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Although it is called "Visayan pop" or "Vispop", the terms mainly refers to popular music in ], not all ].<ref name="ilonggo">{{Cite website | first=Jennie P. | last=Arado | title=10 Vispop songs to get you hooked on the genre | date=March 25, 2018 | url=https://www.sunstar.com.ph/davao/weekend/ilonggo-pop | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/AGkUr | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref><ref name="kz"/><ref name="jerika">{{Cite website | first=John | last=Sitchon | title=Jerika Teodorico: The sweet sound of Vispop | date=September 25, 2021 | url=https://www.rappler.com/entertainment/music/artist-spotlight-jerika-teodorico-visayan-pop/ | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/Xoljx | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> In an interview with Kara Angan of '']'', ] singer-songwriter Joseph Gara identified a "distinct Bisaya melody" common to Vispop songs. He said that the melody was simple and did not have many complicated elements. He attributed it to the loose structure of traditional Cebuano songs from which the genre evolved, noting that such songs lacked the rigid song structures of Western music.<ref name="melody">{{Cite website | first=Kara | last=Angan | title=The Pride Of Bohol: Joseph Gara On The Beauty Of Bisaya Music | date=March 25, 2018 | url=https://billboardphilippines.com/music/discover/joseph-gara-on-the-beauty-of-bisaya-music-interview-vispop-2024/ | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/8OPXc | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> Ruben Almendras of '']'' described Cebuano musicality as "a mixture of Asian, Spanish and Chinese influences".<ref name="freeman">{{Cite website | first=Ruben | last=Almendras | title=The musicality of Cebuanos | date=October 15, 2023 | url=https://www.philstar.com/the-freeman/opinion/2023/10/10/2302612/musicality-cebuanos | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/8X3EZ | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> | Although it is called "Visayan pop" or "Vispop", the terms mainly refers to popular music in ], not all ].<ref name="ilonggo">{{Cite website | first=Jennie P. | last=Arado | title=10 Vispop songs to get you hooked on the genre | date=March 25, 2018 | url=https://www.sunstar.com.ph/davao/weekend/ilonggo-pop | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/AGkUr | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref><ref name="kz"/><ref name="jerika">{{Cite website | first=John | last=Sitchon | title=Jerika Teodorico: The sweet sound of Vispop | date=September 25, 2021 | url=https://www.rappler.com/entertainment/music/artist-spotlight-jerika-teodorico-visayan-pop/ | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/Xoljx | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> In an interview with Kara Angan of '']'', ] singer-songwriter Joseph Gara identified a "distinct Bisaya melody" common to Vispop songs. He said that the melody was simple and did not have many complicated elements. He attributed it to the loose structure of traditional Cebuano songs from which the genre evolved, noting that such songs lacked the rigid song structures of Western music.