| ||
---|---|---|
Related | ||
The different forms and trends of protest music against the Marcos dictatorship mostly first became prominent during the period now known as the First Quarter Storm, [1] and continued until Ferdinand Marcos was deposed during the 1986 People Power revolution; [2] some of the trends continued beyond this period either in commemoration of the struggle against the Marcos dictatorship, [3] or in opposition to the political return of the Marcos family to a prominent place in Philippine politics. [4] [5] [6]
Music protesting the policies and actions of Ferdinand Marcos' administration mostly first became prominent during the First Quarter Storm, a period of social unrest during the first three months of 1970 when Ferdinand Marcos' debt-driven spending triggered the 1969 Philippine balance of payments crisis and subsequently, a series of student-led protests. [1]
At the time, mainstream music in the Philippines had not yet seen the rise of the later trends Pinoy rock, Pinoy jazz, and the Pinoy pop ballads which would be referred to as the "Manila sound", so the protest music of this period was mostly the music of the picket lines, university campuses, and what activists then referred to as "the parliament of the streets". [7]
Among the most prominent protest songwriters of this period were Jess Santiago and Heber Bartolome, who continued to create and perform their protest songs through the days of Martial Law and beyond. [1]
The imposition of martial law in 1979 led to strict government controls over cultural performances and all forms of media. So while artists like Jess Santiago and Heber Bartolome continued writing protest songs, these mostly could not be performed until the late 1970s when international scrutiny and local conditions forced Marcos to loosen the reins somewhat. [8] Many of the underground movement's songs from the first three or four years of Martial Law were never documented, and are now only either recorded orally, or rescued in academic efforts to preserve the history of the era. [9]
Among the first songs from this period to be written down and preserved were those composed by University of the Philippines student organization the UPLB Tulisanes, founded by students Wency Olaguer, Bayani Espiritu, Virgilio “Siokoy” Rojas, Lynn Martinez, Pedro "Bornix” Abad, and Dennis “Tengo” Alegre. [10] The group was able to sing their songs in public because they only did so in small jam sessions within the relative freedom offered to them by the UPLB campus. They thus had the freedom to discuss the human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship and the specific cases of the UPLB students such as those of the Southern Tagalog 10 who had become desaparacidos. [10]
Also documented were the songs attached to cultural performances such as musicals and plays. A prominent example were the songs in Boni Ilagan's play "Pagsambang Bayan", first staged by the University of the Philippines Repertory Company in September 1977 under director Behn Cervantes and musical director Susan Tagle, who were promptly arrested for staging it. [11] [12] [13]
Those who organized strikes, rallies, and other protest actions often invited the cultural group Tambisan sa Sining, whose performances included musical pieces by Tambisan co-founder Napoleon Abiog (who often used the nom de guerre Benjie Torralba), who would become the group's chair after Marcos was deposed. [14] Another group prominent on the picket lines was the female duo of Karina Constantino-David and Becky Demetillo Abraham, who formed the band Inang Laya, and became well known for their adaptation of the Andres Bonifacio song Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa. [15] [16]
Among the thousands of political detainees under the Marcos dictatorship, musically oriented individuals such as Aloysius Baes composed songs while in prison, which were then learned and sung by fellow prisoners and then got passed on to the outside world once detainees were released. [17]
This section needs expansionwith: more details about protest themes in Filipino folk rock. You can help by adding to it. (January 2024) |
Because of censorship, access to protest music was severely limited for those who were not part of the active resistance movement against Marcos, [18] even as Filipino musicians' desire to adapt new western music genres to Filipino sensibilities gave rise to new modes of musical expression, notably Pinoy pop, Pinoy rock, Filipino folk rock, Pinoy jazz, and later the pop ballad genre which became known as the "Manila sound. [19] [20]
On the other hand, Marcos made extensive use of music as propaganda, promoting an interpretation of nationalism which supported his ideology of "constitutional authoritarianism."
