Eraserheads discography

(Redirected from The Heads Set)

Eraserheads are a Philippine alternative rock band. Formed in Quezon City in 1989, the group consists of singer Ely Buendia, bassist Buddy Zabala, guitarist Marcus Adoro, and drummer Raimund Marasigan. The Eraserheads discography consists of seven studio albums, two live albums, five compilation albums, three extended plays (EP), 21 singles, two video albums and 13 music videos.

Eraserheads discography
Eraserheads during the Huling El Bimbo reunion concert in 2022
Studio albums7
EPs3
Live albums2
Compilation albums5
Singles21
Music videos13

With their debut album Ultraelectromagneticpop! (1993) and the following albums Circus (1994) and Cutterpillow (1995), Eraserheads ushered in a second wave of Filipino rock bands in the 1990s. Their first three albums also achieved commercial success, with Cutterpillow becoming the third biggest-selling album in OPM history and the biggest for any Filipino band or group.[1]

After releasing the Christmas-themed concept album Fruitcake (1996), Eraserheads experimented with electronic and art rock styles for their next albums Sticker Happy (1997), Natin99 (1999), and Carbon Stereoxide (2001). The band broke up in 2002, and all principal former members have enjoyed success as solo artists. They later reunited in 2008 for a series of reunion concerts in the Philippines and have since made sporadic touring and promotional appearances in the country and overseas.

Albums

edit

Studio albums

edit
List of albums, with sales and certifications
Title Album details Sales Certifications
Ultraelectromagneticpop!
  • PHI: 200,000+
Circus
  • Released: November 4, 1994
  • Label: BMG, Musiko
  • Format: CD, cassette, LP
  • PHI: 214,000+
  • PARI: 7× Platinum[2]
Cutterpillow
  • Released: December 8, 1995
  • Label: BMG, Musiko
  • Format: CD, cassette, LP
  • PHI: 400,000+
  • PARI: 14× Platinum (Diamond)[3]
Fruitcake
  • Released: December 6, 1996
  • Label: BMG, Greater East Asia
  • Format: CD, cassette
  • PHI: 122,000+
Sticker Happy
  • Released: September 11, 1997
  • Label: BMG, Greater East Asia
  • Format: CD, cassette
  • PHI: 55,000+
Natin99
  • Released: May 19, 1999
  • Label: BMG, Greater East Asia
  • Format: CD, cassette
  • PHI: 20,000+
Carbon Stereoxide
  • Released: March 10, 2001
  • Label: BMG, Musiko
  • Format: CD, cassette
  • PHI: 12,000+

Live albums

edit
Title Album details
The Reunion Concert 08.30.08
  • Released: November 3, 2008
  • Labels: BMG
  • Formats: CD, digital download
Huling El Bimbo (Live at 2022 The Eraserheads Reunion Concert)
  • Released: March 15, 2024
  • Labels: WEU Event Management Services
  • Formats: Digital download

Compilation albums

edit
Title Album details Sales and Certifications
Aloha Milkyway
  • Released: August 12, 1998
  • Label: BMG
  • Formats: CD, cassette
Eraserheads: The Singles
  • Released: 2001
  • Label: BMG
  • Formats: CD, cassette
Eraserheads Anthology
  • Released: January 23, 2004
  • Label: BMG
  • Formats: CD
  • PHI: 209,000+
  • 6× Platinum[2]
Eraserheads Anthology Two
  • Released: August 16, 2006
  • Label: BMG
  • Formats: CD
The Heads Set
  • Released: September 7, 2010
  • Label: Sony Music Entertainment
  • Formats: 10×CD, DVD box set

Extended plays

edit
Title Album details
Fruitcake EP
  • Released: November 1996
  • Formats: CD, cassette
  • Label: BMG
Bananatype
  • Released: June 1997
  • Formats: CD, cassette
  • Label: BMG
Please Transpose
  • Released: August 2002
  • Formats: CDr
  • Label: Self-released

Singles

edit
List of singles, showing year released and album name
Title Year Album Notes
"Ligaya" 1993 Ultraelectromagneticpop!
"Pare Ko"
"Toyang"
"Shirley" 1994
"Kailan" Circus
"Overdrive" 1996 Cutterpillow
"Fruitcake" Fruitcake
"Harana" 1997 Bananatype
"Milk and Money" The New York Mixes Promotional CD single
"Hard to Believe"
"Andalusian Dog"
"Kaliwete" Sticker Happy
"Hard to Believe" 1998
"Para sa Masa"
"Julie Tearjerky" Aloha Milkyway
"Tamagotchi Baby" 1999
"With a Smile"
"Maselang Bahaghari" Natin99
"Huwag Kang Matakot"
"Maskara" 2001 Carbon Stereoxide
"Hula"
"How Far Will U Go"
"U Make Me" 2002 Please Transpose
"Sabado" 2014 Sabado/1995 Released as part of the September 2014 issue of the Philippine edition of Esquire
"1995"

Other appearances

edit
List of non-single appearances, showing year released and album name
Title Year Album
"Run Barbi Run" 1995 Best OPM Collection Volume 4
"Casa Fantastica" 1996 1896: Ang Pagsilang
"Tuwing Umuulan at Kapiling Ka" The Silver Album
"Pumapatak Ang Ulan" 2000 Nescafé Open Up Party
"Blue Jeans"
"Manila" 2001 Bandang Pinoy Lasang Hotdog: The Hotdog Tribute Album

Videography

edit

Video albums

edit
Title Album details
Eraserheads: The Reunion Concert
  • Released: January 31, 2009
  • Label: BMG
  • Format: DVD
Pop-U-Mentary!
  • Released: September 7, 2010
  • Label: Sony Music Entertainment
  • Format: DVD

Music videos

edit
List of music videos, showing year released and directors
Title Year Director Notes
"With a Smile" (version 1) 1994 Art Borromeo and Linette Buenaseda
"Ang Huling El Bimbo" 1995 Auraeus Solito
"Fruitcake" 1997 Mark Gary
"Trip to Jerusalem"
"Kaliwete" Matthew Rosen
"Julie Tearjerky" 1998
"Spoliarium"
"Para sa Masa" Rico Gutierrez
"With a Smile" (version 2) Ely Buendia and Mark Villena
  • Made to promote the song's rerelease as part of the compilation album Aloha Milkyway for Southeast Asian markets.[4]
"Maskara" 2001 Ely Buendia and Marie Jamora
"U Make Me" 2002 Marie Jamora
"Sabado" 2014 Erik Matti
"1995"

Tribute albums

edit
Title Album details
Ultraelectromagneticjam!: The Music
of the Eraserheads
  • Released: November 29, 2005
  • Labels: BMG, Musiko
The Reunion: An Eraserheads Tribute Album
Pop Machine the Album: A Collective of
Artists Turning Heads This 2020
  • Released: June 12, 2020
  • Label: Noisemakers

References

edit
  1. ^ Rodelito Mamuad (September 23, 2009). "20 to try: Filipino albums". timeoutbahrain.com. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Rodelito Mamuad (September 23, 2009). "20 to try: Filipino albums (page 4)". The Knowledge. Retrieved 2011-04-22.
  3. ^ Don Jaucian (August 25, 2012). "The life and death of OPM". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
  4. ^ a b "Videography". Schizo Archives. Retrieved 10 August 2024.