<ref name="melody">{{Cite website | first=Kara | last=Angan | title=The Pride Of Bohol: Joseph Gara On The Beauty Of Bisaya Music | date=March 25, 2018 | url=https://billboardphilippines.com/music/discover/joseph-gara-on-the-beauty-of-bisaya-music-interview-vispop-2024/ | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/8OPXc | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> Ruben Almendras of '']'' described Cebuano musicality as "a mixture of Asian, Spanish and Chinese influences".<ref name="freeman">{{Cite website | first=Ruben | last=Almendras | title=The musicality of Cebuanos | date=October 15, 2023 | url=https://www.philstar.com/the-freeman/opinion/2023/10/10/2302612/musicality-cebuanos | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/8X3EZ | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | website=]}}</ref> | ||
A study published in December 2023 found that Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs avoided using noun-forming suffixes, favoring noun-forming prefixes, although both ] exist in Cebuano. Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs also avoided using adverb-forming affixes and negative affixes, but used verb-forming suffixes. Again, all of these morphemes exist in the language itself.<ref name="morphemes">{{Cite journal | first1=Brandon N. | last1=Obenza | first2=Gideon S. | last2=Sumayo | first3=Teresita Q. | last3=Adriano | url=https://download.ssrn.com/24/02/21/ssrn_id4733694_code6487140.pdf?response-content-disposition=inline&X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEFsaCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJGMEQCIE5J6clMF0Z3h%2FlSyZgiE7WpMHCf88olK4ADEy7x8yChAiBX3KSUYSLocTT6eKdrgOnUfoFoTV%2BD2%2F%2BPNRaZD6WUqiq9BQgkEAQaDDMwODQ3NTMwMTI1NyIMO8nSWFccx4glQOQYKpoFX7BKY36xJ%2F881wUsEJDT9q8731G7gUNb96US2Nv%2BeanhftkCfpWGsig7IoeEj88%2B2%2F39QZPwh2xPB2pLU77a4ZKAC13dzoQJjpFPTaaFVhpSyG2l9p1BCYOTaGLBrCdkCEjxMJv%2BzB%2BpPtJNYsg2gtDNnff7JSi4fPLPIAXA5eKWfKxRc0HeZiFMqAOJnmnmv9%2Bg7wJVypdTvwaP%2FDVmFtuq72skwr4LYiw%2FlN%2BzNKxi3y6Y4YNn3omAKZrfyeMDtX6pGDMEcgV61IDD8A88QKXH9I4%2FT0Wi0ul1d6tWfjdii0e%2FjNAqB1VZ7s7IFQv5ProBnfs%2FBimt40LAI20C1IonJg5ULdn5TSS2Qjt5yov4DpgKQrvLKB%2FlvEtCPfFjTACGUiUSaX8Nc%2BlY8IdLAwgOT3dA00K1w19rmKYssSaF600%2F6e%2F5PtMwE16auv6CbgphPAlXlh3FJqrJKFrdee1r32chCm9TG4dHw7yuSRb1wYKLVCzKQYh%2BBmQKZk2epAbsIMWLcVe8uLiiqOC9Zlu6l8cuMcBDtIVQVHVt43juwNVTt7s9EyXRsGClzVt0VBQurscvOMDI8R9l7gx%2Fyh8FVUjqZMTNsnfQ3iZAJk84%2BPEtvAY0HKyNebQzCYit3cd4uSjBzWwynOj3302vevbH6mjeS1CDvNpEKiLYglayRZuG1yD%2BZM6Zg%2Fuq74ei1e1z3Io0Jy1rnSsfMG7vECNb2Kxl8wxueJsZ5Cx362f5ZjqsZRBievXNfNMirHWeZkdn%2Fl5N4ty8v%2FfvbrOCl5mplkyUFjrwjuCTOryZ14qGUDRqV92AjMiTaKDIapPtW98ovWmLzsE0CjR6%2BSj%2F0aCdMkn39CXJbDWDh0EQ7vSUyuo14ab409wQMIOu%2FroGOrIBC4IFNw%2FxRJ1Xka0ifL6QmpRomRou4mnDIkMIHahAVY1Xgae9DAbRXyvJnpCV%2FXRFr6NlMs7Us6x4LYPIpdTfc%2FXXpRoJP%2FXsrtai97BMmEWBo8gT0edCmhgT5y01D4cP24viO4gWCgAvA1yEm%2BZJ119cQTtV6zOQOd5iC9FIib4xPmSixNiI10WRZohK3nXbj9RLJMq8nhBzThSsFq0jFIVTl5%2BGNJuv7kXL3PNiB4FGHg%3D%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20241216T040643Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAUPUUPRWE5IUPVVLT%2F20241216%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=d3ad52c0ba5d42698fa0406c4c43af4d28915023eb35a4325aa2971f725a0619&abstractId=4733694 | title=Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes of Cebuano and English Pop Songs: A Contrastive Analysis | journal=Advance Journal