Sa Ugoy ng Duyan
"Sa Ugoy ng Duyan" is a Filipino lullaby. The music was composed by Lucio San Pedro while the lyrics were written by Levi Celerio. Both of them were National Artists of the Philippines and this song was their most popular collaboration. Due to its popularity in the Philippines, it was said by an entertainment writer in the Philippine Entertainment Portal to be as familiar as the Philippine national anthem. It has been performed and recorded by various Filipino artists.
Composition
Lucio San Pedro composed the music of "Ugoy ng Duyan"; it was derived from the fourth piece of his own Suite pastorale in the 1940s. San Pedro drew inspiration in composing the music of the song from the melody his mother, Soledad Diestro, hummed when he and his siblings' were put into sleep during their childhood. The song was supposed to be an entry to a competition in 1945, during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. However, because he could not find a collaborator to write the lyrics, he was unable to submit it.In 1947, San Pedro studied at Juilliard School of Music in New York City. He went aboard a ship, the SS Gordon, in 1948 to return to the Philippines. While on a stopover in the Hawaiian city of Honolulu, he met Levi Celerio, who became San Pedro's lyricist for his composition and wrote the words of "Ugoy ng Duyan" during the rest of their trip. The song was completed by the time they landed in Manila. Both San Pedro and Celerio were later named National Artists of the Philippines; they died in 2002, only two days apart from each other.