MYMP
M.Y.M.P., acronymously known as Make Your Momma Proud, is a Filipino acoustic band originating from Quezon City, founded in late 1996 by guitarist and leader Chin Alcantara as a tribute to his mother, who succumbed to breast cancer.[1][2] The ensemble initially operated as an amateur rock group before transitioning to acoustic performances in local bars, gaining traction after a radio executive spotted them during a gig, leading to their debut album Soulful Acoustic in 2003, which featured covers of pop ballads and marked their entry into commercial recording.[3][4] The band's defining sound revolves around stripped-down arrangements emphasizing vocal harmonies and guitar-driven melodies, often reinterpreting international and local hits into emotive, intimate renditions that resonated with Philippine audiences amid the early 2000s Original Pilipino Music (OPM) scene.[5] Achievements include sustained popularity through multiple albums like Beyond Acoustic (a double release) and New Horizon (2006), alongside frequent live gigs that solidified their status as a staple in acoustic music circuits, with self-reported multi-platinum sales underscoring commercial viability in the domestic market.[4][6] MYMP's trajectory has been shaped by recurrent vocalist rotations—prominent departures and arrivals including Juris Fernandez (2003–2006) and Nina Girado (2008–2010), followed by current leads Juliet and Ethyl Bahala—attributed by Alcantara to artistic evolution rather than discord, though this fluidity has drawn fan scrutiny. A notable controversy erupted in 2020 when Alcantara appeared in blackface as Jimi Hendrix for a Halloween event, prompting backlash for insensitivity amid global racial tensions, which he addressed by defending the tribute's intent while acknowledging cultural variances in perception.[7] Despite such episodes, the band persists with ongoing performances and releases, maintaining a core lineup anchored by Alcantara's production and arrangement roles.[8]Origins and Formation
Pre-Band Activities (1996–2002)
Jacques "Chin" Alcantara took up the guitar in the mid-1990s, driven by the loss of his mother to breast cancer, who passed away before witnessing his professional performances.[1] This personal motivation fueled his rapid development as a guitarist, leading him to form an all-male amateur rock band in late 1996.[1] The nascent group, initially focused on rock performances without commercial aspirations, competed in the San Miguel Beer National Battle of the Bands that same year, securing victory and earning Alcantara the title of National Capital Region's Best Guitarist.[1] These early efforts centered on live gigs in local Philippine venues, building technical proficiency through grassroots participation in the local music scene.[1] Additionally, the band provided backup support for Brix Ferraris, the original vocalist of South Border, which offered practical experience in ensemble playing and arrangement during informal sessions and side projects from 1996 onward.[1] This phase emphasized skill-building in Quezon City's emerging rock and live performance circuits, predating any shift toward acoustic covers or pop orientations.[1]Initial Formation and Influences
Jacques "Chin" Alcantara established the core configuration of MYMP in 2002, transitioning from prior rock-oriented efforts to an acoustic format centered on his roles as lead guitarist, primary arranger, and songwriter.[1] [9] The band retained its name, M.Y.M.P.—an acronym for Make Your Momma Proud—coined earlier by Alcantara's brother Julius as a homage to their mother, who died from breast cancer complications.[1] [10] This acoustic pivot aligned with the burgeoning Filipino acoustic movement in the early 2000s, where stripped-down renditions of established songs proved effective for capturing live audience engagement through recognizable melodies and emotional delivery.[11] Alcantara's arrangements emphasized simplicity and vocal prominence, prioritizing covers over originals to leverage familiarity in a scene increasingly valuing intimate, venue-based performances amid a preference for homegrown compositions.[1] Prior to wider recognition, MYMP navigated logistical constraints typical of the pre-streaming Philippine music environment, including self-funding equipment and travel while prospecting for slots at Quezon City bars and small acoustic spots to hone their setlists and draw initial crowds.[3]Early Career and Breakthrough
Debut Album Release (2003)