of Education and Social Sciences | volume=8 | issue=12 | date=December 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241216041539/https://download.ssrn.com/24/02/21/ssrn_id4733694_code6487140.pdf?response-content-disposition=inline&X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEFwaCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJHMEUCIQDVRrA0Qw8gK7Z2htDHzq7WEC6k6PxpPMVHydeAI%2BXW1QIgCY0rL6CuU6sgtpkkEyjltT8R1gP589iSQxkQXW4kwyAqvgUIJRAEGgwzMDg0NzUzMDEyNTciDBnbXe5kwWFF3AvOdyqbBaNtxIQYvMaal2RUvKr1gH%2Fi6Q2UvqI1%2BXI6oW7YFkEYB%2B2gFBlnZVaKwag%2Bo%2FlUhsF3i1xD6OSnsj25vGGEi7VtmwnMu%2FZmu6sS8NLiriwTO75mHM8ZtjTOQJ2kOJ9cDO3edh1xnVcsq69G7GRCP1HNGDKCYBO7gyIs0IqWpVprBgQTwLYe3OlmpzsBF7MOkxwfDZu9dVGU0grxpewK0KLE6NYo9%2FFE6%2BqnQLifDBW1069Ob1%2FrJ6cgBFz6zbQNOV%2BSW5Cxa%2BuzYMPXYYGbY6coqpCCMtp5n%2FyfhM0oNiaZqiCx3o7WZyp8Ir%2Bld6YhS3akAkz2ZhK%2BVywb12PJ3zVcjTyGIgPXOH3oxcTjGwOe6cM7lnermaZ77erfIrGkJffYt0O3PbiZC8j%2BgBadJMI7FFJFXYWAZmbwZ4jTodE8FNNwpImP91%2B7QxfhQxMiwhChHbWWDkXc774xDEefEDsck3TzCDFeGkc7NW2gTb8fu7wqx%2Fr7SERdcWq92UWVIPOWZW44jb%2BqTFQjGtQ49%2B4xBt7SH571%2BTEYr%2FeKK80XafPI9lEr2hmbJiYwjRNgqDTWW17lWTQo3Maqfvr37b0xTvW0fPP4rHXYlN%2FdMtG7g0Yk%2FOLyRyQsK6XY34%2BNdET9T%2BTCt2dYiBQV1VuEH4tc5vpuYNs5AohhqhFQTvAGADfMW%2F9TgF71hanYTyEungtg2%2BYQ%2BTLUCuRrOv%2FyiHxIpFvpEGuKsYy13pk1L%2BUz7YvYFdgRhyn3Dxfh2Gddc1wlZs7f53mT3S2GrDhshuGLZYKmyFZ613P4tqpNtcvDIa1iHQMZirNF%2FZgThs24gHuOhaWtHO%2B76ocZIbWiqeLMt4EW7lwMYl%2FCgxV%2F9ruJdRhqZJoDEo8bGNowgrv%2BugY6sQFENT6gK7ugpnYxFkXbBiP03FI3f0s1WQmfaM3%2BKz39KVCLMeAFJlZlYYqQuLYsrDe44L53WXfV2ByidHU1%2BdI2AUBu00tRlaFbd9Dqcf4euEfoiBK6x5o%2F4K49dGJ6FPwxqLVEFr0wO%2BhhMLfcBK1uCn0%2BVf7U7%2FpUn5WVI0lzdN1b5JxFMOjdTekMuH7O4O6VM2J7E96FejIE12Na0xQAUiR8cDuKjQVAz789SUA9w8k%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20241216T041445Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAUPUUPRWE5LHRFLQ6%2F20241216%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=3146b01801696e7475f04a8df952ff05bf2c59b68439be7d5b85c9c760338fb7&abstractId=4733694 | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | page=1-14 }}</ref> Many Vispop songs, especially from the 2020s onward, use a mix of Cebuano and other languages, mainly English and Tagalog. ] attributes her mixing of Cebuano lyrics with Tagalog to a fear that "not everyone would understand it".<ref name="nme2"/> On the other hand, singer-songwriter Shoti |
A study published in December 2023 found that Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs avoided using noun-forming suffixes, favoring noun-forming prefixes, although both ] exist in Cebuano. Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs also avoided using adverb-forming affixes and negative affixes, but used verb-forming suffixes. Again, all of these morphemes exist in the language itself.<ref name="morphemes">{{Cite journal | first1=Brandon N. | last1=Obenza | first2=Gideon S. | last2=Sumayo | first3=Teresita Q. | last3=Adriano | url=https://download.ssrn.com/24/02/21/ssrn_id4733694_code6487140.pdf?response-content-disposition=inline&X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEFsaCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJGMEQCIE5J6clMF0Z3h%2FlSyZgiE7WpMHCf88olK4ADEy7x8yChAiBX3KSUYSLocTT6eKdrgOnUfoFoTV%2BD2%2F%2BPNRaZD6WUqiq9BQgkEAQaDDMwODQ3NTMwMTI1NyIMO8nSWFccx4glQOQYKpoFX7BKY36xJ%2F881wUsEJDT9q8731G7gUNb96US2Nv%2BeanhftkCfpWGsig7IoeEj88%2B2%2F39QZPwh2xPB2pLU77a4ZKAC13dzoQJjpFPTaaFVhpSyG2l9p1BCYOTaGLBrCdkCEjxMJv%2BzB%2BpPtJNYsg2gtDNnff7JSi4fPLPIAXA5eKWfKxRc0HeZiFMqAOJnmnmv9%2Bg7wJVypdTvwaP%2FDVmFtuq72skwr4LYiw%2FlN%2BzNKxi3y6Y4YNn3omAKZrfyeMDtX6pGDMEcgV61IDD8A88QKXH9I4%2FT0Wi0ul1d6tWfjdii0e%2FjNAqB1VZ7s7IFQv5ProBnfs%2FBimt40LAI20C1IonJg5ULdn5TSS2Qjt5yov4DpgKQrvLKB%2FlvEtCPfFjTACGUiUSaX8Nc%2BlY8IdLAwgOT3dA00K1w19rmKYssSaF600%2F6e%2F5PtMwE16auv6CbgphPAlXlh3FJqrJKFrdee1r32chCm9TG4dHw7yuSRb1wYKLVCzKQYh%2BBmQKZk2epAbsIMWLcVe8uLiiqOC9Zlu6l8cuMcBDtIVQVHVt43juwNVTt7s9EyXRsGClzVt0VBQurscvOMDI8R9l7gx%2Fyh8FVUjqZMTNsnfQ3iZAJk84%2BPEtvAY0HKyNebQzCYit3cd4uSjBzWwynOj3302vevbH6mjeS1CDvNpEKiLYglayRZuG1yD%2BZM6Zg%2Fuq74ei1e1z3Io0Jy1rnSsfMG7vECNb2Kxl8wxueJsZ5Cx362f5ZjqsZRBievXNfNMirHWeZkdn%2Fl5N4ty8v%2FfvbrOCl5mplkyUFjrwjuCTOryZ14qGUDRqV92AjMiTaKDIapPtW98ovWmLzsE0CjR6%2BSj%2F0aCdMkn39CXJbDWDh0EQ7vSUyuo14ab409wQMIOu%2FroGOrIBC4IFNw%2FxRJ1Xka0ifL6QmpRomRou4mnDIkMIHahAVY1Xgae9DAbRXyvJnpCV%2FXRFr6NlMs7Us6x4LYPIpdTfc%2FXXpRoJP%2FXsrtai97BMmEWBo8gT0edCmhgT5y01D4cP24viO4gWCgAvA1yEm%2BZJ119cQTtV6zOQOd5iC9FIib4xPmSixNiI10WRZohK3nXbj9RLJMq8nhBzThSsFq0jFIVTl5%2BGNJuv7kXL3PNiB4FGHg%3D%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20241216T040643Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAUPUUPRWE5IUPVVLT%2F20241216%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=d3ad52c0ba5d42698fa0406c4c43af4d28915023eb35a4325aa2971f725a0619&abstractId=4733694 | title=Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes of Cebuano and English Pop Songs: A Contrastive Analysis | journal=Advance Journal of Education and Social Sciences | volume=8 | issue=12 | date=December 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241216041539/https://download.ssrn.com/24/02/21/ssrn_id4733694_code6487140.pdf?response-content-disposition=inline&X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEFwaCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJHMEUCIQDVRrA0Qw8gK7Z2htDHzq7WEC6k6PxpPMVHydeAI%2BXW1QIgCY0rL6CuU6sgtpkkEyjltT8R1gP589iSQxkQXW4kwyAqvgUIJRAEGgwzMDg0NzUzMDEyNTciDBnbXe5kwWFF3AvOdyqbBaNtxIQYvMaal2RUvKr1gH%2Fi6Q2UvqI1%2BXI6oW7YFkEYB%2B2gFBlnZVaKwag%2Bo%2FlUhsF3i1xD6OSnsj25vGGEi7VtmwnMu%2FZmu6sS8NLiriwTO75mHM8ZtjTOQJ2kOJ9cDO3edh1xnVcsq69G7GRCP1HNGDKCYBO7gyIs0IqWpVprBgQTwLYe3OlmpzsBF7MOkxwfDZu9dVGU0grxpewK0KLE6NYo9%2FFE6%2BqnQLifDBW1069Ob1%2FrJ6cgBFz6zbQNOV%2BSW5Cxa%2BuzYMPXYYGbY6coqpCCMtp5n%2FyfhM0oNiaZqiCx3o7WZyp8Ir%2Bld6YhS3akAkz2ZhK%2BVywb12PJ3zVcjTyGIgPXOH3oxcTjGwOe6cM7lnermaZ77erfIrGkJffYt0O3PbiZC8j%2BgBadJMI7FFJFXYWAZmbwZ4jTodE8FNNwpImP91%2B7QxfhQxMiwhChHbWWDkXc774xDEefEDsck3TzCDFeGkc7NW2gTb8fu7wqx%2Fr7SERdcWq92UWVIPOWZW44jb%2BqTFQjGtQ49%2B4xBt7SH571%2BTEYr%2FeKK80XafPI9lEr2hmbJiYwjRNgqDTWW17lWTQo3Maqfvr37b0xTvW0fPP4rHXYlN%2FdMtG7g0Yk%2FOLyRyQsK6XY34%2BNdET9T%2BTCt2dYiBQV1VuEH4tc5vpuYNs5AohhqhFQTvAGADfMW%2F9TgF71hanYTyEungtg2%2BYQ%2BTLUCuRrOv%2FyiHxIpFvpEGuKsYy13pk1L%2BUz7YvYFdgRhyn3Dxfh2Gddc1wlZs7f53mT3S2GrDhshuGLZYKmyFZ613P4tqpNtcvDIa1iHQMZirNF%2FZgThs24gHuOhaWtHO%2B76ocZIbWiqeLMt4EW7lwMYl%2FCgxV%2F9ruJdRhqZJoDEo8bGNowgrv%2BugY6sQFENT6gK7ugpnYxFkXbBiP03FI3f0s1WQmfaM3%2BKz39KVCLMeAFJlZlYYqQuLYsrDe44L53WXfV2ByidHU1%2BdI2AUBu00tRlaFbd9Dqcf4euEfoiBK6x5o%2F4K49dGJ6FPwxqLVEFr0wO%2BhhMLfcBK1uCn0%2BVf7U7%2FpUn5WVI0lzdN1b5JxFMOjdTekMuH7O4O6VM2J7E96FejIE12Na0xQAUiR8cDuKjQVAz789SUA9w8k%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20241216T041445Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAUPUUPRWE5LHRFLQ6%2F20241216%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=3146b01801696e7475f04a8df952ff05bf2c59b68439be7d5b85c9c760338fb7&abstractId=4733694 | archive-date=December 16, 2024 | page=1-14 }}</ref> Many Vispop songs, especially from the 2020s onward, use a mix of Cebuano and other languages, mainly English and Tagalog. ] attributes her mixing of Cebuano lyrics with Tagalog to a fear that "not everyone would understand it".<ref name="nme2"/> On the other hand, singer-songwriter Shoti, who is known for mixing Cebuano and English in his discography, says that he simply wants his songs to stand out from music that is wholly in either language.<ref name="rappler3"/> Lyricism in Vispop, particularly in the oeuvre of Cebuano singer-songwriter Therese Villarante-Langit, has been described as poetic. Mesiona ''et al.'' identify contemporary Vispop lyrics' poetic qualities as the legacy of ''balak'' (spoken love poetry) culture in Cebu.<ref name="therese"/><ref name="tomasino">{{Cite website | date=November 12, 2023 | url=https://nylonmanila.com/pop-culture/pinoy-culture-references-alamat-day-and-night-music-video/ | title=Alamat narrates the tales of love and freedom in 'IsaPuso' | first=Kurt Alec | last=Mira | website=] | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/dTU7t | archive-date=December 15, 2024 }}</ref> In a feature about the largely Cebuano song "]" by the pop group ], Acer Batislaong of '']'' wrote that the Cebuano language adds "an extra touch of romance and allure" to music.<ref name="nmnl2">{{Cite website | date=June 20, 2023 | url=https://nylonmanila.com/pop-culture/pinoy-culture-references-alamat-day-and-night-music-video/ | title=Jane De Leon And Other Pinoy Culture References in ALAMAT's 'Day and Night' Music Video | first=Acer | last=Batislaong | website=] | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/c38iX | archive-date=December 13, 2024 }}</ref> Although she has not written any songs in Cebuano, the popular singer-songwriter ] credits the Vispop genre for molding her simple, emotionally resonant artistry and lyricism.<ref name="mrld">{{Cite website | date=February 18, 2024 | url=https://billboardphilippines.com/music/discover/mrld-goes-beyond-an-art-gallery-could-never-be-as-unique-as-you-interview-2024/ | title=Mrld Goes Beyond 'An Art Gallery Could Never Be As Unique As You' | first=Acer | last=Batislaong | website=] | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/a3xpY | archive-date=December 16, 2024 }}</ref> | ||
==History== | ==History== |
Revision as of 19:18, 16 December 2024
Visayan pop | |
---|---|
Other names | Vispop, Vis-pop, Cebuano pop, V-Pop |
Stylistic origins | |
Cultural origins | Early 20th century, Visayas, Philippines |
Subgenres | |
Bisrock | |
Other topics | |
Visayan pop, better known as Vispop (not to be confused with the Scandinavian musical genre), is short for Visayan popular music. Despite its name, it usually refers to popular music in the Cebuano language; pop music sung in other Visayan languages is known by other terms. For instance, a separate pop music movement for Hiligaynon emerged in the late 2010s, called Ilonggo Pop. The genre is popular in the Visayas and parts of Mindanao in which Cebuano is spoken. Bisrock, an abbreviated form of Bisaya rock music, may be considered a sub-genre of Vispop.
