Bananatype Explained

Bananatype
Type:EP
Artist:Eraserheads
Cover:Banana TypeEPcover.jpg
Released:June 1997
Recorded:1997
Length:20:36
Prev Title:Fruitcake
Prev Year:1996
Next Title:Sticker Happy
Next Year:1997

Bananatype is the second extended play by the Philippine alternative rock band Eraserheads, released on June 1997 through BMG Records (Pilipinas), Inc. It serves as promotional material for the band’s fifth album Sticker Happy, which was released three months later.

Composition

The promotional EP contains three new songs not included in Sticker Happy. Its lead single “Harana” is a psychedelic, “modernist take” on the titular Philippine serenade. The title track, written by Ely Buendia and his friend Romel “Sancho” Sanchez, has hip-hop and funk elements and segues into “I Can’t Remember You”, which was inspired by a nursery rhyme made up by Buendia’s younger sisters Lally and Elyra.[1]

Bananatype also features two previously unreleased songs. “Police Woman” was originally written by drummer Raimund Marasigan for the 1995 film Run Barbi Run, along with the title track (which was used in the final film) and the still unreleased “Bootleg”. “Tikman” was written in 1994 as a commercial jingle for Burger Machine, with its lyrics containing sexual innuendo.[2]

Personnel

Adapted from the liner notes.[3] Eraserheads

Additional musicians

Production

Design

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gil . Baby A. . The Eraserheads go bananas (The Philippine Star, July 2, 1997) . Schizo Archives . 12 August 2024.
  2. Web site: Lampano Jr. . Reynaldo . Eraserheads' intelligence needs no further proof (Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 29, 1997) . Schizo Archives . 12 August 2024.
  3. Bananatype. Eraserheads. 1997. EP liner notes. BMG.