Tats Faustino
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (January 2009) |
Tats Faustino | |
---|---|
Origin | Manila, Philippines |
Genres | OPM, pop, r&b, classical, gospel, adult-contemporary |
Occupation(s) | Producer, composer, lyricist, singer, arranger, record producer, multi-instrumentalist, drummer, percussionist |
Instruments | Drums, electric drums, vocals, piano, keyboards, guitar, synthesizers |
Years active | 1980-present |
Labels | Viva |
Associated acts | Gary Valenciano, SOP, Party Pilipinas, Cicada Band |
Website | www |
Tats Faustino is a Filipino musical composer, arranger, producer, musical director, songwriter, singer, multi-instrumentalist, percussionist, and drummer.
Work[]
He composed "Hang On" for Gary Valenciano, "Hindi Magbabago" for Randy Santiago, "Dadalhin" for Regine Velasquez, "Nakaraang Pasko" for Kuh Ledesma and later Carol Banawa, Christian Bautista, and Martin Nievera and more original songs for other Filipino music artists.
He was music director/singer of Cicada Band during the late 80s, under the management of Babic Flores-Faustino, who became his wife. He was the resident music director with the SOP Band on SOP, and was resident musical director of Party Pilipinas.[1]
He composed, wrote, and arranged the theme song for Encantadia, "Mahiwagang Puso", sung by Karylle and Jerome John Hughes. He produced a self-titled album of his own hit songs and compositions, Tats Faustino, released under Viva Records in 2006, with first single, "So Romantic". Singles that followed were "There's Nothing Left Inside" and "Dehin Dehin". Richard Gomez directed Tats Faustino's first music video "Dehin Dehin" with Karylle and Rufa Mae Quinto as guests. Al Quinn directed Tats Faustino's second music video "Handa Na" with Daiana Menezes in Enchanted Kingdom. His "Basta Ikaw" was one of the winners of Metropop 2000.[2]
Personal life[]
Tats Faustino was married to Babic Flores (1959-2020), who sang in his former band, Cicada. They have three children: Carissa, Margarita, and Nico.
References[]
- ^ "Lita Alejar-Faustino: Rhapsodic at 70". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 5 December 2000. p. C5. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
- ^ Cayabyab, Ryan (3 June 2000). "And the Metropop winners are..." Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
External links[]
- Filipino OPM composers
- Filipino songwriters
- Filipino male singers
- Filipino multi-instrumentalists
- Filipino drummers
- Living people
- Musicians from Manila
- University of the East alumni
- Asian musician stubs
- Filipino people stubs
- Filipino musician stubs