Retro Manila Presents-Summer Solstice - June 30

June 8th, 2007 by gilbyvillaroman

Retro Manila Presents
"Summer Solstice" - June 30th

Blush Nightclub
261 California Drive
Burlingame, CA

Doors Open @ 9:30 PM
Ladies Free Before 10:30 PM

Early Arrival Suggested

$15 Cover

Spinning the Best in Manila Grooves:
House / Dance Classics / 80’s New Wave

Dino Rivera (Club Manila / Spintronix)
DJ Gilby “The Spin Doctor” (ViaManila /
POGIMIX.com)
Steve Velasco (Club Manila /
POGIMIX.com)
Alexson Lim (Spintronix / Fusion SF)

Special Guest from Manila:
DJ Mon Maramba
Faces / Euphoria / WhereElse /
Peligro / Trip M / Subway

21 & Over Event

Fully Stocked Bars Serving San Miguel Light
Drink Specials All Night Long

Fashionable Attire

Celebrate Your Birthday VIP Style VIP Booth / Bottle Service / Group
Guest List
E-mail retromanila@yahoo.com
Or Visit www.friendster.com/retromanila

In Association With
Friendster / Spintronix / San Miguel Beer / Filipinas Magazine
Via Manila / Club Manila /
POGIMIX.com

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RetroManila on Filipinas Magazine!

January 16th, 2007 by gilbyvillaroman

“Filipinas Magazine” – January 2007 Edition
www.filipinasmag.com

Virtual. Viral. Vital.
Celebrating Manila Sounds
By Christina Dunham

Recently, I celebrated the 20th anniversary of my 18th birthday (don’t bother doing the math). And what better way to commemorate 1986 than with an 80s themed party, complete with fashion and fanfare. Guests were invited to come in their best 80s get-up, from padded shoulders and power ties to banana clips and stir-up pants. The affair headlined Spintronix and Rebel Yell (an 80s band) at Rockit Room in San Francisco.

I love everything about the 80s, especially the music. What’s interesting is that a Stanford neuroscientist actually found that “most people form their basic musical tastes by the age of 20. If a new genre is introduced after age 35, there is a 95 percent chance that you will never listen to it. The window has closed.” So that explains why most of the music on my iPod is from that era. And why any new music I download sounds like everything else that I already have.

Shortly after I moved to California in 1992, word got around about Filipino parties that predominantly played 80s new wave. The parties were called “Via Manila,” started in 1993 by a group of friends yearning for “Manila Sounds – songs from the late 80s/early 90s from Europe featuring a certain pop sound,” says Via Manila DJ Gilby Villaroman. 

Going to my first Via Manila party was like going to a reunion – the faces, the scene, the energy, all felt strangely familiar. My friends and I frequented these parties, held every month at various bars and clubs in the San Francisco Bay Area. There was a real sense of community there, everyone united in spirit and moved by the music. “These types of songs were played at clubs in Manila so they were a hit with the partygoers, mostly new Filipino immigrants,” explains Dino Rivera, a DJ with Spintronix.

Virtual Networks
In 1997, another troupe called “Club Manila” emerged in Los Angeles, playing the same Manila Sounds that Filipinos craved. Club Manila founders DJs Jake Martin and Ricky Fabre were eager to bring the party to San Francisco and New York and eventually brought DJs Dino Rivera, Steve Velasco and promoter Felix Camerino (a.k.a. Gato Purrs, his AOL screen name) into the mix.

Initially meeting and interacting in AOL and IRC chat rooms, they developed virtual alliances that translated into a viable business. The first Club Manila party in San Francisco featured Fil-Am recording artist Pam Serrano and drew over 600 guests.

The chat rooms provided a dynamic forum for the events. “Postings on chat rooms like ‘PinoyPinay’ and ‘Manila’ invited people to the gatherings, which became designated events for ‘EBs’ or ‘Eyeballs’ (internet term for face-to-face meetings). A few chatters even volunteered as staff members,” according to Steve. Dino adds, “At these EBs, online chatters who had known each other online would meet in person for the first time. In fact, one of our early events was held at an Internet Café in downtown San Francisco, adding to the excitement of the internet addicts.”

