Filipino Island Blues: A New Sound Emerges from Leyte

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — June 18, 2026

Most musical genres are not invented in a conference room. They emerge gradually as artists solve problems, tell stories, and borrow from the places where they live.

Over the past several months, a small collection of songs produced under the Cliff Potts and the AI Rebellion banner has begun to reveal a recurring pattern. The songs are not country music. They are not traditional American blues. They are not Filipino pop music. Yet they borrow elements from all three.

The result is what may best be described as Filipino Island Blues.

The genre combines American blues storytelling with the realities of life in the Philippine islands. Instead of highways, the songs feature ferries, banca boats, and coastal roads. Instead of winter storms, they focus on monsoon rains, brownouts, tropical nights, and the sea.

The music itself is intentionally simple. Slow tempos, resonator guitar, acoustic instruments, upright bass, brushed drums, and conversational vocals create a sound that feels more like a late-night conversation than a commercial radio production.

Three recent songs illustrate the emerging style.

“There Were People Before Spain” explores the history of the Philippine islands before European colonization. Rather than presenting a history lesson, the song focuses on ordinary people living, fishing, trading, and raising families long before foreign powers arrived.

“Bye-Bye After Midnight” shifts to a deeply personal perspective. Set in Baybay City after midnight, the song follows a widower listening to the sounds of a sleeping town while reflecting on the absence of the woman he loved. The song relies on atmosphere rather than drama, using dogs barking, distant motorcycles, geckos, and ocean waves to create its emotional setting.

“It Don’t Have To Be This Way” addresses a completely different subject: recurring power interruptions and infrastructure challenges. Instead of assigning blame, the song argues that many technical problems are solvable and that communities often normalize conditions that can be improved.

Despite their different subjects, all three songs share common characteristics. They are rooted in place. They focus on ordinary people. They move slowly. Most importantly, they are built around observation rather than argument.

The result is music that feels connected to both the American blues tradition and modern Philippine life.

Whether Filipino Island Blues develops into a recognized genre remains to be seen. Most genres begin with only a handful of songs before listeners decide whether the label has meaning.

For now, the term serves as a useful description for a growing body of work that combines Philippine settings, blues storytelling, and a distinctly local perspective on history, loss, infrastructure, and everyday life.

Like many cultural developments, it may ultimately be listeners—not musicians—who decide whether the name survives.

If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews

For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org

References

Potts, C. (2026). There Were People Before Spain [Song].

Potts, C. (2026). Bye-Bye After Midnight [Song].

Potts, C. (2026). It Don’t Have To Be This Way [Song].

#AIAssistedMusic #BayBayCity #bluesMusic #FilipinoIslandBlues #FilipinoMusic #independentMusic #Leyte

This Is My Work for the Philippines

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 30, 2026 — 7:05 a.m.

I want to speak directly to my friends here in Baybay City.
To Barangay Guadalupe.
To the families who welcomed me.
To the community that has allowed me to live and work here.

This is not casual blogging.

This is structured work.

The Rice Series: Food Is National Security

Every month, WPS News publishes a rice report focused on production trends, imports, pricing pressure, and long-term sustainability.

Rice is not a minor topic in the Philippines. It is food security. It is price stability. It is farm income. It is household survival. National policy has repeatedly recognized rice as a strategic commodity tied directly to economic stability and social order (Department of Agriculture [DA], 2023).

The rice series tracks what is happening — not emotionally, not politically, but structurally. It is archived for long-term public access so readers can follow trends over time.

Food security is economic security.

That is not theory. That is reality.

Power Stability: Brownouts Are Not Inevitable

Unstable electricity has been normalized in many parts of the country.

It should not be.

Voltage instability, grid fragility, and rolling outages are engineering problems. Engineering problems have engineering solutions. International grid standards show that redundancy, maintenance discipline, and infrastructure modernization significantly reduce outage frequency and voltage fluctuation (International Energy Agency [IEA], 2022).

On WPS News, I have laid out documented analysis of grid resilience, maintenance standards, redundancy design, and structural reform.

Not complaints.
Not emotional arguments.
Documented infrastructure analysis.

Stability is not a luxury. It is the baseline requirement for growth.

Internet Infrastructure: Beyond Social Media

The internet is not just entertainment.

It is commerce.
It is education.
It is export potential.
It is global reach.

Reliable broadband infrastructure is strongly correlated with economic expansion and regional competitiveness (World Bank, 2021). If connectivity is unstable, opportunity is unstable.

I have published explanations of why services fail, how backbone design affects performance, and what structural changes would create durable connectivity across the islands.

Logical architecture.
Physical redundancy.
Long-term planning.

This is telecommunications management work placed into public view.

Why This Exists

Because I live here.

Because documentation matters.

Because long-term stability requires long-term thinking.

This work is public.
It is archived.
It is accessible.

There is no fee.
There is no paywall.
There is no invoice.

Serious communities are built on serious documentation.

The documentation exists.

Read it.
Use it.
Share it.

That is how systems improve.

References

Department of Agriculture. (2023). Philippine rice industry roadmap and production statistics. Government of the Philippines.

International Energy Agency. (2022). Power system reliability and resilience standards. IEA Publications.

World Bank. (2021). Broadband and economic growth: Empirical evidence from developing economies. World Bank Group.

#BayBayCity #internetStability #LeyteDevelopment #PhilippinesInfrastructure #powerGridReform #riceSecurity #WPSNews