Arthur Nery was attending his cousin’s big debut event when he first found out he could sing. As is usually the case at Filipino birthday parties, the then-eight-year-old was asked to sing his cousin’s favorite song in front of his relatives and random guests.
The song was “Fly Me To the Moon,” and the way Nery tells it, it seemed like everybody at the party was impressed.
“My dad was a great singer,” the shy, soft-spoken Nery says when we catch up with him one day at his label O/C Records’ headquarters in Quezon City. “I grew up listening to jazz and blues. First, Frank Sinatra, and then later on, Michael Bublé. It was all his influence.”
Nery broke into the scene in 2019 when his album Letters Never Sent was released. It’s a captivating debut from a undeniable talent: an honest-to-goodness jazzy, R&B-tinged record from a skinny 23-year-old local with vocal chops that make you want to stop and stare. It even starts with a sexy spoken word missive, the aforementioned “letters never sent.”
“Everybody was voting for me and you, but I guess we were short a few ballots,” he croons.
(Admittedly, I’m knocking myself on the head for missing “Letters Never Sent” when I did last year’s best OPM releases. It definitely deserves a spot there, if I could redo things).