Viral Marketing
With a limited budget, Via Manila and Club Manila parties mostly depended on word-of-mouth. Their established social networks – online and offline – facilitated the broadcast about the gatherings. Seasoned partygoers continued to bring newbies to the affairs, and everyone who came was encouraged to sign up for the mailing list.

“Back in the early 90’s, we solely relied on the power of snail mail. We banked on mailed flyers, word of mouth, and flyers handed out to individuals,” says Gilby. Jay de la Cruz, also a Spintronix DJ, remembers “making runs to Kinkos to print flyers and handing them out at other parties later that night and into the early morning hours.”

Gilby also explains that “email was not a big thing yet and websites were mostly in its early infancy. But we have definitely seen a shift. Email/websites/internet social groups now play a big role in these gatherings. When we celebrated the Via Manila 10th anniversary a few years ago, we relied heavily on word of mouth and the internet because we knew that our old mailing lists would have a lot of inaccuracies.”

Vital Community
The “Manila Sounds” parties were such a hit with the Fil-Am community that more were spun off. “In 1999, Steve Velasco and I joined another party promotion group called Xtreme Xposure put together by promoter Ed Matias. After that, we enlisted Alexson Lim from Spintronix and collaborated with some of the DJs from Via Manila to produce a party called FUSION in 2001,” elaborates Dino.

In 2006, Retro Manila was born. A collaboration between Via Manila, Club Manila and Spintronix, Retro Manila’s first project was “Reminisce” held in October to coincide with Filipino Heritage Month. The timing was perfect. I celebrated the 20th anniversary of my 18th birthday for an entire week, kicking off with the 80s Party and culminating with Reminisce at the Casbah Lounge in San Mateo.

At the event, DJs spun to a packed dance floor, neon pink and green strobe lights pulsated to the rhythm of the bass, while the crowd bounced in unison to OPM, New Wave and Euro-pop beats, the trademark “Manila sound.” To make the Manila club scene even more authentic, San Miguel Light beer was offered at the furiously busy bar.

A horde of over 600 guests filed into the Casbah Lounge to “Reminisce,” all there to rejoice in Manila sounds and revel in nostalgia. This was a homecoming reunion at its finest. A half dozen people I went to high school with half a world away at Colegio San Agustin (CSA) in Makati kept my husband and I company at our VIP booth. And later that evening, I ran into two other former CSA classmates: Ernie Lacson, whom I last saw in second grade, and his wife, Triccie Campos, who moved to Assumption for high school.

“Music was the big driving factor for Via Manila and Club Manila,” says Gilby. “The music, the people and the positive vibe. Definitely the reasons why we keep going back to these events. And every time we go, we always run into someone we haven’t seen in years. It’s really like a reunion!” exclaims Jenny Zabarte, a long-time party enthusiast.

As author and journalist Jane Howard says, “Call it a clan, call it a network, call it a tribe, call it a family. Whatever you call it, whoever you are, you need one.” With music as the unifying force, a community was built around Manila Sounds, and it’s become a vital part of the Filipino experience here in America.

Retro Manila on Filipinas Magazine

January 16th, 2007 by gilbyvillaroman

“Filipinas Magazine” – January 2007 Edition
www.filipinasmag.com

Virtual. Viral. Vital.
Celebrating Manila Sounds
By Christina Dunham

Recently, I celebrated the 20th anniversary of my 18th birthday (don’t bother doing the math). And what better way to commemorate 1986 than with an 80s themed party, complete with fashion and fanfare. Guests were invited to come in their best 80s get-up, from padded shoulders and power ties to banana clips and stir-up pants. The affair headlined Spintronix and Rebel Yell (an 80s band) at Rockit Room in San Francisco.