Despite heavy censorship, artists found ways to counter Marcos' propaganda, and talk about the social ills brought about by the excesses of Marcos dictatorship - although often only indirectly. [19]
The rise of Folk Rock in the 1970s meant that its local expression, Filipino folk rock, was inherently full of social commentary. For example, Mike Pillora Jr., Cesar Bañares Jr., and Lolita Carbon did not aim to be political when they formed Asin, but the socially relevant themes of their songs such as "Balita" and "Masdan mo ang Kapaligiran" led their records to sometimes be confiscated by authorities, and at other times for the band to be invited to play at official events. [21]
Performing in clubs, Pinoy Rock musicians had more opportunities for social commentary than pop musicians whose songs had to be acceptable for play on the radio; in 1979, activist-poet-musician Chickoy Pura gathered Olongapo-based musicians Nitoy Adriano, Hely Umali, Boy Matriano, Flor Mendoza and Gils Dauag together to form The Jerks, one of the country's earliest blues and punk bands, whose lyrics were full of anti-authoritarian social commentary in the same way that British punk was at the time. [22]
In more radio-friendly fare, there were also songs that had lyrics which, while not clearly references to the administration, could and were often interpreted as such. These include Pilita Corrales' "Ang Pipit" (lit. "The Little Songbird"), whose slain titular bird cries out "Mamang kay lupit, ang puso mo’y di na nahabag" ("Cruel man, your heart feels no pity!"); and Celeste Legaspi's seemingly-cheerful lullabye "Saranggola ni Pepe" (Pepe's kite), which refers to a "matandang bingi" (an old deaf man) which could be interpreted as Ferdinand Marcos, and whose lyrics could be interpreted to be descriptions of various social ills and abuses of the authoritarian government, concluding with the line "Sumusuway sa utos, puso'y sinusunod" (disobeying orders, the heart will follow). [23] [24]
Bayan Ko, the patriotic kundiman written in the 1920s, was deemed seditious through the earliest years of the Marcos regime; public performances of the song were banned, with violators facing potential arrest and detention. [25] Circumstances changed after the 1983 Assassination of Ninoy Aquino, however, as public anger against the Marcos dictatorship erupted, leading to the weekly protest rallies attended by both the masses and the middle class, and the increasing participation of previously silent groups such as businesses and churches. In particular, a public singing of Bayan Ko was led by folk singer Freddie Aguilar at Aquino's massively-attended funeral, making Aguilar's recording of the song (international pressure had loosened censorship somewhat by then) an instant hit as a protest anthem. [25] [26]
Another old song which was spontaneously appropriated as a protest anthem was the 1970s American folk rock ditty "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," which had been a reference to the return of American prisoners of war, but which was now adapted to refer to Political detainees under the Marcos dictatorship, such as Aquino himself. [26] Yet another was the Ramon Magsaysay campaign jingle "Mambo Magsaysay", which warned Filipinos that "our democracy will die" if a new democratic leader is not put in place. [26] Yet another phenomenon of this shift in public attention was the appropriation of church music for use in the context of protest. [26]
As the last three years of the Marcos dictatorship led inevitably to the People Power revolution, there was enough information about the dictatorship's abuses and enough awareness in churches about the social ills of the time that church music could come to be spontaneously used to spur on resistance against the dictatorship and against authoritarianism in general. Most prominently, during the three days of the active phase of the People Power revolution, the 19th-century English hymn Onward, Christian Soldiers came to be used as a call for the Soldiers to side with the people, instead of the protesters. [26]
The quickly-put-together Evangelical alliance Konsensiya ng Febrero Siete (KONFES), [27] mostly made up of Theologian Isabelo Magalit's Diliman Bible Church congregation and social scientist Melba Padilla Maggay's Institute for Studies in Asian Church and Culture (ISACC) brought their hymnals and loudly sang their hymns the barricades at Gate 2 of Camp Aguinaldo, which the Marcos military had identified as an entry point for storming the camp. [28]
Elsewhere, the largely Catholic EDSA crowd - encouraged to join the protest by Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin, erupted in occasional renditions of "Ave Maria", "Our Father", and various other songs. [29]
In the weeks and months following the ouster of the Marcos family from power, various songs celebrating the People Power revolution came out. Just a few days after the Marcoses were removed from power, composer Tito Sotto, who had popularly been associated with Marcos, [30] wrote and released "Magkaisa" (lit. "Unite as one") was released, as a general call for Filipinos to reconcile with one another despite their differences. [30]
A few weeks later, a supergroup composed of 15 Filipino artists released Handog ng Pilipino sa Mundo (lit. "Offering of the Filipino to the World," and released with the English title of "A New and Better Way—The People's Anthem"), [31] [32] which commemorated specifics of the event, with lyrics saying:
Masdan ang nagaganap sa aming bayan / Nagkasama ang mahirap at mayaman / Kapit-bisig madre pari at sundalo / Naging Langit itong bahagi ng mundo. [32] (Look at what is happening in our country/the rich and poor came together/ linked arms, the nun, the priest, and the soldier/ this part of the world had become heaven)
The lyrics of the song are inscribed on a wall of Our Lady of EDSA Shrine, [31] one of the three monuments which would be built to commemorate Martial Law and the People Power revolution.
"Bayan Ko" is one of the most recognizable patriotic songs of the Philippines. It was written in Spanish by the revolutionary general José Alejandrino in light of the Philippine–American War and subsequent American occupation, and translated into Tagalog some three decades later by the poet José Corazón de Jesús.
"Magkaisa" is a 1986 Filipino pop song performed by Virna Lisa and composed by Tito Sotto, which is notable for being one of three iconic songs associated with the People Power Revolution of 1986 - the other two being "Handog ng Pilipino sa Mundo" and the traditional kundiman anthem "Bayan Ko".
The Bantayog ng mga Bayani, sometimes simply referred to as the Bantayog, is a monument, museum, and historical research center in Quezon City, Philippines, which honors the martyrs and heroes of the struggle against the dictatorship of the 10th Filipino president Ferdinand Marcos.
