Teddy Diaz

Teddy Diaz

Teddy Diaz onstage in 1987
Background information
Also known as Teddy Diaz
Born (1963-04-01)April 1, 1963
Died August 21, 1988(1988-08-21) (aged 25)
Agno St. Tatalon, Quezon City, Philippines[1]
Genres Hard rock, heavy metal, post-punk, new wave
Occupation(s) Musician, composer
Instruments Guitar, vocals, keyboards
Years active 1985–1988
Labels OctoArts International, Inc.
Associated acts The Dawn
Website www.thedawn.ph
Notable instruments
Gibson Les Paul

Teodoro "Teddy" de Villa Diaz (1 April 1963 21 August 1988) was a Filipino guitarist and composer, best known as the leader and founding member of the rockband The Dawn.

As a composer, he co-wrote the band's first single "Enveloped Ideas" and their well-known hit "Salamat", which was released posthumously in 1989.[2] He played guitar on the albums The Dawn (1986) and I Stand With You (1988). Aside from being a guitarist, he played keyboards as he was credited on The Dawn's 1986 debut album.

At the height of his career and at the peak of The Dawn's popularity in the late 1980s, he was stabbed to death in front of his girlfriend's house by two bystanders allegedly under the influence of drugs and alcohol.

Early life

Diaz's father was the Filipino actor Vic Diaz of Sampaguita Pictures fame; his grandfather was Pompeyo Diaz, a judge. His godfather is Fernando Poe, Jr. who was the "King of Philippine Movies" in Philippine cinema. Diaz was born on April Fools' Day, and was often teased because of this. He was the first grandchild on both sides of his family. Diaz had two brothers, Carl and Loren.

Diaz spent both grade school and high school in his father and grandfather's alma mater, Ateneo de Manila University. After graduating from high school, he enrolled at the University of the Philippines as an architecture student and stayed there for three years. He transferred to the Philippine Women's University after his third year in UP and took up music with guitar as his major. Aside from being a musician, Diaz was also gifted with a talent in drawing. He would spend time with Fine Arts students in PWU, and would draw comic book characters and different electric guitar designs for relaxation.[3]

Career

Main article: The Dawn (band)
The Dawn in the late 80s.

The Dawn was formed in 1985 originally consisted of Diaz on guitar, JB Leonor on drums and Clay Luna on bass. The band's name was derived from a portrait of the Holy Spirit that symbolized the dawn of a new day (probably found in a book given by the Sisters of the Holy Spirit to Teddy Diaz,[4] as well as a crucifix which Teddy also received from the same sisterhood), called The Dawning of the Holy Spirit.[5] Diaz, Leonor and Luna initially wanted a female vocalist; but in the course of their search, Jett Pangan auditioned and got the trio's unanimous nod. And the quartet started to performing in clubs. In 1987, he co-wrote The Dawn's debut single "Enveloped Ideas",[2] as Orly Ilacad of Octo Arts gave them the necessary breakthrough by releasing their single and 12" EP of the single.[1] The band INTRoVOYS was mentored by Diaz. One of the songs, "Radio", on their 2005 release, A Brighter Day, was originally arranged by him back in 1987. The arrangement of the Filipino traditional folk song, "Magtanim Ay 'Di Biro" was credited to Diaz.[6] The other songs on which Teddy wrote or co-wrote such as "Dreams"[7] and "The Moon".[8]

Before his death, he became friendly with Francis Reyes (who was later joined as a guitarist of the band) and they even spoke of forming a thrash metal side project with drummer JB Leonor's brother Dennis.

Death

On 21 August 1988, The Dawn performed "Love (Will Set Us Free)" on Martin After Dark a show hosted by Martin Nievera. After the performance, The Dawn left the ABS-CBN compound and went their separate ways. Diaz proceeded to his girlfriend's home in Agno Street Tatalon, Quezon City.[1] As he was approaching the gate to the dwelling, he was accosted by two drunken men. Diaz gave them his wallet containing Php 200.00, his share of the fee from the band's earlier performance. After taking the wallet, one of the men, who was armed with a knife, began stabbing Diaz. Wounds on Diaz's left arm indicated that he may have tried to parry the blows, but a knife thrust to his throat caused massive bleeding, eventually leading to his death. Drummer JB Leonor explained: "With his long hair, Teddy might have been mistaken for a woman, an easy prey. Teddy might have resisted at some point, and that's why they stabbed him. He was really a victim of circumstance. He just happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time."

Diaz's murderer was apprehended by police a week later, tried in court, convicted and remanded to the custody of authorities at the New Bilibid Prison. Members of The Dawn state that the convict had since died in incarceration.

The first decision of the three surviving members and band's manager Martin Galan was to continue with the band, they also agreed that Diaz's replacement would not have to be his clone.[9] In September 1988, Francis Reyes was asked to be one of the three guitarists who were to play Teddy's parts in the tribute concert "Salamat Teddy" at the Folk Arts Theater. Reyes talks about Diaz and he said: "People continue to remember Teddy. He had star quality written all over him that registered very well even with those who didn't know him as a musician. He had a very strong personality that you just can't ignore."

Legacy

In spite of his early demise, his influence is still felt among many guitarists in the Philippines today and he has become a legend among many Filipino musicians. The Dawn, and the Filipino music industry also consider Diaz to be the band's driving force until today. In memory of Diaz, The Dawn has recorded a song that pays tribute to him: "I Stand With You".[10] Perfecto de Castro, former guitarist of Rivermaya, was inspired to study the guitar upon seeing Diaz perform with The Dawn in a concert in 1987.[11] Former Afterimage guitarist and 6Cycle Mind's founding lead guitarist Chuck Isidro is also influenced by Teddy Diaz. He treasures a poster of Teddy Diaz kept in his room, which he got during his pre-teen years. In 2006, a photo, features Francis Reyes playing Diaz's last surviving Hofner guitar.[12]

Former Eraserheads bassist Buddy Zabala describes Teddy's death as a "Great loss, and after a band made a success out of creating homegrown music, other local bands started writing their own material. But it was Teddy who was the prime mover of The Dawn". In 2006, he was portrayed by actor Ping Medina.[9]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "The Story Of THE DAWN". Doc Music. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  2. 1 2 The Dawn - Enveloped Ideas at Opm Tunes
  3. "Remembering TEDDY DIAZ". Doc Music. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  4. Sheryl Garcia (June 18, 2006). "The Dawn remembers founding member in bio-pic". www.filipinoexpress.com. Archived from the original on 2006-10-18. Retrieved 2006-11-13.
  5. Jay Taruc (2008). i-Witness:Salamat Teddy (Documentary TV-Series). Philippines: GMA Network.
  6. "The Dawn - Magtanim Ay 'Di Biro (Concert at the Park)". You Tube. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  7. The Dawn - Dreams at Opm Tunes
  8. The Dawn - The Moon Live at Concert at the Park on YouTube
  9. 1 2 Maghirang, Tony (2007-10-28). "The dawn and twilight of Teddy Diaz". Inquirer.net. Retrieved 2009-09-17.
  10. Ricky L. Calderon (May 24, 2006). "THE DAWN: 20 YEARS AND GETTING BETTER". www.newsflash.org. Retrieved 2006-11-18.
  11. Dennis Ladaw (November 4, 2005). "A rocker goes classical". manilatimes.net. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  12. "Photo of the Day: Francis Brew with Teddy Diaz's guitar". Rosarioko. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
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