Containing two all-time favorites, All Day IPA and All Day Haze, a seasonally rotating All Day Series release and an exclusive All Day beer, you’ll be able to stock your fridge and still have enough to share with friends. Founders Brewing Co (Grand Rapids, MI)Īll Day Series Variety Pack – The All Day Variety Pack is filled with four refreshing All Day options to elevate life’s many occasions. Cinderveza is a light, crisp, low abv beer, making it especially easy drinking!įresh Pressed: Cherry Cider – After first look this Cider has a luscious red hue and with the first taste a flood of tart Michigan cherries and apple flavors flood the pallet with a slightly tart/sweet finish. Not bitter and not high in alcohol, Cinder Block Brewery created the perfect beer to cuddle up to!Ĭinderveza – Cinderveza is a Mexican Style Lager brewed with fresh lime zest, added in the conditioning process to preserve the fresh lime flavor. All the hops in this beer find their way in at the very end of the brewing process, preserving all the delicate, tropical and juicy flavors. Hop Cuddle Hazy IPA – When all you want to do is cuddle, Hop Cuddle is your partner for a soft, luscious, fluffy IPA. Juicy Pils – This hoppy Pilsner is a clean, crisp beer, with a hop-packed juicy kick! Coming in at 5% ABV, it’s easily crushable for hop heads and lager lovers alike. Cinder Block Brewery (North Kansas City, MO) These are the official Filipino lyrics sung all over the country today and given wider propagation through radio, television and cinema.Join us in store at Macadoodles Lee’s Summit for complimentary samples of the following beers from Cinder Block Brewery (North Kansas City, MO) and Founders Brewing Co (Grand Rapids, MI). In 1956, a new version penned by the Surian ng Wikang Pambansa (Institute of National Language) was adopted. The most popular were the following versions, one in English by Camilo Osias and M.A.L. The American administors discouraged the singing of the anthem and in the 1920s, Palma's original spanish lyrics underwent several English and Tagalog translations. The first half of the century were years of humiliation for the Filipinos and their anthem. But on March 23,1901, the war with America ground to a halt with the capture of Aguinaldo in Palanan, Isabela. The anthem was readily taken by the young nation at war. He wrote a poem entitled "Filipinas" and this was wed to the Felipe composition. The defiant lyrics to march the stirring strains of Felipe were supplied by Jose Palma, a 23-year old soldier who was as adept with the pen as he was with the sword. In February of 1899, the Filipino-American War erupted. Having thrown off Spanish rule, the Filipinos found themselves under new colonial masters, the Americans. In December 1898, the Philippines was ceded by Spain to the United States of America in the Treaty of Paris. The need for lyrics was just as great as there was for the music. Also displayed for the first time was the national flag, unfurled to the stirring strains of the marcha nacional played by the band of San Francisco de Malabon (now Heneral Trias) whose members had learned the music the day before.īut still without words, Felipe's music was simply a march. Two rallying symbols were presented to the infant nation that day. The national anthem was heard publicly for the first time on June 12, 1898, when, standing on the balcony of his Kawit mansion, Aguinaldo proclaimed Asia's first independent republic before a cheering throng. Named by Felipe the Marcha Filipino Magdalo (after Aguinaldo's nom de guerre and his faction in the Katipunan), the music was adopted on the spot and renamed the Marcha Nacional Filipina (Philippine National March). Felipe worked on the assignment for six days and on June 11, sitting in front of a piano in the Aguinaldo living room, played his music before the presidente and his lieutenants. On June 5, 1898, he commissioned Julian Felipe, a Cavite pianist and composer, to work on a march for the revolutionists. Emilio Aguinaldo astutely recognized the need for national symbols to rally the nation against the enemy. And this need arose in 1898, when the revolution against Spain was in its second year and a Filipino victory was in sight. The Philippine National Anthem is a product of revolution, a response to the need of the revolutionary times that gave birth to it.
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