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For Old Time’s Sake – Together   
The curious case of For Old Time's Sake presents a band caught between continents, decades, and recording methods. Darwin D. Dacanay and Whet Crisostomo's latest offering, "Together," carries the weight of seventeen years since its initial conception, finally receiving proper studio treatment at Perth's Vision Studio.

The track emerges from a peculiar creative arrangement: instruments laid down in Australia while vocals traverse the Pacific to be captured in the Philippines. This geographical separation might have doomed lesser partnerships, yet the duo's Beatles-inflected sensibilities remain intact. The folk-pop foundation they established across four home-recorded albums between 2007 and 2011 provides sturdy scaffolding for this studio debut.


"Together" bears the hallmarks of a song that has lived through multiple iterations. The melody possesses that particular quality of compositions that have been road-tested in living rooms and rehearsal spaces—worn smooth like river stones, comfortable in its own skin. Dacanay's vocals carry genuine warmth, while Crisostomo's guitar work demonstrates the kind of tasteful restraint that comes from years of musical dialogue between old friends.


The production values represent a marked departure from their bedroom recording origins. Vision Studio has afforded the band clarity and separation that their earlier works necessarily lacked, though purists might argue that some of the intimate charm has been polished away. The rhythm section—Jonathan Peria on guitar, Vanie Cubero on bass, and Joel Cacao on drums—provides competent support without overwhelming the central partnership.


The narrative of friendship sustained across distance resonates more powerfully than the musical execution itself. For Old Time's Sake have created something genuine and heartfelt, even if it doesn't quite transcend its influences. "Together" functions as both artifact and promise—proof that some musical partnerships endure geographic separation, and perhaps a foundation for future studio adventures.


This is music for late afternoons and long conversations, crafted by musicians who clearly value the process as much as the product. While "Together" may not revolutionize anyone's record collection, it offers the considerable pleasure of sincerity in a world increasingly short on that commodity.