Monday, 8 February 2010

Do Not Sing "My Way" in the Philipines

quote [ The authorities do not know exactly how many people have been killed warbling “My Way” in karaoke bars over the years in the Philippines, or how many fatal fights it has fueled. But the news media have recorded at least half a dozen victims in the past decade and includes them in a subcategory of crime dubbed the “My Way Killings.” ]

Full article posted in extended.

GENERAL SANTOS, the Philippines — After a day of barbering, Rodolfo Gregorio went to his neighborhood karaoke bar still smelling of talcum powder. Putting aside his glass of Red Horse Extra Strong beer, he grasped a microphone with a habitué’s self-assuredness and briefly stilled the room with the Platters’ “My Prayer.”
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Jes Aznar for The New York Times

A karaoke machine outside a house in Pasig city, east of the capital, Manila.

Next, he belted out crowd-pleasers by Tom Jones and Engelbert Humperdinck. But Mr. Gregorio, 63, a witness to countless fistfights and occasional stabbings erupting from disputes over karaoke singing, did not dare choose one beloved classic: Frank Sinatra’s version of “My Way.”

“I used to like ‘My Way,’ but after all the trouble, I stopped singing it,” he said. “You can get killed.”

The authorities do not know exactly how many people have been killed warbling “My Way” in karaoke bars over the years in the Philippines, or how many fatal fights it has fueled. But the news media have recorded at least half a dozen victims in the past decade and includes them in a subcategory of crime dubbed the “My Way Killings.”

The killings have produced urban legends about the song and left Filipinos groping for answers. Are the killings the natural byproduct of the country’s culture of violence, drinking and machismo? Or is there something inherently sinister in the song?

Whatever the reason, many karaoke bars have removed the song from their playbooks. And the country’s many Sinatra lovers, like Mr. Gregorio here in this city in the southernmost Philippines, are practicing self-censorship out of perceived self-preservation.

Karaoke-related killings are not limited to the Philippines. In the past two years alone, a Malaysian man was fatally stabbed for hogging the microphone at a bar and a Thai man killed eight of his neighbors in a rage after they sang John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” Karaoke-related assaults have also occurred in the United States, including at a Seattle bar where a woman punched a man for singing Coldplay’s “Yellow” after criticizing his version.

Still, the odds of getting killed during karaoke may be higher in the Philippines, if only because of the ubiquity of the pastime. Social get-togethers invariably involve karaoke. Stand-alone karaoke machines can be found in the unlikeliest settings, including outdoors in rural areas where men can sometimes be seen singing early in the morning. And Filipinos, who pride themselves on their singing, may have a lower tolerance for bad singers.

Indeed, most of the “My Way” killings have reportedly occurred after the singer sang out of tune, causing other patrons to laugh or jeer.

“The trouble with ‘My Way,’ ” said Mr. Gregorio, “is that everyone knows it and everyone has an opinion.”

Others, noting that other equally popular tunes have not provoked killings, point to the song itself. The lyrics, written by Paul Anka for Mr. Sinatra as an unapologetic summing up of his career, are about a tough guy who “when there was doubt,” simply “ate it up and spit it out.” Butch Albarracin, the owner of Center for Pop, a Manila-based singing school that has propelled the careers of many famous singers, was partial to what he called the “existential explanation.”

“ ‘I did it my way’ — it’s so arrogant,” Mr. Albarracin said. “The lyrics evoke feelings of pride and arrogance in the singer, as if you’re somebody when you’re really nobody. It covers up your failures. That’s why it leads to fights.”

Defenders of “My Way” say it is a victim of its own popularity. Because it is sung more often than most songs, the thinking goes, karaoke-related violence is more likely to occur while people are singing it. The real reasons behind the violence are breaches of karaoke etiquette, like hogging the microphone, laughing at someone’s singing or choosing a song that has already been sung.

“The Philippines is a very violent society, so karaoke only triggers what already exists here when certain social rules are broken,” said Roland B. Tolentino, a pop culture expert at the University of the Philippines. But even he hedged, noting that the song’s “triumphalist” nature might contribute to the violence.

Some karaoke lovers are not taking chances, not even at family gatherings.