MYMP released their debut album, Soulful Acoustic, in 2003 under Ivory Music & Video, coinciding with the label's 20th anniversary.[3][12] The record, arranged through a producer connected by guitarist Raymund Ryan, showcased the band's acoustic arrangements of covers and select originals, including "Every Little Thing (He Does Is Magic)" produced by Papa Zu.[13][14] Tracks such as "A Little Bit," "Tibok Ng Puso," "Could Be Wrong," and "Miss You" highlighted a stripped-down sound emphasizing guitar accompaniment and vocal delivery, marking an early contribution to the Philippine acoustic revival trend.[14][15] Lead vocalist Juris Fernandez's performances lent emotional authenticity to the album's interpretations, with her clear, emotive range praised for evoking intimacy in covers like the rendition of Sting's composition.[16] This vocal approach, paired with Chin Alcantara's guitar work, differentiated MYMP from contemporaneous pop acts by prioritizing raw, heartfelt expression over polished production.[17] Initial sales were modest upon release, but Soulful Acoustic eventually attained platinum certification, reflecting gradual market uptake driven by radio exposure and organic promotion.[3][4] The album's 11 tracks resonated with listeners seeking acoustic alternatives, establishing MYMP's foundational appeal in the local scene without immediate blockbuster hype.[18]Rise Through Covers and Live Performances (2003–2004)
Following the release of their debut album Soulful Acoustic in 2003, consisting primarily of acoustic covers of pop and rock hits such as "A Little Bit" and "Every Little Thing (He Does Is Magic)," MYMP intensified live performances to promote the material and expand beyond Quezon City origins.[2][19] The band, then a trio featuring Chin Alcantara on guitar, Juris Fernandez on vocals, and Mike Manahan on percussion, focused on intimate gigs in local bars and clubs, which served as foundational platforms for audience engagement in the crowded OPM scene.[3] These performances causally linked to rising visibility, as repeated sets of familiar songs in stripped-down arrangements fostered immediate relatability and word-of-mouth growth among concert-goers seeking alternatives to mainstream pop productions.[20] A pivotal event occurred in 2004 when MYMP's set at Ipanema Bar in Eastwood, Quezon City, drew Ivory Music executives, reinforcing label support amid the band's grassroots momentum.[21] This bar circuit strategy exemplified a low-risk tactic: leveraging pre-existing hits acoustically minimized creative barriers while capitalizing on the era's appetite for nostalgic, venue-friendly reinterpretations, distinct from high-production OPM contemporaries. Early fan bases coalesced around these gigs, with attendees drawn to the raw emotional delivery, particularly Fernandez's vocals, helping differentiate MYMP in a market saturated by solo balladists and electronic acts.[2][22] By late 2004, sustained live outings transitioned from sporadic local shows to more structured regional appearances, solidifying causal pathways to broader recognition without relying solely on radio airplay. This phase marked the band's shift toward national circuits, as cover-driven sets built loyalty through consistent, event-specific attendance rather than isolated recordings.[3] In the competitive OPM landscape, where established artists dominated charts, MYMP's emphasis on live authenticity via covers cultivated a dedicated following attuned to acoustic intimacy over polished originals.[23]Peak Success and Achievements
Commercial Dominance (2005–2008)
In 2005, MYMP released Versions and Beyond Acoustic, two albums that together achieved seven-times platinum certification from the Philippine Association of the Record Industry (PARI), representing sales of 210,000 units at a time when platinum status required 30,000 units per certification level.[24][25] This marked a peak in their acoustic cover repertoire's appeal, driven by tracks like the cover of "Especially for You," which propelled chart performance and radio airplay in the Philippine market.[24] The success reflected the band's saturation of the local OPM (Original Pilipino Music) scene during the dominant physical CD sales period, before digital streaming's rise. By 2008, MYMP had amassed over 12 combined platinum certifications across their catalog, underscoring their commercial hegemony in the acoustic genre amid a market favoring tangible media formats.