I love everything about the 80s, especially the music. What’s interesting is that a Stanford neuroscientist actually found that “most people form their basic musical tastes by the age of 20. If a new genre is introduced after age 35, there is a 95 percent chance that you will never listen to it. The window has closed.” So that explains why most of the music on my iPod is from that era. And why any new music I download sounds like everything else that I already have.

Shortly after I moved to California in 1992, word got around about Filipino parties that predominantly played 80s new wave. The parties were called “Via Manila,” started in 1993 by a group of friends yearning for “Manila Sounds – songs from the late 80s/early 90s from Europe featuring a certain pop sound,” says Via Manila DJ Gilby Villaroman. 

Going to my first Via Manila party was like going to a reunion – the faces, the scene, the energy, all felt strangely familiar. My friends and I frequented these parties, held every month at various bars and clubs in the San Francisco Bay Area. There was a real sense of community there, everyone united in spirit and moved by the music. “These types of songs were played at clubs in Manila so they were a hit with the partygoers, mostly new Filipino immigrants,” explains Dino Rivera, a DJ with Spintronix.

Virtual Networks
In 1997, another troupe called “Club Manila” emerged in Los Angeles, playing the same Manila Sounds that Filipinos craved. Club Manila founders DJs Jake Martin and Ricky Fabre were eager to bring the party to San Francisco and New York and eventually brought DJs Dino Rivera, Steve Velasco and promoter Felix Camerino (a.k.a. Gato Purrs, his AOL screen name) into the mix.

Initially meeting and interacting in AOL and IRC chat rooms, they developed virtual alliances that translated into a viable business. The first Club Manila party in San Francisco featured Fil-Am recording artist Pam Serrano and drew over 600 guests.

The chat rooms provided a dynamic forum for the events. “Postings on chat rooms like ‘PinoyPinay’ and ‘Manila’ invited people to the gatherings, which became designated events for ‘EBs’ or ‘Eyeballs’ (internet term for face-to-face meetings). A few chatters even volunteered as staff members,” according to Steve. Dino adds, “At these EBs, online chatters who had known each other online would meet in person for the first time. In fact, one of our early events was held at an Internet Café in downtown San Francisco, adding to the excitement of the internet addicts.”

Viral Marketing
With a limited budget, Via Manila and Club Manila parties mostly depended on word-of-mouth. Their established social networks – online and offline – facilitated the broadcast about the gatherings. Seasoned partygoers continued to bring newbies to the affairs, and everyone who came was encouraged to sign up for the mailing list.

“Back in the early 90’s, we solely relied on the power of snail mail. We banked on mailed flyers, word of mouth, and flyers handed out to individuals,” says Gilby. Jay de la Cruz, also a Spintronix DJ, remembers “making runs to Kinkos to print flyers and handing them out at other parties later that night and into the early morning hours.”

Gilby also explains that “email was not a big thing yet and websites were mostly in its early infancy. But we have definitely seen a shift. Email/websites/internet social groups now play a big role in these gatherings. When we celebrated the Via Manila 10th anniversary a few years ago, we relied heavily on word of mouth and the internet because we knew that our old mailing lists would have a lot of inaccuracies.”

Vital Community
The “Manila Sounds” parties were such a hit with the Fil-Am community that more were spun off. “In 1999, Steve Velasco and I joined another party promotion group called Xtreme Xposure put together by promoter Ed Matias. After that, we enlisted Alexson Lim from Spintronix and collaborated with some of the DJs from Via Manila to produce a party called FUSION in 2001,” elaborates Dino.

In 2006, Retro Manila was born. A collaboration between Via Manila, Club Manila and Spintronix, Retro Manila’s first project was “Reminisce” held in October to coincide with Filipino Heritage Month. The timing was perfect. I celebrated the 20th anniversary of my 18th birthday for an entire week, kicking off with the 80s Party and culminating with Reminisce at the Casbah Lounge in San Mateo.

At the event, DJs spun to a packed dance floor, neon pink and green strobe lights pulsated to the rhythm of the bass, while the crowd bounced in unison to OPM, New Wave and Euro-pop beats, the trademark “Manila sound.” To make the Manila club scene even more authentic, San Miguel Light beer was offered at the furiously busy bar.

