Orange and Lemons

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Orange and Lemons
Origin Baliuag, Bulacan, Philippines
Genres Alternative rock
Years active 1999-2007, 2015-present
Labels Universal
Associated acts
Members Mcoy Fundales
Clementine
JM del Mundo
Ace del Mundo

Orange and Lemons was a Filipino pop rock band formed in 1999.

History

The band name "Oranges and Lemons" was initially recommended by a former member of the group. Apparently the band was not aware at the time that the name was actually derived from a British nursery rhyme and a title of an album by the British band XTC.[citation needed]

Clementine Castro and Mcoy Fundales met in high school in the mid-1990s. The duo formed groups with friends from their province of Bulacan and went through several names such before eventually settling on Orange and Lemons.[citation needed] Brothers Ace and JM del Mundo were in a band called Colossal Youth when they met Castro and Fundales in a local bar in Bulacan in 1999.[citation needed] Castro and Fundales with two other friends were handled by Roldan "Bong" Baluyot of No Seat Affair (a local management, booking and production outfit) when they recorded a two-track demo ("She's Leaving Home", "Isang Gabi") in 1999 as Orange and Lemons. The song "She's Leaving Home" soon found its way to radio station NU107.5 FM's playlist.[citation needed]

The band went on hiatus in 2000, but was reformed in 2003 with the del Mundo in the line-up permanently.[citation needed]They started arranging and rehearsing original songs that would eventually end up in their debut album, Love in the Land of Rubber Shoes and Dirty Ice Cream.[citation needed] With a style of retro music combined with alternative rock, the band's main musical influences ranged from The Beatles and The Smiths, to The Cure and Eraserheads.[citation needed]

Castro and Fundales contacted Bong Baluyot to once again handle the band and ten songs were recorded in three days due to a limited financial budget. After the songs were recorded, Baluyot once again started scouting around for a label that would take the group in.[citation needed]

The band had their first gig stint in a club in Makati City called Where Else?[citation needed] It was in one of those gigs that ONL met Toti Dalmacion, formerly of Groove Nation, a local music store famous for rare and hard-to-find vinyl records. Dalmacion was already toying with the idea of establishing an independent label that he would call Terno Recordings. The label would showcase unsigned and talented Filipino artists with a unique sound and style that could (hopefully) pass international standards. He proposed that ONL be the flagship artist for the label. A one-album deal was signed.[citation needed]

ONL's 10-track debut album, Love in the Land of Rubber Shoes and Dirty Ice Cream was independently released and launched in December 2003.[citation needed] The album's single "(Just Like) A Splendid Love Song" got radio airplay on NU107.5 FM and reached the station's number 1 spot in their weekly countdown.[citation needed] Orange and Lemons was declared Best New Artist for 2004 in NU107's yearly Rock Awards event.[citation needed]

ONL signed a contract with Universal Records in October 2004.[citation needed] The band proceeded to record a new album; their second and first under a major label.Strike Whilst The Iron Is Hot was completed and released in June 2005, with singles including "Hanggang Kailan (Umuwi Ka Na Baby)", "Heaven Knows (This Angel Has Flown)" and "Lihim".[citation needed] One of the band's biggest breaks came with an offer from Philippine media giant ABS-CBN for ONL to do the jingle/soundtrack for a new series Pinoy Big Brother, the Philippine franchised version of the reality TV show Big Brother. ONL came up with a song called "Pinoy Ako".[citation needed]

Other projects of the band included "Abot Kamay" (a song for a shampoo advertisement) and "Blue Moon" (their version of the classic track for a movie theme song).[citation needed]

In June 2005, Orange and Lemons was featured on MTV Philippines in its Rising Star segment, and in March 2006 they were featured in the "Lokal Artist of the Month" segment.[citation needed] Orange and Lemons were named "Artist of the Year" at the NU107's Rock Awards for 2005.[citation needed]

The release of the tribute album of the Apo Hiking Society, Kami nAPO Muna in 2006, where the band contributed one track, gave Orange and Lemons the spotlight again.[citation needed] Orange and Lemons once again did their take on yet another Apo song "Tuloy na Tuloy Pa Rin Ang Pasko" by December 2006. The song was used by ABS-CBN for their Christmas station ID.[citation needed] As a follow-up to "Abot Kamay", the band completed a song from Unilever Philippines called "Let Me" and was used for another shampoo advertisement.[citation needed] Universal Records released their third and last album on June 8, 2007 called Moonlane Gardens. Their first single in that album was "Ang Katulad Mong Walang Katulad" and their last single before they disbanded was "Fade".[citation needed]

It was reported on October 10, 2007 by the Inquirer.net that Orange and Lemons had disbanded.[citation needed] The reason stated was primarily due to differences between band members and their managers. Clem Castro, the then lead guitarist of the band, then started his own band, 3-piece indie pop group The Camerawalls signed under his own label, Lilystars Records.[citation needed] He formed the band with original Orange & Lemons bassist Law. The three remaining band members formed a new band called Kenyo.[1]

Controversies

Allegations have been made that the melody and musical arrangement of the band's breakout single "Pinoy Ako", also used as theme song in the hit reality show Pinoy Big Brother, was stolen from an obscure single "Chandeliers" by 1980s new wave group, Care.[2][3]

Band members

  • Clementine "Clem" Castro - lead guitar/Singing|vocals
  • Mcoy Fundales - rhythm guitar/lead vocals
  • JM del Mundo - bass guitar
  • Ace del Mundo - drums

Discography

Albums

  • Love in the Land of Rubber Shoes and Dirty Ice Cream (Terno Records, 2003)
  • Strike whilst the Iron is Hot (Universal Records, 2005)
  • Moonlane Gardens (Universal Records)

Tribute album contributions

Other collaborations

  • NU 107 Super Size Rock (2004)
  • Jack Lives Here (2004)
  • Pinoy Ako (Star Records, 2005)
  • Super! The Biggest Opm Hits Of The Year (2006)
  • Musika Sa Bahay Ni Kuya: The Best Of Pinoy Big Brother Hits (Star Records, 2008)
  • i-Star 15: The Best Of Inspirational Songs (Star Records, 2010)

Christmas album contributions

  • Not Another Christmas Album - JAM 88.3 ("Christmas Daydreams") (2004)
  • OPM Gold Christmas Album ("Tuloy na Tuloy Pa Rin Ang Pasko") (2006)
  • Close Up Season of Smiles ("God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen") (2006)

Singles

  • "She's Leaving Home"
  • "Just Like A Splendid Love Song"
  • "A Beginning of Something Wonderful"
  • "Kailangan Kita"
  • "Hanggang Kailan (Umuwi Ka Na Baby)"
  • "Heaven Knows (This Angel Has Flown)"
  • "Pinoy Ako"
  • "Abot Kamay"
  • "Blue Moon"
  • "Lihim"
  • "Yakap Sa Dilim" (original by APO Hiking Society)
  • "Tuloy na Tuloy Pa Rin Ang Pasko"
  • "Let Me"
  • "Ang Katulad Mong Walang Katulad"
  • "Fade"
  • "Huwag Kang Matakot" (original by The Eraserheads)

References

Awards
Preceded by NU Rock Awards
Best New Artist

2004
Succeeded by
Pedicab