[26] Quantifiable metrics included rapid gold-to-platinum escalations for releases under Ivory Music, with Versions & Beyond exemplifying multi-platinum thresholds met through sustained retail and broadcast momentum.[27] Live engagements amplified this dominance, including their November 18, 2005, concert M.Y.M.P: Best at Araneta Coliseum, which capitalized on hit-driven demand without relying on international touring.[28] Media visibility further evidenced market penetration, with frequent TV slots on programs like ASAP showcasing covers that aligned with PARI's sales-verified benchmarks.[29] This era's revenue stemmed predominantly from domestic physical sales, unencumbered by later digital metrics, positioning MYMP as a benchmark for acoustic acts in the Philippines prior to lineup shifts.[26]Key Hit Singles and Album Milestones
MYMP's album Versions, released in 2005 as a companion to Beyond Acoustic, marked a commercial milestone, peaking at number two on Philippine charts and achieving sales of over 210,000 units, equivalent to seven platinum certifications based on contemporary industry thresholds.[30][31] The double release's success stemmed from its acoustic reinterpretations of original Pilipino music (OPM) tracks, including the single "Paano Nga Ba," whose stripped-down arrangement—centered on Juris Fernandez's emotive vocals and Chin Alcantara's fingerstyle guitar—stripped away orchestral elements to heighten lyrical intimacy and vulnerability.[31] This approach amplified the song's resonance on local FM radio stations, where frequent airplay propelled it into heavy rotation, contributing to the album's dominance as the best-selling by an acoustic act at the time, with total band sales reaching 285,700 units by September 2009. In 2006, the single "Tell Me Where It Hurts" from New Horizon emerged as a standout, benefiting from similar minimalist production that foregrounded raw vocal delivery over layered production, fostering deeper listener connection through unadorned emotional phrasing.[32] MTV Philippines played a pivotal role in its amplification, with video rotations exposing the track's subtle arrangement innovations—like harmonic vocal layering without electronic effects—to a youth audience, driving crossover appeal amid the era's preference for authentic acoustic sounds.[33] The album itself certified multi-platinum, underscoring MYMP's formula of reworking familiar melodies into sparse, guitar-led versions that emphasized causal emotional triggers over bombastic orchestration.[31] By 2008, Now yielded hits like "Especially for You," a cover whose acoustic rendition innovated by reducing the original's pop synths to intimate strumming and breathy harmonies, enhancing its melancholic core and securing sustained radio traction.[34] Radio outlets and MTV Philippines' programming, which prioritized such accessible yet innovative covers, causally boosted visibility, as evidenced by the track's enduring streams reflecting peak-era momentum, with the album closing MYMP's Ivory Music phase on strong commercial footing.[35] These releases collectively demonstrated how targeted acoustic simplifications, paired with broadcast amplification, elevated MYMP's output beyond covers into culturally resonant milestones.[3]Lineup Transitions
Departure of Juris Fernandez (2009)
In late 2009, lead vocalist Juris Fernandez departed from MYMP amid irreconcilable professional differences with guitarist Chin Alcantara, marking the end of their eight-year partnership that had produced five albums.[36] [37] The split was announced publicly around October 31, with reports indicating it stemmed from disagreements over creative directions and specific professional exposures, such as a television segment appearance.[38] Fernandez described the breakdown as a gradual accumulation of unaligned ideas that reached a breaking point, emphasizing that no financial disputes were involved and that the separation occurred after a calm discussion before the year's end.[37] Alcantara's response highlighted the finality of the parting, warning against the use of the MYMP name by Fernandez and her manager, while affirming the duo's intent to fulfill existing commitments through December 2009.[38] Fernandez, pivoting to a solo career, signed with Star Records and expressed optimism about pursuing original compositions independently, viewing the exit as an inevitable step after prolonged compromises.[37] [38] The departure prompted an immediate operational shift for MYMP, including a temporary focus on completing obligations without new promotions or recordings, as Alcantara began seeking a replacement vocalist to sustain the band's activities under contractual constraints.[38] This transition period effectively paused major initiatives, allowing time for lineup adjustments while honoring prior agreements with their label.[36]Adaptation with New Vocals and Label Changes (2010–2018)
