Turning 28 Years in Public Service, Daniel Razon Celebrates with
- November 22, 2011
- posted in News
Kuya Daniel Razon has done at least five public musical performances geared for philanthropic advocacies – free clinics, free rides, free private education, among many others. With more and more people lining up every day for social, health care, and educational assistance, he knows well that his music can give more than just entertainment.
So for his 28th year celebration of continued service to people, Mr. Public Service returns on stage for a night of entertainment and charity. Dubbed “Story of my Life,” the concert is inspired by the broadcast journalist’s own life story reflected through his originally-composed song of the same title. The event night concurrent to the “Story of my Life” album launch is set on November 28, 2011, 7pm at the Smart-Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, Philippines.
Both the concert and album launch will help finance the daily charity works that Mr. Razon had conceptualized and launched on UNTV.
“What we always have in mind is what we can do to help our fellowmen. The continued projects and charity works that we carry out, those are what we always want to continue,” Razon told reporters during the initial production of the concert’s carrier album.
In preparation for the big event, Kuya Daniel recorded the carrier single along with other songs as early as October, with assistance from renowned hitmaker, Vehnee Saturno. This is the second project of Daniel Razon with Saturno; the first being the A Song of Praise album released in September.
Four of Mr. Razon’s original compositions plus several popular love songs are included in the album. The Story of my Life is his 39th composition to date, written out of personal reflection while he was in an 8-hour bus travel.
“It contains stories of my childhood, the present, and those of the future. It is short but content-rich, because each line of the song has a lot of scenes — scenes of my life encapsulated in it,” Kuya Daniel disclosed in the vernacular. – Hazel Chavez