In Manila, Alisa Escanlar, 33, and her relatives invariably gather before a karaoke machine, but they banned “My Way” after an uncle, listening to a friend sing the song at a bar, became enraged at the laughter coming from the next table. The uncle, who was a police officer, pulled out his revolver, after which the customers at the next table quietly paid their bill and left.

Awash in more than one million illegal guns, the Philippines has long suffered from all manner of violence, from the political to the private. Wary middle-class patrons gravitate to karaoke clubs with cubicles that isolate them from strangers.

But in karaoke bars where one song costs 5 pesos, or a tenth of a dollar, strangers often rub shoulders, sometimes uneasily. A subset of karaoke bars with G.R.O.’s — short for guest relations officers, a euphemism for female prostitutes — often employ gay men, who are seen as neutral, to defuse the undercurrent of tension among the male patrons. Since the gay men are not considered rivals for the women’s attention — or rivals in singing, which karaoke machines score and rank — they can use humor to forestall macho face-offs among the patrons.

In one such bar in Quezon City, next to Manila, patrons sing karaoke at tables on the first floor and can accompany a G.R.O. upstairs. Fights often break out when customers at one table look at another table “the wrong way,” said Mark Lanada, 20, the manager.

“That’s the biggest source of tension,” Mr. Lanada said. “That’s why every place like this has a gay man like me.”

Ordinary karaoke bars, like the Nelson Carenderia here, a single room with bare plywood walls, mandate that a singer give up the microphone after three consecutive songs.

On one recent evening, at the table closest to the karaoke machine, Edwin Lancaderas, 62, crooned a Tagalog song, “Fight Temptation” — about a married man forgoing an affair with a woman while taking delight in their “stolen moments.” His friend Dindo Auxlero, 42, took the mike next, bawling songs by the Scorpions and Dire Straits. Several empty bottles of Red Horse crowded their table.

“In the Philippines, life is difficult,” said Mr. Auxlero, who repairs watches from a street kiosk, as he railed about government corruption and a weak economy that has driven so many Filipinos to work overseas, including his wife, who is a maid in Lebanon. “But, you know, we have a saying: ‘Don’t worry about your problems. Let your problems worry about you.’ ”

The two men roared with laughter.

“That’s why we come here every night — to clear the excesses from our heads,” Mr. Lancaderas said, adding, however, that the two always adhered to karaoke etiquette and, of course, refrained from singing “My Way.”

“Misunderstanding and jealousy,” in his view, were behind the “My Way” killings. “I just hope it doesn’t happen here,” he said.
[music] [by stugatz@2:18amGMT] [+10 WTF]

Comments

sanepride said @ 2:34am GMT on 8th Feb
"And now the end is here,
And so I face the final curtain"

nbob said @ 9:17pm GMT on 8th Feb
Regrets..
I've had a few...
swiggy said @ 2:36am GMT on 8th Feb
crwk8 said @ 2:40am GMT on 8th Feb
damn it! i spent too long reading the article! should ve posted 1st!
crwk8 said @ 2:38am GMT on 8th Feb

mwoody said @ 5:50am GMT on 8th Feb
To save others a tinEye:
A cover of "My Way" by the Sex Pistols
f00m@nB@r said @ 2:39am GMT on 8th Feb
We Southeast Asians are serious about our karaoke.
ckfahrenheit said @ 2:44am GMT on 8th Feb
ckfahrenheit said @ 2:55am GMT on 8th Feb
whoa...
damnit said @ 2:56am GMT on 8th Feb
If there's one thing I learned about singing in karaoke bars in the Philippines, I learned not to laugh at the bastardized attempts of the singer no matter how funny and out of tune they are. Just do something else. Don't stare. These squabbles usually occur at open karaoke bars in which everyone who's been drinking for the past 2 hours are there to watch you.
damnit said @ 3:09am GMT on 8th Feb
themanwhoeatslettus said @ 5:09am GMT on 8th Feb
not as bad in northern Asia but still bad
Xiph0 said @ 3:16pm GMT on 8th Feb
Roy**
damnit said @ 3:56pm GMT on 8th Feb
L := R

stereotype fail.
sacrelicious said @ 3:25am GMT on 8th Feb
I WILL SURVIVE!
skainsmate said @ 4:56am GMT on 8th Feb
Mic.
sacrelicious said @ 5:06am GMT on 8th Feb
racist.
lilmookieesquire said @ 6:24am GMT on 8th Feb [Score:1 Informative]
This is why there are seperately karaoke boxes in Japan.
Naruki said @ 7:48am GMT on 8th Feb
Yes, very seperately.