Following the departure of lead vocalist Juris Fernandez in November 2009, MYMP introduced Juliet Bahala as their new frontwoman on January 24, 2010, during a performance on ABS-CBN's ASAP XV.[39] Bahala, an 18-year-old from Davao City and grand prize winner of the 2007 Star of Davao competition, represented an attempt to refresh the band's acoustic sound with a younger voice while maintaining their cover-focused repertoire.[40] Her tenure lasted until 2011, after which the band experimented with lineup adjustments, including reliance on backing vocalists and core members like guitarist Chin Alcantara for lead duties, to sustain performances amid the absence of a fixed female lead.[41] In parallel, MYMP navigated label shifts reflective of broader Philippine music industry consolidation and the rise of digital distribution. After parting with Star Records following their 2008 album Now, the band released The Unreleased Acoustic Collection in 2011 and The MYMP Anthology: A Decade After in 2012 independently or under short-term arrangements, compiling previously unheard covers and hits to capitalize on nostalgia.[41] By 2014, they signed with PolyEast Records for Electrified: 10th Anniversary Edition, a self-produced effort released on February 19 that blended two original tracks with acoustic reinterpretations of pop singles, marking a pivot toward anniversary-themed releases to mark their longevity.[42] These adaptations coincided with declining physical album sales in the Philippine market, where MYMP's earlier works had achieved gold and platinum certifications, but post-2010 releases lacked comparable chart dominance amid streaming's ascent.[31] Nonetheless, the band maintained viability through consistent live touring, including regular appearances on television variety shows and regional gigs, which provided stable revenue as core fans sustained demand for their acoustic sets despite reduced recording peaks.[41] By 2018, MYMP renewed ties with original label Ivory Music, releasing The High 5 Collection to underscore their persistence in a shifting industry landscape.[41]Recent Developments
Current Lineup and Performances (2018–present)
In 2022, Juliet Bahala rejoined MYMP as lead vocalist, marking a return after her initial stint from 2010 to 2011, while Chin Alcantara maintained leadership on lead guitar and vocals to ensure continuity in the band's acoustic style.[31] In October 2023, the band introduced Ethyl Bahala, Juliet's sister, as an additional lead vocalist during the release of their single "Di Mo Lang Alam," enhancing vocal dynamics without disrupting core instrumentation.[43] This lineup, supported by members including Aaron on bass, Jin on guitar, Ben on drums, and Evan on additional instrumentation, has provided post-2018 stability, focusing on live renditions of covers and select originals. MYMP sustains activity through frequent live performances at Philippine venues, such as weekly gigs at 12 Monkeys Music Hall in Pasig, Solaire Resort North in Quezon, and 19 East, including a show on October 23, 2025.[44] In 2024, they appeared at the All Hits OPM Concert, delivering classic and newer tracks alongside the Bahala sisters.[45] Earlier, a full set was recorded at Grand Bar & Lounge on December 13, 2023, highlighting their emphasis on intimate, acoustic sets that retain fan engagement.[46] Adapting to digital platforms, MYMP released the single "Wish I Could" in 2024, distributed via streaming services like Apple Music and Spotify, alongside ongoing social media content on TikTok and Instagram featuring lineup introductions and live clips as recent as October 2025.[47] [6] These efforts demonstrate sustained audience retention, with official channels promoting bookings and performances to bridge traditional gigs and online visibility.[48]Response to Industry Shifts
