


It intensified more as she grew up, surrounded by a sister and a brother, who were a cover band member and a songwriting contestant, respectively. “My dad taught me how to play the guitar, like the basic chords of a song, but I couldn’t learn.”ĭespite that failed initial attempt, Meg knew, deep down in her heart, that she had a special feeling for music. “I saw my siblings playing instruments like the guitar and, (at some point,) nainggit ako (I wished I could do the same thing),” Meg looked back on how music got her interest. But the singer-songwriter definitely found her center to finish another interview, set for her in one fine afternoon. She tried to relax her nerves as Meg anticipated the questions that would be thrown at her. In the customary, new-normal media call, Meg sat cozily in a room that doubled as her waiting and interview room. One of them is Meg Zurbito of Ivory Music & Video, who recently released her single, Panandalian. Year after year, with or without pandemic, the local recording scene is flooded with new talents, who wish that their unique voice and musicality be heard.
