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Tuesday, March 19, 2024

The Magic Lives On: Malasimbo Music and Arts Festival 2017

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Text and photos by Beatrice Tulagan for Manila Standard

For many, the journey starts like this: braving Friday rush hour to catch a bus headed south in a crowded terminal, falling asleep barely five minutes in to the faint sound of city sirens wailing in the distance, waking up to the melodious calls of persistent food vendors hawking water bottles and buko pie just as Batangas port comes into view.

Then comes the waiting by the gate, the minutes flitting by unnoticed because you spend them nodding to the headliners’ hits you’ve unwittingly saved on your phone to psych yourself up even more. You’re only a few steps away from the colorful boats that bob up and down the water now. You imagine them awaiting the weight of excited passengers, promising to make distances manageable. “If you see someone who looks like they’re about to go camping,” someone from behind you mumbles to his companion, “chances are they are headed to Malasimbo.”

Passengers are whisked away to Puerto Galera by boats from the Batangas Port

And indeed, the faces of some of the people who get off with at Muelle port become familiar by dusk, when you finally reach the festival grounds and inevitably meet them again. To get there, you’ll have to ride a jeepney and hold tight as it snakes through steep mountain roads, making you feel like you’re now truly out of the city.

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Somehow, though, you’ll never feel more at home.

The Malasimbo 2017 sign that welcomed festival goers

 

Music beyond borders, across generations

Through the years, Malasimbo’s well-curated line of performers has included international artists from all genres, treating its audience to performances from world-renowned figures like Joss Stone and the Robert Glasper Experiment. The festival, however, has always made an effort to carve a space for homegrown talent too, from promising newcomers to industry idols.

Rapper Curtismith confirms this early into the first evening of the festival this year, sharing how the organizers got him onboard upon discovering him on Soundcloud. Performing songs from his newly-released EP, Soully Yours, the young Mito Fabie and his confessional rap set the tone of the festival to be one that celebrates artists who have made things happen for themselves, doing it, as he sings, “for the love.”

Curtismith during the first night of the festival

Meanwhile, led by Ely Buendia and RJ Pineda, soul band Apartel electrified the crowd with hits from their November release, Inner Play.

Led by Ely Buendia, Apartel rocked the festival grounds

The best songs destroy language barriers, and in the case of funk band Brass Pas Pas Pas with guest Kat Agarrado’s performance of their hit YONIP, the international crowd proved this to be true as they danced and sung along. This was also the case during the sets of reggae act Jeck Pilipil and Peacepipe and Filipina-American soul artist June Marieezy, who once called Malasimbo her favorite festival in the world.

Brass Pas Pas Pas Pas brought the house down with Kat Agarrado

As for the international acts, Jordan Rakei made a comeback much to the thrill of his fans and launched immediately into songs from Cloak. Brother-sister duo Tennyson made the third night one for the books as well.

Jordan Rakei returned to Malasimbo this year

Other than the incredibly diverse line-up, Malasimbo 2017 also featured Silent Disco DJ battles in their Mangyan Village. Three artists spinned tracks simultaneously while attendees listened through headphones, the units lighting up either red, green or blue to represent which DJ channel they were tuned into.

Silent disco at the Mangyan village features three DJ's simultaneously
Headphones lit up blue, green or red

Festival with a heart

Any discussion about the Malasimbo magic is of course incomplete without mentioning its commitment to the arts as well as the preservation of indigenous culture and the environment.

For starters, this year, every ticket sold automatically equates to one mangrove seedling planted in Mindoro. Hosted by the D’Aboville Foundation, a French-Filipino non-profit working on local environmental sustainability and eco-cultural tourism, Malasimbo made sure to give back to its host region by showcasing art installations, talks and products about or by the Mangyan communities.

The festival also featured talks about Mangyan culture. This was a session about the ancient Hanunuo script.

One of the sessions for example was about the ancient Hanunuo script that D’Aboville Foundation is working hard to preserve through partnering with local schools. Guests were also treated to samples of the Mangyan ambahan, a combination of music and poetry that Mangyans create spontaneously. Ambahans are exchanged when chancing upon another Mangyan down the road or delivered in moments filled with such overwhelming emotion –whether it is sheer bliss or despair — that one just has to burst into song. A traditional dance was also performed by young students for the festivalgoers.

Artist Hohana poses with her creation

Aside from Olivia D’Aboville’s trademark dandelions and works by artists like Agnes Arellano, Leeroy New, Russ Ligtas and many more, one of this year’s installations was dedicated specifically to Mindoro. Artist Hohana Domanais – Viñas reiterated how everyone should always pay tribute to the Mangyans who were so gracious to share the beauty of the region with guests every year. Her installation of knitted mandalas bordered by rattan called “Indayog ng Kulay” was shaped into the Hanunuo script translating to “Ma” for Mangyan.

“They appreciated it very much,” said Viñas. “I told them I made this to celebrate them.”

Malasimbo has definitely grown and made a name for itself worldwide, and for good reason. Combining the best names in music and art with a worthy cause, its no wonder attendees will always feel like its charm lives in how it makes every year’s festival feel like a welcome respite from the incessant demands of city life where the hours drag on but everything feels like its moving too fast.

No matter what happens, we’ll get by with the memory of this weekend atop a mountain south of Manila reachable only by wrestling with the sea, where the Malasimbo magic has inspired hundreds to slow down, take a breather and give into the promise of a homecoming.

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