In the early 20th century, the popularity of zarzuelas in Cebu led to a boom in original Cebuano music. Modern Cebuano music flourished until the 1970s to 1980s. From the 1980s to 1990s, Cebuano interest in local music waned. Bisrock bands briefly revived the genre of Visayan popular music in the 2000s. In the 2010s, with the launch of the Visayan Pop Songwriting Campaign, a new crop of Vispop talents renewed the industry's hope in the genre. The genre progressed towards a more pop sound. Various Vispop songs are written partially in Cebuano and partially in other languages, primarily English and Tagalog, achieved mainstream success in the 2020s. In January 2023, Careless Music's Wavy Baby Festival in Cebu sparked backlash when they cut most of the Cebuano musical acts from their lineup. In response to the controversy, some individuals, such as Vincent Eco from the Vispop band The Sundown and journalist Kara Angan of Billboard Philippines, remarked that a social divide between Vispop and mainstream Pinoy pop still exists.
Characteristics
Although it is called "Visayan pop" or "Vispop", the terms mainly refers to popular music in Cebuano, not all Visayan languages. In an interview with Kara Angan of Billboard Philippines, Boholano singer-songwriter Joseph Gara identified a "distinct Bisaya melody" common to Vispop songs. He said that the melody was simple and did not have many complicated elements. He attributed it to the loose structure of traditional Cebuano songs from which the genre evolved, noting that such songs lacked the rigid song structures of Western music. Ruben Almendras of The Freeman described Cebuano musicality as "a mixture of Asian, Spanish and Chinese influences".
A study published in December 2023 found that Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs avoided using noun-forming suffixes, favoring noun-forming prefixes, although both inflectional morphemes exist in Cebuano. Cebuano lyrics in Vispop songs also avoided using adverb-forming affixes and negative affixes, but used verb-forming suffixes. Again, all of these morphemes exist in the language itself. Many Vispop songs, especially from the 2020s onward, use a mix of Cebuano and other languages, mainly English and Tagalog. Maris Racal attributes her mixing of Cebuano lyrics with Tagalog to a fear that "not everyone would understand it". On the other hand, singer-songwriter Shoti, who is known for mixing Cebuano and English in his discography, says that he simply wants his songs to stand out from music that is wholly in either language. Lyricism in Vispop, particularly in the oeuvre of Cebuano singer-songwriter Therese Villarante-Langit, has been described as poetic. Mesiona et al. identify contemporary Vispop lyrics' poetic qualities as the legacy of balak (spoken love poetry) culture in Cebu. In a feature about the largely Cebuano song "Day and Night" by the pop group Alamat, Acer Batislaong of Nylon Manila wrote that the Cebuano language adds "an extra touch of romance and allure" to music. Although she has not written any songs in Cebuano, the popular singer-songwriter Mrld credits the Vispop genre for molding her simple, emotionally resonant artistry and lyricism.
