At the time: Yauch and Hawkins were alive and well. Php600 was then an enormous sum of money. Local rock fandom were divided over the Eraserheads, debating whether “selling out” to the mainstream was worth it or not.
At the time: Yauch and Hawkins were alive and well. Php600 was then an enormous sum of money. Local rock fandom were divided over the Eraserheads, debating whether “selling out” to the mainstream was worth it or not.
If promoters were able to do so back then, I think not only the bands’ agencies were offering less costly talent fees and wanting to break new ground, but also they had fewer bureaucratic and protectionist obstacles, regulations, and payments to deal with than it is now, as Singapore later made itself more affordable as a concert venue.
That advertisement and awareness were then limited to what most youth had access to, as anyone with CATV (MTV & Channel V) and in range of local FM stations (NU, LA, Magic, LSFM) will know more and be up-to-date than others who don’t.