One nice thing about being a musician
is it makes you part of a tribe. Like magnets we attract each other
and discourse about forces incomprehensible to the non-adept.
Classical musicians, being scattered few and far between, are
especially prone to this magnetism. So two of the first friends I
made arriving at Easter were Ma'am Rouilla, soprano, one-time
conductor of seemingly every Anglican choir in the city, and music
teacher at Easter School; and Reis, tenor, composer, music student,
and staff accompanist. When I met Reis his first question was how
good my sight singing was, and his second was whether I wanted to
join the Holy Innocents choir for their concert next week. I figured
it would be a good way to meet people and agreed to help them out,
four months later I'm still singing with them.
btw, have I mentioned how beautiful Baguio is? |
When I joined the choir they were
having rehearsals every evening, it was intense, and not just
musically. It was like joining a family. We would typically have
rehearsal at 5 30, so at 5 30 I would show up to find maybe half of
the choir sitting around downstairs (Filipino time). So we sit and
chat, drink coffee and eat the snack that someone would invariably
bring; we go upstairs to start singing when a quorum of people has
arrived, around 6 or 6 30. The songs for this concert were a mixture
of showtunes arranged for choir, which I found pleasantly
incongruous; and Filipino songs, which I found pleasing melodically
but difficult linguisticly. After a little while its break time, and
we go downstairs where a big pot of pinikpikan (boiled chicken soup)
or adobo (ubiguitous recipe involving vinegar, soy sauce and any
available meat) on the boil by an overflowing pot of rice. Dinner is
served. Typically Filipino, dinner is a lengthy event, and involves a
long stretch of sitting around, drinking coffee and chatting. After
dinner we rehearse some more, and go home, usually around 9 or so;
rather a long rehearsal, but I gained so much! Aunties, Uncles, a
gang of friends my age, and of course a week of free dinners.
Before the Concert |
Any place is defined by the people that
live there, I think that is especially true of the Philippines. This
country cannot be understood by keeping abreast of the latest natural
and man-made disasters, nor by eating a bunch of exotic parts of
animals, nor by reading up on the colonial histories of Spain and the
USA. The Philippines is a country of interpersonal relationships, of
vast extended families, clans, and tribes. Because of this the
Philippines is much much bigger than its 77 islands, because these
relationships extend to every country in the world, spread by the
vast Filipino diaspora. So when I say that joining the choir was like
joining a family it's no mere nicety, joining the choir really was
one of the best things I've done here, I became part of the
community. For one thing my new Aunties and Uncles also happen to be
the Lolas and Lolos (grandparents) of several of my students. Many of
them are teachers as well in Easter, or are good friends with my
fellow teachers and my superiors. Churches are very much community
organizations here, most of my new friends live within walking
distance of the church, which incidentally is directly next to where
I stay, so I now have the experience of being able to walk down the
street and see people I know, stop for a chat just like any other
person in the neighborhood. This is a tremendous moral comfort, and
it is also of great practical use. I've found that things are not
scheduled in the Philippines in the same way that they are in the
States. There is no calender of events for the next year, or if there
is it is probably wrong. Even knowing dates and times a month ahead
is iffy. One finds out about coming events by chatting with other
people, things come through the grapevine. If you have no one to chat
with, your best bet is to hang out somewhere conspicuous and hope
someone warns you before important events.
Here in Baguio there are many choirs.
There are at least 5 Episcopal Churches with choirs within Baguio
City and La Trinidad. There are amateur choirs attached to many other
institutions, operating out of City Hall or the Department of
Agriculture, choirs made up of lawyers and choirs of students and
choirs of priests. I'm assuming there are more choirs in churches of
other denominations. I doubt that ours is an unusually busy choir,
nonetheless we are much busier than any musical organization I've
ever been a part of back in the states. We sing for weddings, wakes,
funerals, Sunday services, holy days, secular events, and friends.
All of these are community events, so everyone is there, all the
friends and family, some having crossed boundaries and oceans to be
in attendance. Invariably there is food, Aunties sitting around
chatting, or walking around making everybody eat; Uncles slightly
removed, sitting around and chatting; children running around
playing; plates and babies being passed around. Probably the most
frequent of these events are wakes, with weddings a close second. In
the States I have been to one wake, here in the Philippines I go to
at least one a week. But these are not particularly sad occasions,
they are a chance for people to gather, to support each other with
music and speeches, cash donations and by simply hanging around and
helping out. They're a chance to remember and say good by and look
back on hopefully a long life well lived. Being able to be a part of
these community events is why I am so grateful for my choir.
during the concert |
I'll close by talking about Uncle
Gilbert Dao-ey, an elderly cancer patient who we visited at home
about a month ago. We didn't do much, we hung out, we chatted, we
brought some food, we ate the food, after an hour or two we sang a
few songs and went home. Uncle Gil was lovely, cracking jokes,
teaching me words of Ilocano, reminiscing about his days teaching at
Easter School and his own student days. I remember him telling me
what he claimed was an old saying, “Give a Filipino 4 wheels and a
bag of GI garbage and he'll give you a jeepney” This was during a
conversation about Filipino ingenuity and lack of concern for safety
protocols. All in all it was a charming afternoon, and when his wife
told us (at a wedding reception a week later) that during our visit
he had been happier and more lively than she had seen him for months,
I was touched. It's good to be a help for someone.
We have fun too |
Today I sang in Uncle Gil's wake. It
was one of the first wakes that I found genuinely touching, because
it was one of the first ones where I had met the deceased. But it was
not sad, or at least not only sad. Instead I found myself thinking
about him, the things I remember him saying, the way I imagine he
used to be, and how wonderful it was that such a lot of people were
in some way connected with his life, enough people to fill the room
for 3 days running of the wake. I was thankful for the chance to meet
him, and the chance to say goodbye.
From Left to Right, Uncle Johnny, Reis, Uncles Bede, Jimmy and Gilbert, Me |
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