You have been here too long. :-)
lilmookieesquire said @ 7:46pm GMT on 8th Feb [Score:1 Funny]
separate.

Jesus Fucking H. Christ. on a stick.

I'm at the point where I can speak 0.8 languages.

-_-;
lilmookieesquire said @ 7:47pm GMT on 8th Feb
and I forgot to mod +1 insightful. *whistles and makes crazy thing next to head* :p
Naruki said @ 2:25am GMT on 9th Feb
That's okay. As long as you are a safety driver.
lilmookieesquire said @ 2:40am GMT on 9th Feb
What, did they spell driver incorrectly? ;) I kid I kid. There is still hope for me yet. Besides, I have a Choi Nori so I literally can't go fast enough to be a dangerous driver. ;)

http://www.japanforum.com/gallery/data/505/medium/motorbike-093006-11.jpg
Naruki said @ 3:13am GMT on 9th Feb
Heh. I had a scooter when I was here the first time, back when I was 20. It was pretty darn dangerous, but only because I was either being run down by cars on the street or running down pedestrians on the sidewalk.

I figured pedophilia is a crime, so best to take them out, right?
lilmookieesquire said @ 11:45am GMT on 9th Feb
I like the way you think. I've had plenty of cars clip me, but they still haven't downed me yet. Bitches!
maryyugo said @ 6:27am GMT on 8th Feb
I've often wanted to kill someone doing dismal karaoke while I'm trying to relax, talk or hustle. Only the desire to stay out jail prevented me.
sacrelicious said @ 6:30am GMT on 8th Feb [Score:1 Insightful]
why the fuck are you going to karaoke bars to relax, talk, or prostitute yourself if you don't want to hear karaoke?
ahPook said @ 10:18am GMT on 8th Feb
It interferes with the prostituting himself thing.
loomspace said @ 4:45pm GMT on 8th Feb
Maybe this will help.

Ebichuman said @ 5:09pm GMT on 8th Feb
Apparently those who do the Hustle also run a high risk of having their heads cut off.
monkeytooth said @ 7:28am GMT on 8th Feb
omg this is real.
hippoh said @ 6:11pm GMT on 8th Feb [Score:2 Interesting]
My family is from General Santos City, and it's pretty gritty. My aunt has a "karaoke bar" which is nothing more than a small, one-room bamboo hut with a cheap (by our standards) karaoke box - nothing more than a portable speaker with a mic input.

The most astonishing thing was seeing a similar building being erected. One day while I was visiting as a child, my bored uncle grabbed a machete and started hacking away at some small trees until they were felled, then hacked off some branches, hacked some notches in the trunks, grabbed some twine, lashed some palm leaves, and no more than an hour later had built a shed. The "bar" is the same sort of ad hoc edifice, with just a few touches and tables added. Even more surprising is that her "business" is just the portable karaoke machine and a supply of San Miguel beer. No business license, no inspections, zero red tape. Just a lady with a music box and a place to hang out. Her ability to buy that $40 POS speaker is the Western equivalent of someone having a couple hundred grand with which to buy capital for a business. Her bar has been doing well enough in the past few years that she's now able to provide a microlending loan service to some people in her town.

Oh and uhhh: Filipinos CANNOT sing! A Filipino church mass has the loudest, most raucous singing ever (and late churchgoers streaming in until halfway through the mass). My middle aged 40+ y.o. Filipino roommate is great, but she hums constantly and sings in the shower due to her church choir practice - pretty much her favorite past time. Cotillions, weddings, what have you, Filipinos will find an excuse to sing, and they belt out their most powerful, accent-ridden voices with such glee!
Reagletam said @ 2:44am GMT on 9th Feb


heheh
cb361 said @ 9:25pm GMT on 8th Feb
I prefer Margaret Thatcher's cover version


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