The marvels of   Misalucha
By Ricky T. Gallardo

Publish Date:[Monday, July 28, 2003]
Not too long ago, Lani Misalucha   humbly admitted she never really had a big hit. "I recall Diana Ross in   a movie where she said that no matter how good a singer you are, it's all for   nothing if you don't have a hit song," she told me.

   It doesn't bother me that until now, a hit song has eluded Lani. I know she's   an outstanding vocalist. I adore her simplicity and straight-forwardness. For   me and many others, a hit does not a true singer make, even if this   almost-jaded, piracy-burdened music industry thinks so.

   In a business where everyone seems to be sprinting towards the pedestal of   fame and fortune, Lani is one who has benefited from taking it slow but sure.  "I don't see why people have to rush things," she says.   "Especially the aspiring singers
na parang hindi makapaghintay, o di   kaya naman yung lumalaki kaagad ang ulo sa konting kasikatan pa lang."

   Lani surely knows what she'ss talking about. For many years, she was content   with just mimicking the voices of Braxton, Houston and Dion, recording their   songs into multiplex cassette tapes, and being paid measly sums for doing so.   In short, she used to be the country's most sought-after ghost singer.

   She lets me in on her success story. A former actress and singer with the   Andres Bonifacio Concert Chorus of the Cultural Center of the Philippines,   Lani has performed in almost all the first-rate lounge bars in the country.   Name it and she must have been there: the Manila Hotel's Tap Room, Intercon's   Boulevardier, Mandarin's Captain's Bar, and Shangri-La's Conway's Bar. "
Mahirap   kasing kumita noon, habang may opportunities, sige lang ng sige,"   was her work ethic when offers came one after the other.

   "To be very honest, I never really dreamed of making it big,"she   continues."I was already content with being on the sidelines, singing with   bands, doing jingles for commercials, and lending my voice to the popular   songs in the multiplex tapes."

   In 1990, she made her first mark when she went solo for the first time in a   five-star hotel lounge. "I was jittery, hotel crowd
yon at dapat magaling   ka talaga kundi tatayuan ka at lalayasan. I'm glad I was able to pull   through," she recalls.

   From then on Lani became a favorite of the lounge crowd. People would troop   to her performances and would request her to sing like their favorite   singers. "
Ako naman, kanta lang ng kanta, basta maaliw ang audience   ko," she explains. When the band scene was so in vogue, she went   with the flow and performed as lead singer with Prelude Band, the Silk Band   and Bodgie Dasig's Law of Gravity before returning to solo performances at   Regine's Caf� in Makati and Shangri-La Makati?s Conway's Bar in 1994 and   1995.

   Then when she thought she was ready, Lani mustered enough courage to   interpret an entry at the 1996 Metropop Song Festival, singing
Ang Iibigin   Ay Ikaw. She lost.

   After that loss, she came out with a "seemingly winnable" album,
More   Than I Should which included her cover of Anthony Gordon?s Somebody   Warm Like Me. Still no certified hit. She made a big move to Viva, and   released songs like You Don't Have to Say You Love Me and Tunay na   Mahal with so-so results.

   Then as if the world really roots for underdogs, Lani bravely tried, for the   second time, at the Metropop, interpreting Dodjie Simon's
Can't Stop   Loving You. The song capped the grand prize, and many were one in saying   that she was the main reason the song won.

   Lani's very first two-night solo concert in September of 2001 (I'm
Gonna   Make You Love Me) became a sell-out and this established her in the music   scene. But despite the huge success of the concerts that followed, the   elusive hit song remained a dream.

   Then came the millennium and she released a 14-track album called
All   Heart. It didn't create as much waves as it was expected to. Still, Lani   didn't lose heart. She worked harder and improved her performance in each   concert that followed, whether it be in the Philippines or offshore,   carefully choosing her repertoire which would fit her marvelous range and   style.

   And because patience is a virtue for Lani, here's the good news: after three   years in the oven, her new CD titled
Loving You is out. The better   news is that it was purposely recorded without the usual belting, acrobatics   and unnecessary modulation which many of our female singers who are so eager   to hold on to their "diva"thrones follow as their standard of   excellence.

   The carrier single is a composition of Lisa Dy titled
Tila. Included   in the album are the melodies of Jun Lacanienta, Lisa del Valle, Janno Gibbs,   Trina Belamide, Moy Ortiz and Ben Escasa. She did wonderful covers of   Truefaith's Muntik Nang Maabot ang Langit and Hajji Alejandro's Tag-araw,   Tag-Ulan. Of course, the Burt Bacharach-Hal David song Loving You is   finally in a Misalucha album.

   Lani has never been comfortable with labels and titles, specially the   "D" word."I've never had those grand illusions of being one,   " she says, almost whispering, without a hint of pretentious modesty.   Didn't you notice that she can't even mention the word? She adds, "I   simply want to sing. I am simply Lani Misalucha, the singer, period."

   Music is obviously Lani's passion. "It's a God-given gift, and it's   meant to be shared, to move, to inspire, to entertain, and to make people   happy," she tells me. But she has other sources of happiness, too, like   her family: husband Noli and daughters Li-an, and Louven.

   For those who genuinely understand music appreciation, Lani has remained on   top of their list of favorite singers. She doesn't have to belt like a bird   being strangled just to impress, nor does she have to possess the stance of   an aging songstress to look in control on stage.

   As my reliable maid asked me once while watching TV, "
Kuya, bakit   hindi na lang sila kumanta nang maayos tulad ni Lani, bakit kailangan   iba-ibahin ang tono o kaya'y tumili nang tumili?"

   For someone who used to make a living recording uncanny multiplex covers of   the world's most popular foreign female singers, Lani Misalucha has surely   come a long, long way. Perhaps with this newly-released CD, she will have her   first big hit. It's long overdue, if you ask me.
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