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Songs of Hope and Pride cont’d

Isang Daan

Meanwhile, in UP Los Baños, a music fest, or a songwriting competition, was held to choose a centennial theme song.

“Sinuggest siya ni Chancellor David (who?),” said Angelica Dayao, a senior Communication Arts student from UP Los Baños who composed the winning entry, Isang Daan, in the music fest which was held on Sept. 27, 2007 in UP Los Baños.

Sixty percent of the total scores of entries were already pre-judged, Dayao said. The remaining 40 percent were based on the performance on the finals night.

“Gusto niya magkaroon ng Centennial theme song ang UPLB,” Dayao said. “Lahat ng Centennial-related activities, systemwide or UPLB Centennial lang, gusto niya may theme song.”

At first, Dayao said she was not really interested in joining the competition. She said she was even “disheartened” at first because she once proposed a Centennial songwriting competition for an arts organization, where she is a member of, that is based in the Department of Communication Arts in UPLB.

“Unfortunately, walang budget. Di masyadong nabigyang-pansin yung proposal na ginawa ko,” Dayao said.

She only became interested in joining the competition around two weeks before the deadline. “Ako yung pinakahuling nag-submit ng entry,” Dayao said.

Dayao said one of her professors, Prof. Dukka, invited her to join the songwriting competition. Dukka is the director of the play they are currently producing as of this writing. Dayao said she usually makes the music for most of the plays which Dukka has directed.

“Nung ininvite niya ‘ko na sumaili, medyo may pagtanggi, pero di ‘ko rin matangghian kasi parang boss ko [siya],” Dayao said.

Dayao shared that most of the songs that she composed are for theater. “Nagco-compose din ako ng songs na pang-banda, pang-solos,” she added.

How was she able to compose Isang Daan?

Dayao said she composed the melody first before the lyrics of the song because her mind works better in music and harmony. Then, a lot of people helped her in creating the lyrics.

“Maraming nagbiday ng ideas. Mostly mga friends from communication arts program. Mga ka-course ko,” she said.

This was how she did the lyrics. She wrote down her ideas, mostly one-liners, on a sheet of bond paper.

“Ano ba ang masasabi ko sa Centennial ng UP? Bakit ba tayo nagcecelebrate? Ano ba ang nagawa ng university para sa akin as well as doon sa mga taong hindi naman student ng university?” Dayao said, adding that she just kept on writing on her bond paper without following any “structure, form or arrangement.”

She then showed her bond paper full of one-liners to her friends. “Nagsulat din sila ng mga one-liner,” she said. “[Pagkatapos] nag-encircle ako nung mga pinaka-nakaantig sa ‘kin,” she added.

After that, she started writing the lyrics following a “form,” which she then incorporated into the music she had created before. “Ganoon yung naging proseso ko ng paggawa,” she shared.

Dayao’s classmates, Adrian Crisanto and Joana Rica Sena, sung the demo version of Isang Daan. Then, Dayao said she wanted to add more singers so the song would produce an effect that a whole community is singing, so Dayao’s fellow Communication Arts majors, Miguel Encarnacion, Jeanette Soruico and Karlo Guevarra, joined Crisanto and Sena. The five of them performed during the Centennial kickoff last Jan. 8 in UP Diliman.

Dayao said she chose the five of them to sing Isang Daan because she thinks they can best invoke the song’s message.

“Kasi hindi ko intension na sobrang galling nung mga kakanta… kasi ayokong magkaroon ng impression na mahirap siyang kantahin ng mga tao,” Dayao said. “[Yung] tamang galing lang na pwedeng gayahin ng kahit sino.”

She also said that the idea of a theme song is that it should be sung by many that’s why it should be easy to sing. Dayao said her “philosophy” in making the melody is that it should be easy to recall and that the song need not have high-belting notes.

“Yung tama lang,” Dayao said.

Critique

According to Ramon Maria G. Acoymo, Ph.D, dean of the College of Music in UP Diliman, Rosales’ UP Ang Galing Mo and Dayao’s Isang Daan are “typically youngish” songs.

“I think the fact that they’re forthright and they’re honest, they’re simple, makes it very accessible to certain niche of the listening market. And for me, [for] both songs, the niche really is college students or I think very young professionals that happen to like pop rockish, folkish three- to four-minute songs,” Acoymo said.

The lyrics of UP Ang Galing Mo, according to Acoymo, are “effective in a sense [that] they seem to suggest hope and pride for our institution.”

“If that’s what we want to believe in, I think it’s pretty clear [that] the lyrics deliver them,” Acoymo said.

Likewise, Acoymo said the lyrics of Isang Daan also suggest hope and pride for UP.

However, whether one is better than the other cannot be determined because the two songs “accomplish different things.”

“[UP Ang Galing Mo] revves you up. [Isang Daan] is a little more introspective,” Acoymo said.

Acoymo added, “[The first one] is rawer and more hard-driving because maybe it’s inspiring you to move to greater action. Maybe the second one is mellower because it places more emphasis on introspection and reflection.” Likewise, Acoymo said it’s hard to define what a good pop song is. For instance, UP Ang Galing mo is good in a sense that it was able to say what it wants to say.

“But if you compare it to great song compositions of the masters, the harmonic, melodic and rhythmic ingenuity may not be of the same level. But it doesn’t strive to be that way. Within what it strives to be, it has a potential to be effective,” Acoymo said.

Acoymo also said UP Ang Galing Mo is apt for UP’s Centennial “for a certain market.”

“It may be limited to that young market which appreciates alternative pop rock [type] of songs. So it may be appropriate in a sense that it’s singable and listenable and recallable by a certain segment of the young UP population,” Acoymo said.

The same is true for Isang Daan. “It may not be very listenable to or something older people might enjoy. It’s not one to drive to a frenzy of, shall we say, vision or inspiration,” he said.

Acoymo added that “majesty” is one word he would like a centennial song to have.

“What I would look for in a centennial song are qualities that are more akin to majesty, to scope, to breadth, to sublimity,” Acoymo said. “Something that moves your heard to lofty inspirations. It has to be majestic to encapsulate, to reflect and to embody 100 years of great achievement,” he added.

An example he gave is UP Naming Mahal by Nicanor Abelardo and Bayan Ko.

“Maybe the Freddie Aguilar version [of Bayan Ko] would be like folk rock. But the composition itself, I think it’s majestic. It is sublime. And whether a teenager sings it or Cory Aquino sings it, it is just as powerful,” Acoymo said.

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ISANG DAAN

Isang daang taong pagsisilbi sa bayan
Isang daang taon ng kagitingan
Ginising ang ating puso’t isipan
Mula sa pagkakatulog ng kamalayan

CHORUS

Isang Daan tungo sa karunungan
Isang Daan tungo sa kagalingan
Daan na tinuro ng ating pamantasang hirang
Inilaan para sa’ting mga anak ng bayan

Dumating man ang hangin ng pagbabago
Iskolar, huwag patitinag itaas ang kamao
Kasing lawak at ‘sing taas ng langit
Ang abot ng isipan mo

(Repeat CHORUS)

Magbago man ang panahon
Pamantasan nati’y ‘di patatalo
Iskolar ng bayan noon at ngayon
Laging angat sa iba
Isang Daan tungo sa karunungan
Isang Daan tungo sa kagalingan
Isang Daan tungo sa karunungan
Isang Daan tungo sa kagalingan

(Repeat Chorus)

Listen to the lyrics here.