In the face of digital disruption, including the decline of physical sales and the rise of streaming services, MYMP pivoted to online platforms to sustain visibility and fan engagement. By the mid-2010s, the band began uploading live acoustic covers and performances to YouTube, capitalizing on the platform's algorithmic reach for viral potential, while distributing catalog tracks on Spotify. This shift coincided with broader Philippine industry trends, where streaming accounted for over 80% of music revenue by 2023, enabling niche acts like MYMP to bypass traditional labels for direct audience access.[49] To counter genre evolution toward pop-heavy OPM productions, MYMP strategically incorporated acoustic covers of contemporary hits, such as tracks by artists like Silent Sanctuary and Maja Salvador, blending them with their signature style to appeal to evolving listener preferences. These adaptations, often premiered via online live sessions during the COVID-19 quarantine in 2020, helped maintain relevance; for instance, the band released singles like covers tailored for digital consumption, fostering playlist inclusions and algorithmic plays. Chin Alcantara's guitar arrangements were central, reinterpreting pop structures into stripped-down acoustics to differentiate amid OPM's electronic and vocaloid influences.[50][51] Empirically, pre-streaming era metrics showed robust physical sales, with MYMP's albums achieving over 12 platinum certifications (each denoting at least 30,000 units in the Philippine market) through 2008, underscoring commercial strength in CD and early digital downloads. Post-streaming dominance, the band's output transitioned to on-demand metrics, amassing 569 million Spotify streams and 2 million monthly listeners by 2024, reflecting resilience in the acoustic niche despite lower per-unit payouts—streaming royalties averaging $0.003–$0.005 per play versus $10–$15 per album sale. This endurance, bolstered by persistent live circuit activity, highlights MYMP's data-backed viability without pivoting to pop conformity.[52][6][1]Musical Style and Repertoire
Acoustic Cover Focus
MYMP's acoustic covers form the cornerstone of their repertoire, comprising the majority of their performances and recordings, drawing from both Original Pilipino Music (OPM) staples such as "Torete" by Moonstar88 and international hits like Cyndi Lauper's "True Colors" and Sting's "Every Little Thing (He Does Is Magic)."[53] These reinterpretations prioritize stripped-down arrangements that simplify original harmonic complexities—often reducing lush productions to basic chord progressions and melodic lines—to foster a sense of intimate vulnerability, allowing the emotional core of the songs to resonate more directly with listeners.[53] This methodology aligns with the band's foundational acoustic ethos, where elaborate orchestration yields to raw, unadorned expression, enhancing accessibility without diluting lyrical intent. The empirical rationale for emphasizing covers stems from their proven appeal in lowering entry barriers for audiences, who gravitate toward familiar material that evokes immediate recognition and emotional connection rather than untested novelty.[54] In the Philippine context, this preference is causally rooted in a cultural landscape dominated by karaoke practices and mimicry traditions, where sing-along familiarity drives engagement and commercial viability over experimental compositions.[55] Band members, including former vocalist Juris Fernandez, have noted adapting covers to personal stylistic nuances to ensure authenticity, underscoring a pragmatic approach that capitalizes on audience predisposition for revived hits to build loyalty.[53] Technically, MYMP distinguishes its executions through precise fingerpicking on acoustic guitars, which provides rhythmic propulsion and textural subtlety without percussive intrusion, complemented by layered vocal harmonies that emphasize consonant intervals for warmth and cohesion.[36] These elements—evident in renditions like "Especially for You," where guitar arpeggios underscore dual vocal lines—create a hallmark intimacy that amplifies the covers' soothing, "easy-on-the-ear" quality, differentiating their sound from fuller-band originals.[53] This technique not only suits live settings but also mirrors the causal logic of acoustic minimalism: fewer variables allow purer conveyance of melody and sentiment, empirically sustaining prolonged listener immersion.[36]Original Contributions and Arrangements
