Pinoy Punk Rockers Betrayed release
powerful new album, Why Must Everything Involve Politics?
by rick olivares
When Filipino punk rock band
Betrayed released their debut album on cassette in 1986 (under DMZ Records), it
was like a Molotov cocktail had been thrown through the window. Like the Urban
Bandits’ Independence Day that came out earlier, there was an urgency to the
music. But the Betrayed mixed obvious protest songs with others that straddled
other themes. The cover alone featuring a tabloid cover was fetching.
Thirty-two years later (22 after
their last album, Betrayed Again), it’s a new old formula – a blurred newspaper
waiting for the licking flames to torch it. I like the fact that the cover
image is blurred because despite the title, Why Must Everything Involve
Politics?, the band points out that politics or not, our daily lives are
problematic. And that is an understatement.
During a conversation with a
friend of mine about the state of American politics today, he remarked that we
will see a lot of very good music come out from North America that reflects the
times. And I agree. The angry and sad (sometimes depressed) write really good
songs.
Thousands of miles away in these
islands, we’ve seen Chickoy Pura song “Sa Madilim na Sulok ng Kasaysayan” that
doesn’t mince words. It’s powerful.
And Betrayed – vocalist and
guitarist Buddy Trinidad, guitarist Boyet Miguel, bassist Ed Ramos, and drummer
Manny Pagsuyuin – have put together a powerful album. The fact that it is 22
years in the making means the band had more than sufficient time to refine the
songs. And Why Must Everything Involve Politics? finds the band’s chops
well-honed with their fire not dampened one iota.
The self-titled debut was a raw
piece of work. You know – fire away and damn the torpedoes. Betrayed Again
well, it’s all right. Why Must Everything Involve Politics? makes you sit down
and take notice and wonder what the F are we doing with our lives? Leave it to
the punk rockers to set us straight.
The band isn’t particularly overt
with their song messages. They are pointed but they leave you to make your own
conclusions. However, I will have to admit their re-working “Caught in the
Crossfire” – though minus the angry young man in the late Dominic Gamboa – is just
as vital and fiery with Buddy Trinidad’s crackling voice. The man is a veteran
who has plugged away non-stop all these decades even as fads and genre changes
be damned.
The first two albums had this
marked hardcore influence. In fact, it’s still there – I can hear traces of the
Damned, GHB, even Rancid --- but the band doesn’t forsake any melody for a
total sonic assault. I was surprised the by the last track “All That I Have”
that is a slow one. Perhaps the band wanted you to dispense with the
pyrotechnics for the listener to pay attention.
Oh, they want to be heard. And at
first glance, it might seem – despite the title – to be political commentary.
But in truth, the band intends all the commentary – pointed as they may be – to
be applicable to daily life. Take the politicking away and it’s still the same.
Having said that, Betrayed has come away with perhaps their most telling album.
They even re-recorded “Caught in the Crossfire” (along with “Where Has Love
Gone) that takes even new meaning whether they intend it or not.
The album is a call to action for
people to wake up, make a stand, speak out, and do something about the quagmire
of life we find ourselves neck deep in.
Why must everything involve
politics? Why must we wait for good music? Ah, never mind the bollocks,
Betrayed are here.
The album launch for Why Must
Everything Involve Politics is this coming Saturday, July 14, at Mow’s along
Matalino Street in Diliman, Quezon City.
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