History
Introduction of Western music to the Visayans
Spanish colonization of the Philippines introduced the Visayans to Western musical traditions. In the 17th century, the Spanish historian Francisco Ignacio Alcina wrote that the Visayans learned to play Spanish musical instruments with "notable skill". Spanish musical instruments such as the Spanish guitar and harp became widely used in the Visayas, supplanting indigenous instruments. The Spaniards influenced the musical styles within the region.
20th century
Modern Cebuano music first took shape in the 20th century. Its production began to flourish in the early 1900s, owing to the rise of Spanish-style musical plays (locally known as sarswela). In the 1920s to the 1970s, the release of songs such as "Kasadya Ning Taknaa" (lit. 'Happy is This Hour') in 1933, "Rosas Pandan" in 1938, and "Matud Nila"(lit. 'They Say') in 1941 further bolstered modern Cebuano music. Levi Celerio translated "Rosas" into Tagalog, removing the gibberish words "ayay, ayayay, tigadong, and tikadong" from the original Cebuano lyrics by Piux Cabajar. Almendras wrote that, as a result, the song lost its "oomph" and cadence.
Cebuano musicians were highly sought after by Manila-based music labels such as Villar Records. Max Surban, dubbed "the King of Visayan Song", and Yoyoy Villame, who both produced songs in Cebuano, were at the height of their fame in the 1970s. In the same decade, Cebuano musicians Tony Blanco, Cacal Blanco, and Mel Libre made it to the top ten of the First Jingle Magazine Songwriting Contest. According to Libre, a Cebuano rock band called Odds & Ends pre-dated Pinoy rock. In the 1980s, the popularity of MTV, an American musical channel that exclusively played American and non-Cebuano songs, shifted music preferences among Cebuanos. Patronage towards Cebuano music declined. The 1990s saw the formation of Cebuano rock bands Local Ground and Mango Jam. However, they wrote their songs in English, not Cebuano.
2000s to mid-2010s
In the early 2000s, Bisrock bands who sang in Cebuano grew in popularity. Local radios played their songs frequently, contributing to a brief rise in patronage towards Cebuano-language music. Missing Filemon, a band described by Nile Villa of Rappler as "one of the pillars of the Bisrock community", released their debut album in 2003. In 2009, the prolific composer Jude Gitamondoc pitched the idea of the Visayan Pop Songwriting Campaign, a contest for original compositions written in Cebuano, to Ian Zafra, Lorenzo Niñal, and Cattski Espina of Artists and Musicians Marketing Cooperative (Artist Ko), a creative collective based in Cebu. The inaugural contest took place in 2013, in cooperation with the Filipino Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (Filscap). In addition to the contest, Artist Ko offered songwriting workshops. In an interview for the event, Espina said, "I was alarmed at the realization that by default, local songwriters write in English." The festival outlined the following objectives:
- to uplift the Cebuano language
- to change the widespread mindset of belittling anything in the language, including music
- to challenge the stereotype that all Cebuano music is strictly either Bisrock or comedic novelty songs, and produce more heavily pop-sounding Cebuano music
The festival helped introduce fresh Vispop talents to the region, including Kurt Fick, Lourdes Maglinte, Mandaue Nights, Jerika Teodorico, and Therese Villarante-Langit. These popular new Vispop artists brought "new hope" to the genre. Many Cebuano-speaking artists from the Mindanao region, such as the band Oh! Caraga, whose members hail from Caraga, Maris Racal from Davao, and KZ Tandingan, also from Davao, consider themselves to be Vispop artists. In the late 2010s, however, a distinct pop music movement emerged in Mindanao, simply called Mindanao Pop or Minpop, with the goal to "hyper-localize" songs to the region, although some Minpop songs still use the Cebuano language.