Chin Alcantara, MYMP's guitarist and primary songwriter, composed select original tracks for the band, including "Would You Be My Girlfriend" featured on the 2005 album Beyond Acoustic.[56] This song, credited solely to Alcantara, exemplifies their occasional forays into original material amid a repertoire dominated by covers. Similarly, "A Little Bit," another Alcantara-penned composition, appeared on The Unreleased Acoustic Collection (2011) and garnered attention as one of their few self-authored hits. The 2008 album Now included two original compositions among its 12 tracks, marking a deliberate inclusion of new material after extended development.[57] These originals received favorable integration into MYMP's catalog, with streams and playlist inclusions reflecting sustained listener interest, though specific sales data for individual tracks remains limited.[58] MYMP's arrangements emphasized acoustic reinterpretations, often slowing original uptempo pop structures to ballad paces while minimizing electronic elements in favor of guitar-vocal interplay. This approach, evident across albums like Soulful Acoustic (2003) and Versions (2005), stripped songs to core melodies, amplifying lyrical intimacy and emotional resonance through simplified dynamics.[59] Such tweaks—reducing orchestration to essentials—facilitated direct causal links between stripped-back sound and heightened affective response, distinguishing their output from source versions.[60] The scarcity of originals, with Alcantara noting that numerous self-written pieces were excluded from releases for not aligning with MYMP's established acoustic cover aesthetic, underscored a market-oriented strategy prioritizing adaptable, familiarity-driven content over untested compositions.[61] This selective output, including fresh originals on later works like Electrified (2014), balanced innovation with commercial viability in an industry where reinterpretations of established hits yielded broader accessibility.[62]Controversies
Blackface Incident (2020)
During a Halloween online performance on October 30, 2020, MYMP guitarist and co-founder Jacques "Chin" Alcantara appeared in blackface makeup while playing guitar, stating it was intended as a tribute to Jimi Hendrix, whom he described as a personal guitar hero influencing his style.[63][7] The band streamed the event live on Facebook, incorporating the costume as part of the holiday-themed gig amid pandemic restrictions limiting in-person shows.[64][65] Alcantara's attire included dark face paint, a headband, and Hendrix-inspired clothing, aligning with practices of impersonating musicians through makeup that predate contemporary cultural prohibitions on such depictions.[66][7] He later clarified in a follow-up video that the choice stemmed from admiration for Hendrix's artistry rather than any intent to mock or demean, emphasizing no malice was involved.[63][66] During the stream, Alcantara commented that the Black Lives Matter movement was "a joke," asserting instead that "all lives matter" and labeling BLM efforts as propaganda disconnected from broader human value.[63][64] This remark occurred alongside the performance, tying the costume event to his expressed skepticism toward the movement's political framing at the time.[66]Public Reactions and Defenses
The blackface performance by MYMP guitarist Chin Alcantara on October 30, 2020, elicited immediate outrage from Philippine media outlets and social media users, who condemned it as racially insensitive and emblematic of ignorance toward blackface's historical ties to minstrelsy and dehumanization of Black people. Rappler highlighted the backlash, noting Alcantara's concurrent dismissal of the Black Lives Matter movement as "kalokohan" (nonsense) and propaganda during the live session, framing it as a double offense amid global racial justice discussions. Similar criticism appeared in ABS-CBN and Philstar reports, which described widespread online condemnation on platforms like Twitter for mocking Black struggles while appropriating Jimi Hendrix's image.[63][66][64] Alcantara responded without issuing a full apology, defending the blackface as essential for accurately portraying Hendrix—"no one would've recognized the costume without it"—and reiterating his view that Black Lives Matter represented performative activism rather than genuine concern, insisting instead that "all lives matter." By November 4, 2020, he conceded the blackface itself was a mistake due to cultural unawareness but maintained his opposition to the movement, attributing the uproar to imported Western sensitivities irrelevant to Philippine contexts. The band as a whole did not disavow him or alter its trajectory, positioning the act as an innocent tribute to a musical icon rather than malice.