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The religious connotations to this title are not misleading at all. A more than
100,000-strong audience trooped to the Mall of Asia Concert Grounds for what
must be the ultimate concert in Philippine music history—and like some phoenix
rising, resurrecting for this one special night, were the Eraserheads.
For anyone who was around when Ely Buendia, Raimund Marasigan, Marcus Adoro and Buddy Zabala were
regularly gigging as the EHeads, this would have been
like some semi-religious revival meeting. The closest we've had to a
Beatles-like Fab Four, the premature demise of the
band in 2002 (Ely calling it Graduation-time) has only added to the mystique
and legendary status of the band. Factor in the bitin midway-aborted reunion concert
of last year, due to Ely's poor health, and you had an almost-mystical,
fervor-pumped event in the making.
From
the opening chords of Magasin,
there was dumbstruck awe written on the faces of the audience, that sensation
of having to pinch oneself to know this was finally, truly happening. And it
took a couple of songs before the crowd shook off this sensation, to really get
into the music. Raimund's tackling the lead vocals
for Slow Mo, Insomnia and Alcohol,
plus the rearranged reggae lilt to Marcus' version of Huwag Mo Nang Itanong
—these were like the true icebreakers, when the crowd broke free, seemed to
collectively sigh 'I believe,' and realized that at its core, they were at a
celebration, a party of a concert! And the E-Heads did not disappoint.
Mining their first three albums, Ultramagneticelectropop, Circus and Catterpillow for the night's
repertoire, it was one crowd favorite after another, where a sea of voices
would not only sing the chorus of the songs, but even accompany EIy from the very first line. Such was the case with songs
like Overdrive; and when Ely exhorted
the crowd to dance to Super Proxy,
the crowd was awash with raised and pumping hands, ready to follow their
leader's every utterance.
A
poignant moment was raised when Ely asked the crowd to remember Francis Magalona; and while they performed the chorus of Kaleidoscope World, images of Francis
flashed on the screens that were raised on the stage, and those that were
dotted around the grounds. An acoustic set followed the short intermission, and
I presume that had much to do with the pacing of the concert for Ely's health,
as it allowed him to sit on an armchair.
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I
personally called this their "sofa set," and when Marcus placed a hat
on his head, with his acoustic guitar, some people joked with a request for Anak (yes, there
was a Freddie Aguilar look to him). And that was what became
the tone of concert, how people relaxed, enjoyed the vibe, and seemed to party
as one. During the intermission, people would stroll, and I know for a
fact that celebrities like Francine Prieto, Ehra Madrigal, Wendell Ramos and Dos Quizon
were getting all these requests to pose for photos.
The
final set of songs had them up bringing on Jazz Nicolas of the Itchyworms to play the keyboards, and it was during this juncture that
the realization of just how magical and mystical this night was really hit me.
If I understand it right, while the band may perform as the Eraserheads
for a bunch of dates abroad, Ely had signed a document effectively eliminating
him from performing in the Philippines
with the other three, as the Heads, for a period of ten years. As I've written
elsewhere, I can understand how with their own respective bands and flourishing
careers, the four Heads can be frustrated by how everyone can only talk about
them reforming. But, let's face it, I don't think Pupil, Sandwich, Pedicab, Marcus Highway and the Dawn play to crowds of
100,000—so this reunion gig truly had special stamped all over it. When the
five trooped to the center of the stage to take a final bow, there were shouts
of "group hug," to which Ely exclaimed, Kayo muna! While Raimund
threw his sneakers to the crowd, Ely threw his sneakers and jacket and slyly
called out, “Salamat... We were the Eraserheads!”
An
encore with Ang Huling El Bimbo
had the crowd swaying in sheer ecstasy, and as the crowd began to troop to the
exits, a real surprise was created by the band coming back for a second encore
that included such all-time favorites as the playful Toyang—shame to those who didn't
know the lyrics when Ely descended from the stage and brought the mike to some
members of the audience. Kudos to, the MOA personnel as they
made the egress orderly, with only a minimum of traffic affecting Macapagal Ave.
For the more than 100,000 "faithful," the night really
exemplified how the Eraserheads represented an era (I
call it putting the Era back in the Eraser); how much of what we see passing as
today's music scene, owes a debt to this band that made original material and
relevant, shared-experiences lyrics, anthems for a generation.
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