November 28, 2011

You Are So Beautiful

(Video by ice3353)
                                    
If you are a Chaster, most probably you have already watched the video above. It’s Charice’s rendition of “You Are So Beautiful” which she dedicated to her late father, Mr. Ricky Pempengco. Charice couldn’t have chosen a better song. As David Foster said, “I think it is very, very fitting; a great tribute to your father.”

The word “beautiful” is a very beautiful word. Yes, right…it’s redundant. Please let that redundancy stay. And I’ll say it again. The word BEAUTIFUL is a very beautiful word!

Being a common word to describe a person, a thing, a place, an experience, a feeling and anything under the sun, and the moon if you wish, “beautiful” seems to be so overused that sometimes its meaning is taken for granted. In the video above, however, the meaning of “beautiful” cannot be that—taken for granted.

If you are a Chaster, most probably you cried while watching the video. I did…and not just once. Every tear that touched my cheek was beautiful. Yes, there’s beauty in crying because it reflects the human in us and our capacity to empathize with someone. Even if we have no way of knowing or feeling the exactness of Charice’s emotion, we cried because of the bond we have with her. Her triumph is our triumph, her happiness is our happiness, her sadness is our sadness.

David Foster is a beautiful person. He gave Charice time to compose herself after her voice cracked when she said, “…I lost my Dad…” His moving closer towards Charice when she started to utter her request showed his sensitivity to what was about to happen. And when he finally heard that she wanted to sing a song for her father (the song was unrehearsed), he politely talked to the audience to excuse the two of them while he had his arm around Charice (maybe it was his way of letting her know that he was supportive of her).  He granted the request which, to me, demonstrated not only his belief in the ability of Charice as a performer but also his willingness to give her the opportunity to pay tribute to her father by way of a beautiful song.

     David Foster and Charice
in a beautiful and heart-warming embrace
after the performace.
(Photo by Tome Donoghue, www.lasvegasweekly.com)


The musicians and the audience are beautiful people. They were one with Charice in her request. Their applause with standing ovation after the performance was, to me, an appreciation of the scenario of a beautiful person giving tribute to a loved one through something that she does best. This whole thing is destined to happen not in any other show but in this one—her comeback performance in a David Foster and Friends Concert in Mandalay Bay where she and David first showed their beautiful tandem to the concert-goers more than three years ago.

To Mr. Ricky Pempengco, I’d like to say that the entire video above is so beautiful and so touching because to your daughter, You Are So Beautiful.


November 22, 2011

Discovering Charice



It was in the second half of 2010 when someone suggested that I check out Charice on YouTube. He was full of excitement when he recommended that I watch her performances,  especially on Oprah.  I’ve heard Charice’s name before but I did not have the chance to see her on TV nor had I thought of watching her videos on the Net. I didn’t even know she had numerous videos uploaded on YouTube. My work schedule then was so crazy that whenever I reached home, I would think of something to relax me and listening to music was not in my list.

Aside from Oprah, I heard she also appeared on Ellen and there were talks of her being on Glee. In as much as I was intrigued by her guesting on global TV programs, I went on my usual routine, which I never suspected would have a big change soon.


Note To God




One night in August (I think that was the month) last year, I turned on my computer, not to search for Charice, but to watch the much talked about acrobatic group in Britain’s Got Talent. I also searched for other episodes of the show including other countries’ like Ukraine’s Got Talent. After watching a number of fantastic episodes from different countries, I remembered about the suggestion—check out Charice. So, I did.

I can’t recall now which Charice video I watched first but I do remember clicking on the featured video of her performance of “Note to God” on Oprah. Everything about it—her voice, her hand gestures, her facial expressions, her movements from one side of the stage to the other, the accompaniment, the back-up choir, the playful lyrics on widescreen behind her, and the fog effect on the floor—was so perfect that I was one with the studio audience in awe and admiration for what I witnessed. I watched it many times that night and I was so drawn to it that I didn’t notice the change of the calendar date. Yes, it was already past midnight and Charice’s voice reverberated in my head until I finally succumbed to the comfort of my pillows to sleep.


I Will Survive




Within the same week, I searched for other videos of Charice on YouTube. In between videos, I googled for information about her. Little by little, I realized that I missed so many happenings in her growing career and popularity. I asked myself why I did not know about her earlier. I felt like a student cramming for an exam; trying to be up-to-date with her current performances, interviews, and write-ups while going two or three years back to have a better understanding of the comments that her followers wrote about her.

Then, I stumbled upon a video of Charice singing “I Will Survive” at the Mandalay Bay in 2009. I was my usual self seated comfortably in front of my computer watching and listening when suddenly she ran to one end of the stage. I literally stood up and I heard myself say, “Hey, wait a minute! How could she run that way and sing flawlessly at the same time?” I right away replayed that part several times because of my disbelief that it could be done. I even listened to that part of the song without looking at the video just so I could convince myself that she did it flawlessly. I shouldn’t have doubted. I then let the video play up to the end of that performance without knowing that there were more surprises for me. She was just adorable and entertaining at the same time.

That night, which I now consider as the timestamp of my getting hooked on Charice, I could not reconcile that the girl I saw singing “Note to God” on Oprah was the same girl I saw running on stage while singing “I Will Survive.” I then concluded: If she could sing these two songs in the manner that she did, then, she could sing any song. Like Simon Cowell, I can confidently say, “And I was right!”