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"path": "/2026/03/charlie-ysmael-man-myth-rebirth-of-rock.html",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-30T07:37:00.000Z",
"site": "https://www.azraelsmerryland.com",
"textContent": "When the neon sign of 19 East in Muntinlupa City flickers to life on the night of March 29, the crowd will be waiting for more than a concert. They’ll be waiting for a piece of Filipino rock history to step back onto the stage, guitar in hand, a grin that says “I chose to rock.”\n\nThat man is Charlie Ysmael, the 65‑year‑old frontman of the once‑legendary outfit The Breed. With “Timeless”, Ysmael celebrates not just his birthday, but 40 years of rock. Produced by Stellar Productions, his guest line‑up reads like a who’s‑who of Pinoy rock royalty—Sampaguita, Spirit, Tropical Depression, Radha, K.O. Jones, Laura, former Razorback lead singer Josemari Cuervo, Ingrid, and, of course, The Breed itself.\n\nWhat makes this night arresting isn’t just the roster; it’s the journey that brought a psychology graduate, a would‑be pilot, a TV newsreader, and a hotel‑circuit crooner full circle to the very spot where he first heard a guitar scream in the ‘80s.\n\n**A Sonic Childhood That Rocket‑Launched**\n\nCharlie’s love affair with music began in the living room of his Manila suburb, where the crackle of an old Elvis record and the twang of Chuck Berry mingled with the harmonies of The Beatles. “Those early records were my first teachers,” he says, eyes bright. “I learned how a simple chord could make a whole room feel alive.”\n\nHis first professional foray came with Arenarr, a band signed to Vicor Music in the late 1980s. They were the soundtrack of a generation still learning to speak in Tagalog‑English code‑switches, and they gave Charlie a taste of the studio’s gritty, magnetic pull.\n\nWhen the 1990s hit, he answered that pull with a louder, faster answer: The Breed. “Two full albums with DYNA Records,” he recalls, “and that’s where the Beast truly awakened.” The band’s signature track—“Black Mercedes Benz”—still reverberates in the memories of anyone who ever owned a battered cassette player or a Walkman that survived the turn of the millennium.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n**The Fall, The Reinvention, The Resurgence**\n\nLike many great acts of the era, The Breed’s lights dimmed by the close of the ’90s. The group disbanded in early 1998. A wave of grief hit when guitarist Manny Amador—the man behind the ear‑splitting riffs that defined the band’s raw edge—passed away years later.\n\nBut Charlie never stayed still. He swapped the stage for the newsroom, delivering headlines as an RPN 9 newsreader. He spun tracks as a NU 107 DJ and even dusted off the old DZRJ‑AM decks, curating the next wave of sounds for a younger audience.\n\nIn the hotel circuit he found a new home with The Spirit of ’67, a 13‑year stint that saw him experiment from pop‑soul to swing, adding a brass section for good measure. “It was a period of musical apprenticeship,” Charlie explains. “I learned how to wear many hats—vocalist, guitarist, arranger—so that when the world stopped in 2020, I could rebuild from anything.”\n\nCOVID‑19 shuttered clubs, silenced microphones, and forced the entertainment industry into a grinding halt. But in the empty rooms of his home studio, Charlie heard a new riff: The Breed, resurrected.\n\nFrom October 2020 to May 2022, he and a hand‑picked quartet—Paolo Blaquera (lead guitar), Gerard de Dios (bass), Jay Alviar (drums)—wrote, recorded, and mixed Against the Light of Day, a hard‑rock statement that was released in November 2022. “We tried to capture the old Breed sound, the punch, the lyrical bite,” Charlie says, “but we also let the pandemic’s darkness shape the music’s edge.”\n\n\n\nThe Breed\n\nFrom left to right:\n\nMike Bewer - Lead Guitar & Vocals\n\nCharlie Ysmael - Lead Vocals & Guitar\n\nMckoy Alcantara - Drums & Vocals\n\nJun Lazo - Bass\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPhotos from last night's event\nshots by George Buid of ManilaStories.com\n\n\n\n\n**Beyond The Stage: A Legacy That Counts**\n\nWhen asked about his greatest achievement, Charlie pauses—not to think of record sales or chart positions, but of the faces in the front row. “My kids,” he says, his voice softening, “they’re the real encore.”\n\nHis son, asked the same question that haunted his father: “Why didn’t you become a pilot?”\n\nCharlie’s answer is now an anthem: “I chose to rock, son!”\n\nIt’s a line that resonates beyond his family. For a generation that watched Manila’s nightlife evolve from the smoky basements of the ’80s to the digital livestreams of 2020, Charlie’s story is proof that rock isn’t just a genre—it’s a mindset.\n\nIn a city where the rush of traffic often drowns out the hum of guitars, Charlie Ysmael stands as a reminder that the beat never truly stops—it merely waits for the right moment to drop again.\n\nOn March 29, as the lights dim at 19 East, you’ll hear that moment. You’ll feel the pulse of a man who, after a lifetime of reinvention, finally pulled the lever on his own Timeless machine. And when the final chord fades, the roar of the crowd will answer his lifelong mantra: “I chose to rock.”\n\nSee you at 19 East. Bring a flashlight—because the night will be lit by the glow of four decades of rock, and one man’s unending love for the sound.",
"title": "Charlie Ysmael – The Man, the Myth, the Rebirth of a Rock Legend",
"updatedAt": "2026-03-30T07:58:40.324Z"
}