tree, and assumes the very manifestation of the
Creator Himself, cherishing and nurturing all of creation – “Lingap mu’t
lugud king labuad/Sasalbag babie kang bie kanakung abe.”
The search for life’s meaning that takes one to great distances and greater
longings only to find it within oneself, if only one opened his heart – so
celebrated in Paulo Coelho’s novels, most notably in The Alchemist –
finds a fuller, and deeper, expression in Pamanuli -- “Nung nukarin
mengaparas/Ikwang mengalampas-lampas/Atiu ka pala keni king lele/Kakung
matimyas.” Life’s journey ends where it starts – with the Lord.
And then, oneness with Him. Stirrings from the prophet Isaiah, resonate in Abe
Mu Ku – “Abe mu ku nukarin ka man/Abe mu ku kapilan man/Ala ng muna pa/King
lugud ku keka/Abe mu ku kakung kaluguran.”
Indeed, there is more to moonlight than Eros. Bulan provides an
uplift to the spirit eclipsed in the darkness of despair – “Potang malungkut
ka/Potang tatakut ka/Potang paintunan mu ku/Lumwal ka, talanga ka/Akit
me ing bulan a masala/Karin mikit kata.”
The human spirit rises higher with man’s affirmation of God’s guiding light
in Siwala – “Ing kekang s’wala diren nakung sala/Dala ne ning angin iadwang
king batwin/Ing kekang s’wala diren nakung sala/King isip at pusu, kapasnawan.”
Penitential lamentation, so inhered in the praxis of Kapampangan
Catholicism, naturally finds expression in Aduan Ku Mu – “Aduan ku namu Keka
O Ginu/Katmuan Mu la ding kakulangan ku at antabayanan king gulu/Bustan Mu
sa’ng mibayu ing karokang gewa ku/Lawen Mu sa kakung lugud daraun ku O Ginu.”
Two selections that pay homage to the father and the teacher still do
adhere to the album’s general theme of the soul, of man’s pining for the
divine: God after all is Father and Teacher to man.
To win his future, a young man looks back at his past and sings a song of
gratitude to his father in Tatang Kung Kaluguran – “Ngeni maragul na ku,
ladlad ku no ring pakpak ku/Sulapo na king angin sapul sapul king lupa
ku/Mangaparas man nukarin, ing lugud mu atyu pa rin/Dakal a salamat tatang,
king masanting a daratang.”
Mayap a Oras gives recognition to the hardships of the talaturu in
moulding the mind of the youth – “Migigising kang maranun/Obra ing
isipan/Mananggang gatpanapun/Babie mu ing eganaganang/Lugud at sala/ A manibat
king pusu/Kabiasnan at kebaluan/Ika ing tuturu.”
As the Kapampangan is a lover, so some love songs are a must in an album
expressive of his soul.
Bayung Bengi, Bayung Sinta sings of the lovers’ anticipation of an early
evening tryst, of the stars watching over a love ever renewed – “Pagtiririn
tala ding batwing masala/King bulalako metung ku mu adwan/Eka sa tatabili gamat
pakatalan.”
The angst, the fears, the insecurities of the torpe at seeing the object
of his repressed affections are played to life in the carrier single Paralaya
-- “Dakal ku buring sabian keka/E ku balu nung atuan daka...Nung balu mu mung
malwat ku nang sasalikut/Ing panamdaman, pansinan mu naku man…Alub kung
makiagnan king kakung palsintan.”
On the wings of song, cliched yes but that is the experience one gets with
the blend of the musical accompaniment that enhanced poetry, if not the purity,
of the lyrics.
Thanks to Andy Alviz and all those great artists, Paralaya set me on a
personal journey to get to my Kapampangan core.
(Zona Libre/Punto! November 5, 2007)
No comments:
Post a Comment