[66][67] Supporters, including some Filipino netizens, countered the outrage by emphasizing local cultural norms where blackface lacks the same historical baggage as in the U.S., arguing it was not intended as mockery but as a straightforward homage to Hendrix, a common practice in tributes worldwide without universal condemnation. Analyses of Filipino Twitter discourse noted divisions, with defenders highlighting colonialism's role in uneven awareness of global racial taboos and questioning the proportionality of "cancel culture" applied to a niche acoustic act. No documented boycotts, sponsor losses, or measurable dips in engagement followed; MYMP persisted with online gigs and live shows post-controversy, suggesting the backlash remained confined to online amplification without broader commercial repercussions.[68]Band Members
Current Members
Chin Alcantara remains the band's lead guitarist, arranger, and occasional vocalist, having founded MYMP in 2003 and providing instrumental and creative continuity amid personnel shifts.[43] His arrangements underpin the group's acoustic performances, sustaining its repertoire of covers and select originals in recent tours and releases.[69] Lead vocals are currently handled by sisters Juliet Bahala, who rejoined in 2022, and Ethyl Bahala, who joined in 2023 as a co-vocalist.[43] This dual-vocal setup, featuring the Bahala siblings, has refreshed the band's harmonic dynamics while preserving its emotive delivery, as evidenced in 2024 live sets and singles like "Wish I Could."[69] Supporting the core are bassist Aaron Cadaing (full name Aaron James Cadaing) and drummer Benj Bamba, who handle rhythm section duties in contemporary lineups.[69] Additional guitar support from Jin and multi-instrumentalist Evan appears in select 2024 documentation, contributing to fuller band configurations for gigs. This stable ensemble has facilitated MYMP's ongoing club and resort performances in the Philippines as of 2025, adapting to post-pandemic venues without major disruptions.[44]Former Members
Juris Fernandez joined MYMP as lead vocalist in 2001 and remained with the band until her departure in late 2009 due to irreconcilable professional differences.[36][38] Following her exit, Fernandez signed with Star Music and launched a solo career, releasing her debut album Now Playing in 2010, which included popular tracks such as "Para Sa Masa" and "Hanggang Wakas," contributing to her commercial success as an independent artist.[36][70] Prior to Fernandez, the band's original lead vocalist was Nina Girado, who performed with MYMP for about one year starting around 2000 before leaving to pursue her own solo endeavors, which later resulted in multiple hit albums and awards.[41] Subsequent to Fernandez's tenure, MYMP underwent several vocalist changes, including Juliet Bahala, who joined as lead vocalist in January 2010 and stayed until 2011, later shifting to other musical pursuits.[39] Other interim vocalists, such as Jana Laraza around 2014, filled the role during periods of transition as the band adapted to new lineups.[71] These shifts were driven by individual career aspirations rather than band dissolution.Discography
Studio Albums
MYMP released its debut studio album, Soulful Acoustic, in 2003 under Ivory Music, which achieved PARI platinum certification for sales exceeding 30,000 units.[17][12] The follow-up, Beyond Acoustic, arrived in 2005 via the same label and earned multi-platinum status.[17] Also in 2005, the band issued Versions, another Ivory Music release featuring acoustic interpretations of popular songs.[72] The 2006 album New Horizon, released in December by Ivory Music, similarly received PARI platinum certification with over 30,000 units sold.[73][31] MYMP's final Ivory Music studio effort, Now, came out on September 25, 2008.[74] In 2014, the band released Electrified: 10th Anniversary Edition on February 19, marking a shift toward electrified arrangements of prior material.| Album | Release Date | Label | Certification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soulful Acoustic | 2003 | Ivory Music | PARI Platinum (30,000+) |
| Beyond Acoustic | 2005 | Ivory Music | Multi-Platinum |
| Versions | 2005 | Ivory Music | - |
| New Horizon | December 2006 | Ivory Music | PARI Platinum (30,000+) |
| Now | September 25, 2008 | Ivory Music | - |
| Electrified | February 19, 2014 | - | - |