Late 2010s to 2020s
In 2017, the Filipino-American artist Karencitta released the single "Cebuana", a dance pop song with lyrics written in a mix of Cebuano and English. The song had a transformative impact on the Vispop genre. The 2020s saw a sharp increase in mainstream Vispop hits written in a mix of Cebuano and other languages, primarily English and Tagalog. In September 2021, Maris Racal released a pop-rock single about heartbreak titled "Asa Naman" (lit. 'Where'), which featured verses in Tagalog and choruses in Cebuano. She explained that Rico Blanco, her partner at the time, encouraged her to write a full song in Cebuano. However, she was "also worried that not everyone would understand it", so she decided to write the song partially in Tagalog. The song won "Best Regional Recording" at the 35th Awit Awards in 2022. In her partly Cebuano acceptance speech, Racal said, "We all know that when we write songs, we should write our truth, and part of my truth is that I'm born in Tagum, Davao. I grew up Bisaya!" She encouraged musicians to stop being afraid of writing songs in Philippine languages beyond Tagalog. Also in September 2021, Felip made his solo debut "Palayo" (lit. 'Walk Away'), a Vispop song about ending a toxic relationship.
In 2022, the English chorus of the song "LDR" by Jared Almendras, better known as Shoti, went viral on social media across the globe. In an August 2024 interview with Juno Reyes of Rappler, Shoti shared that he was shocked to hear the audience singing along to the Cebuano lyrics as well when he performed the song in Manila, assuming that they were only familiar with the English chorus that went viral. He said, "I'm always gonna be putting Bisaya and English together in all my songs." In June 2023, the multilingual P-Pop boy group Alamat released "Day and Night", with lyrics in Cebuano, English, and Tagalog. The song was co-written by the famed Vispop singer-songwriter Villarante-Langit. In August 2023, Maymay Entrata released "Tsada Mahigugma". The title is a Cebuano phrase that translates to "It feels great to be in love", and is prominently featured throughout the song. Billboard Philippines included it in their end-of-year "Top Filipino Releases of 2023" list, a curated list of reader picks.
In October 2022, Gitamondoc alluded to "Manila organizers gearing up their machinery to stage multiple music festivals during Sinulog Week", and urged Cebuanos to stand by the Visayan Pop Songwriting Campaign despite their lack of "clout" and funding. He wrote, "We will not be forever relegated to the sidelines. We will not be a mere afterthought in a scheme to please the locals. We will not remain just front acts to Manila’s main event." On December 6, 2022, Careless Music announced that it would stage the Wavy Baby Festival in Cebu amid Sinulog festivities in January 2023. The festival was marketed as "the first of its kind" for Sinulog. Kara Angan of Rappler noted that the Cebuano music acts were billed at the bottom of Wavy Baby's promotional poster, below foreign and Manila-based acts. The festival sparked backlash on social media when they removed most of the Cebuano music acts from the lineup. Vincent Eco from The Sundown, one of the Cebuano bands whose performances were canceled, was quoted as saying, "Yet again, will hold concerts in Cebu but Cebu bands were made disposable."
James Reid, co-founder of Careless, issued an apology to Cebuano music acts The Wonggoys, Three Legged Men, The Sundown, and Sepia Times on Instagram. He said, "Thank you for allowing us to come to your hometown and throw this amazing experience. I promise to make it up to you." The company released a separate statement, saying that they personally reached out to the Cebuano acts involved. Eventscape Manila, one of the festival's producers, issued another statement blaming the removal of Cebuano acts from the lineup on inclement weather and logistical difficulties. Writing for Rappler, Kara Angan criticized Wavy Baby for "capitaliz on cultural festival yet remov a platform for Cebuanos to showcase their experiences through music". Angan suggested that the incident illustrates how the cultural, economic, and social divide between Manila and the Visayas and Mindanao regions manifests in all aspects, even music.
Notes
- "Rosas" means rose, while "pandan" refers to the Pandanus amaryllifolius, a herbaceous plant found across Southeast Asia
- credited as Therese Villarante at the time
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The Ilonggos have a different approach.
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