Student activism in the Philippines from 1965 to 1972 played a key role in the events which led to Ferdinand Marcos' declaration of Martial Law in 1972, and the Marcos regime's eventual downfall during the events of the People Power Revolution of 1986.
The Southern Tagalog 10 was a group of activists abducted and "disappeared" in 1977 during martial law in the Philippines under Proclamation No. 1081 issued by President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Of the 10 university students and professors who were abducted, only three, Virgilio Silva, Salvador Panganiban, and Modesto Sison, "surfaced" later after being killed by suspected agents of the state. Two of those who surfaced were apparently summarily executed. The rest were never found.
Jose "Joe" Pacturayan Dizon was a Filipino priest and activist who fought against the dictatorship of then President Ferdinand Marcos.
Lourdes "Chit" Panganiban Estella-Simbulan was a Filipino journalist and professor, known for her critical writings on government repression, abuse, corruption and human rights violations.
Benjamín Roberto "Behn" Holcombe Cervantes was a Filipino artist and activist. He was highly regarded as a theater pioneer, teacher, and progressive thinker who was detained multiple times during martial law in the Philippines.
Rizalina "Lina" Parabuac Ilagan was an anti-martial law activist who belonged to a network of community organizations in the Southern Tagalog region in the Philippines.
Religious sector opposition against the dictatorship of President Ferdinand Marcos included leaders and workers belonging to different beliefs and denominations.
During the presidency of Ferdinand Marcos, Filipino workers in the labor industry experienced the effects of government corruption, crony capitalism, and cheap labor for foreign transnational industries, One of the objectives of Martial Law was to cheapen labor costs, in order to attract transnational corporations to export labor to the Philippines. Marcos signed many presidential decrees beneficial only to his associates, while allowing for the forced relocation of indigenous peoples, decreasing workers' wages, and murders of labor activists. Minimum wage was a fixed PHP8.00 per day. Many workers were unemployed or underemployed. It was also during the Marcos presidency when the practice of contractualization began, enabling managements to avoid giving regular, permanent status to employees after six months of work. Strikes were banned and the government controlled trade unions, leaving workers without effective protection against employers who had unfair labor practices and regulations.
Alexander "Alex" Orcullo was a Filipino journalist, community leader, and activist known for speaking against the abuses of the dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos, and for being a seminal figure of the protest movement against the Marcos dictatorship in Mindanao, Philippines.
Melania Cristina Catalla was an anti-martial law activist who belonged to a network of community organizations in the Southern Tagalog region in the Philippines whose disappearance on July 31, 1977, became a rallying cry of the Philippine resistance against the Marcos dictatorship.
Captain Danilo Poblete Vizmanos, PN, Ret. was a Filipino activist and retired captain of the Philippine Navy. He is best known for his resistance against the Martial Law regime of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos. On November 30, 2016, Vizmanos' name was engraved on the Wall of Remembrance of the Bantayog ng mga Bayani, which honors the martyrs and heroes who fought against the Marcos dictatorship.
Aloysius “Ochie” Ureta Baes was a Filipino chemist, environmentalist, pro-democracy activist, educator and musician.
Gerardo T. Faustino was a Filipino student leader and activist from the University of the Philippines Los Baños who is best known as one of the most prominent desaparecidos of the Marcos Martial Law era in the Philippines.
Maria Leticia Quintina Jimenez Pascual-Ladlad, also known by her nickname Tish, was a student journalist at the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB) during the Marcos dictatorship, known for being the first woman editor-in-chief of the Aggie Green and Gold, for her community organizing work among farmers in Laguna and Quezon, and for being the first UPLB student to become a desaparecido during the Martial Law regime.
Camp Vicente Lim is a facility of the Philippine National Police located in Barangay Mayapa in the City of Calamba, Laguna, which currently serves as the regional headquarters of the PNP in Calabarzon. It has played a significant part in the local history of the Calabarzon region, as well as the national history of the Philippines; it was part of the Calamba Airstrip during the Philippines' American Colonial era, and was occupied by the Japanese during World War II although it is not recorded as having been used for military purposes during the war. It later became a facility of the Philippines' integrated local police forces, hosting the Integrated National Police Training Command. During Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos, Camp Vicente Lim was one of the four provincial camps to be designated a Regional Command for Detainees (RECAD). It was designated RECAD I and it housed thousands of political detainees from the Southern Tagalog and Bicol regions.
Historians estimate that there were about 70,000 individuals incarcerated by the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos in the period between his 1972 declaration of Martial Law until he was removed from office by the 1986 People Power Revolution. This included students, opposition politicians, journalists, academics, and religious workers, aside from known activists. Those who were captured were referred to as "political detainees," rather than "political prisoners," with the technical definitions of the former being vague enough that the Marcos administration could continue to hold them in detention without having to be charged.
Movement for a Free Philippines was a Washington, D.C.-based organization established in 1973 by exiled Filipinos in opposition to the authoritarian regime of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines.