Budots
{{Short description|Philippine music genre}}
{{Primary sources|date=January 2022}}
{{use mdy dates|date=December 2021}}
{{Infobox music genre
| name = Budots
| native_name = {{lang|ceb|Budots}}
| etymology = "Slacker", in Bisaya slang
| stylistic_origins = {{hlist|Badjao percussion|house music|techno|Eurodance|dutch house|Italo dance|Melbourne Bounce|early hardstyle}}
| derivatives = {{hlist|full bass}}
{{hlist|battlemix}}
| cultural_origins = 2008, Davao City, Philippines
}}
Budots ({{IPAc-en|b|u|ˈ|d|ɔː|t|s}}; {{Respell|boo|DOTS}}) is an electronic dance music (EDM) genre that originated in Davao City, Philippines, and is considered as street style techno. It eventually spread in Bisaya-speaking regions. Based on techno and house music with Sama-Bajau tangonggo rhythms, it is regarded as the first "Filipino-fied" electronic music, characterized by its aggressive percussion, heavy use of sampling, off-beat basslines, high-pitched "tiw ti-ti-tiw" whistle hooks, and organic noises that surround the city.{{cite web |last1=Alfasain |first1=Genory Vanz |title=Budots: The Craze |url=https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1869513/Davao/Lifestyle/Budots-The-Craze |website=SunStar Davao |date=September 7, 2020 |publisher=SunStar Publishing Inc. |access-date=27 September 2020}} It is created to complement a form of freestyle street dance that bears the same name.{{cite web |last1=Celera |first1=Lex |title=The Origins of Budots, the Philippines' Catchiest Viral Dance Craze |url=https://www.vice.com/en_asia/article/xwewa3/the-origins-of-budots-the-philippines-catchiest-viral-dance-craze |access-date=27 September 2020 |website=Vice.com |date=September 10, 2019 |publisher=Vice Media Group}}
Etymology
Budots is a Bisaya slang word for slacker (Tagalog: tambay). An undergraduate thesis published in University of the Philippines Mindanao suggests the slang originated from the Bisaya word burot meaning "to inflate", a euphemism for the glue-sniffing juvenile delinquents called "rugby boys". The publication also claims that rugby boys dance in a style that would be called budots to disguise their drug use.{{cite web |last1=Mendoza |first1=Jacob |title=INSIDE BUDOTS, THE PINOY DANCE MUSIC PHENOMENON THAT TOOK THE PHILIPPINES BY STORM |url=https://mixmag.asia/feature/budots-homegrown-viral-dance-music-craze-philippines |access-date=11 November 2020 |website=Mixmag Asia}}{{cite web |last1=Zinampan |first1=Dominic |title=Yes to Dance No to Drugs: Budots, Imperial Manila, and Mañanitas |url=https://www.goethe.de/prj/nus/en/mag/ddb.html |access-date=25 November 2020 |website=Nusasonic |publisher=Goethe-Institut}} It can also be traced from the Bisaya word tabudots, which means "a person dancing with unpredictable movements."{{cite web |last1=UDOU Team |date=October 11, 2017 |title=BUDOTS MIX: EDM of The Philippines |url=https://udou.ph/events/budots-the-edm-of-the-philippines/ |access-date=27 September 2020 |website=UDOU}}
Origins
File:Budots Dance Video.oggFile:BUDOTS RUGBY BOYS.gif
The style seems "worm-like" or "ragdoll-like" in nature, wriggling the hips while moving the arms and legs in slow movements. One of its characteristic moves features opening and closing the knees while in a low squat, the arms swaying and pointing at random.{{cite web |last1=Tuna |first1=Sherwin |title=ASUKARAP TIKTOK BUDOTS BUDOTS DANCE BEST OF TEAM CAMUS 7 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cPwXGlX5Tw |website=sherwin tuna |publisher=YouTube |access-date=27 September 2020}} Despite its freestyle movements, the poses in budots dance are possibly inspired by the Sama-Bajau (locally referred to as simply Badjao) people who perform as street buskers, either through variations of the traditional Pangalay dance or their indigenous martial arts such as kuntaw and langka baruwang.{{cite web |last1=Soho |first1=Jessica |title=Budots Dance |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EhJ_KCbOsPk |website=YouTube |date=April 5, 2014 |publisher=GMA Network |access-date=28 September 2020}}{{cite web |title=Tawi-Tawi Authentic Cultural Dances |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ym9mOCQEzk |website=Bureau on Cultural Heritage – Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao | date=April 6, 2015 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=22 November 2020}} Writer and musician Dominic Zinampan claims the connection between budots and the Badjao people remains inconclusive, as it is hard to tell which influenced the other.