A horde of over 600 guests filed into the Casbah Lounge to “Reminisce,” all there to rejoice in Manila sounds and revel in nostalgia. This was a homecoming reunion at its finest. A half dozen people I went to high school with half a world away at Colegio San Agustin (CSA) in Makati kept my husband and I company at our VIP booth. And later that evening, I ran into two other former CSA classmates: Ernie Lacson, whom I last saw in second grade, and his wife, Triccie Campos, who moved to Assumption for high school.

“Music was the big driving factor for Via Manila and Club Manila,” says Gilby. “The music, the people and the positive vibe. Definitely the reasons why we keep going back to these events. And every time we go, we always run into someone we haven’t seen in years. It’s really like a reunion!” exclaims Jenny Zabarte, a long-time party enthusiast.

As author and journalist Jane Howard says, “Call it a clan, call it a network, call it a tribe, call it a family. Whatever you call it, whoever you are, you need one.” With music as the unifying force, a community was built around Manila Sounds, and it’s become a vital part of the Filipino experience here in America.

Retro Manila’s Reminisce Event to Benefit Filipino American Arts Exposition

September 19th, 2006 by gilbyvillaroman

Retro Manila’s Reminisce Event to Benefit Filipino American Arts Exposition

Retro Manila’s Reminisce Event to Benefit Filipino American Arts Exposition -
A Portion of the Proceeds Supports San Francisco Bay Areas Filipino Nonprofit Cultural Organization

"Reminisce" Taking Place Saturday, October 21st, 2006;
The Casbah Ultra Lounge in San Mateo, California

UNION CITY, CA — Retro Manila, hosts of the upcoming Reminisce event, announced today that a portion of the proceeds raised will be donated to the Filipino American Arts Exposition (FAAE).  The announcement was made by Alexson Lim, Retro Manila partner and Spintronix Entertainment, LLC board member.

Established in 1994, the FAAE has been a leading advocate in celebrating and educating the public in Filipino history, its achievements and cultural traditions.  Based in San Francisco, California, the FAAE recently hosted the 13th Pistahan Parade and Festival.  For additional FAAE information: www.pistahan.net.

Were very pleased to support the Filipino American Arts Exposition and its worthwhile cause, said Lim.  As we celebrate the upcoming Filipino Heritage Month (October) and pay tribute to the Centennial Anniversary (1906-2006) of Filipinos in America, its also time to recognize how invaluable the Filipino American Arts Exposition is as a community partner.  Their impact and influence will be felt for many generations to come.

Added Lim, We salute Al Perez, Luz de Leon, their executive team and the many volunteers for their countless hours of dedication and their passion to celebrate and educate the Filipino culture.  Their efforts are truly incomparable and greatly appreciated by all.

On Saturday, October 21st, 2006, RETRO MANILA proudly presents its inaugural club event Reminisce at The Casbah Ultra Lounge (234 South B Street, San Mateo, CA).

REMINISCE is endorsed by Spintronix Entertainment, LLC, Filipino American Arts Exposition/Pistahan Parade & Festival, ABS-CBNs MYX: Music Lifestyle Channel, San Miguel Beer, Miko Carson, Via Manila, Club Manila , Club Rococo, Extreme Exposure, F. Duncan Reyes Events by Design and BluFizz

For additional event information, please visit www.myspace.com/retromanila

About Filipino American Arts Exposition (FAAE):

The Filipino American Arts Exposition (FAAE) is a vital part of the rich tapestry of cultures and ethnic communities of the San Francisco Bay Area through its promotion of Filipino art, music, film and dance.

FAAE celebrates its ancestral heritage and contemporary traditions, broadening awareness and deepening the understanding of Filipino history, achievements and culture.

Founded in 1994, FAAE is an all-volunteer nonprofit organization that contributes to the artistic and cultural pride of the Filipino community and strives to be a meaningful community tradition among the many great ethnic institutions of San Francisco.