Budots dance was performed with foreign electronic dance music until Sherwin Calumpang Tuna, an internet café manager who goes by the stage name DJ Love or Lablab, created a new techno music genre that would complement the dance using FL Studio, which locals referred to as "bistik" (short for Bisayang Tikno, "Visayan techno"{{cite web |last1=Tan |first1=Michael |title='Budots' and Filipino |url=https://opinion.inquirer.net/123486/budots-and-filipino |website=Inquirer.net |date=August 23, 2019 |publisher=Philippine Daily Inquirer |access-date=27 September 2020}}). He also choreographed dance steps for his friends to perform on his budots music videos, which were uploaded on his YouTube channel since February 3, 2009.{{cite web |title=List of DJ Love's budots videos in chronological order |url=https://www.youtube.com/c/sherwintuna/videos?view=0&sort=da&flow=grid |website=YouTube |access-date=26 October 2020}} According to Vice, the budots dance compilation videos features "Myspace-era graphics, free-wheeling dances, and the names 'CamusBoyz' or 'DJ Love.'" In an article published on February 18, 2025, The Philippine Daily Inquirer writer Gabriel Pabico Lalu identified budots as a "Visayan pop dance craze".{{Cite web | first=Gabriel Pabico | last=Lalu | date=February 18, 2025 | title=Revilla claps back at 'budots' flak: I danced to 343 passed bills | url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2035816/revilla-addresses-budots-critique-i-danced-to-over-2000-bills-343-laws | work=The Philippine Daily Inquirer}}
While local impression about budots is through its association with overt sexuality, gang wars, and juvenile delinquency,{{cite web |last1=よっちゃんの海外奔放記 |title=日本人はまだ知らないフィリピンダンスミュージック"Budots"の謎に迫る!! |url=https://qetic.jp/column/yohei-koyama/01-budots/233549/ |website=Qetic |date=January 29, 2017 |access-date=11 November 2020}} DJ Love has distanced himself and his budots mixes from such issues that plague Davao City. His music videos are incorporated with captions such as, "Yes to Dance; No to Drugs" or "Yes to Dance; No to Riots." The genre–and its creators–have also become at the receiving end of cyberbullying.
Characteristics
File:Asukarap_Choy_Budots_Sample.ogg
Budots music is characterized as a derivation from electronic and house music. It features 140 bpm four-on-the-floor patterns, notably having a kick-snare-kick-snare pattern, off-beat basslines, drum loops, a distinctive snare sound, distorted vocal samples, vocal chops, DJ fills placed throughout the track and distinct high-pitched dutch house inspired synth hooks that locals onomatopoetically refer to as tiw tiw.{{cite journal |last1=Losa |first1=Rogin |title=Sound Escapes |journal=Scout |date=October 8, 2018 |issue=33 |page=12 |url=https://issuu.com/hipph/docs/scout_33__oct-dec_2018__for_web |access-date=13 November 2020}} The melodies and patterns are similar of that from early forms of hardstyle and tribal rhythms. Its basslines are influenced from Eurodance. There are also expressions of emotional vulnerability in exchange for lewd jokes and calls for rowdy partying. Most budots tracks follow the structure of techno and early hardstyle. The energetic beats are usually accompanied with sound effects such as vinyl scratches or chipmunk laughter. Meanwhile, budots tracks with lyrics are written in any of the Bisayan languages, those that lack any lyrical content take advantage of sampling vocal speeches from any source. Budots producers also put their producer tags that typically goes "(DJ name) on the mix" or "(DJ name) on the beat".
Unlike most dance music that is commonly played in nightclubs, budots is performed on public places such as basketball courts. It also has an element of virality, as its distinct repetitive sound and the craziness of its dance moves serve as the background of a number of Filipino internet memes such as Hala Mahulog! ("Oh no, it's about to fall!") videos and Taga-asa Ka/ Tagasaan Ka ("Where are you from?") challenge.{{cite web |title=WATCH: THE FUNNIEST "HALA MAHULOG!" DANCE VIDEO YET! |url=https://myx.abs-cbn.com/features/4556/watch-the-funniest-hala-mahulog-dance-video-yet |website=Myx |publisher=ABS-CBN.com |access-date=13 November 2020}}{{cite web |title=Kapamilya Toplist: Funniest "Taga Saan Ka" challenges of Kapamilya celebrities in It's Showtime |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRp6dl0K3MQ |website=ABS-CBN Entertainment | date=January 24, 2018 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=13 November 2020}}
In 2024, "Emergency Budots" by DJ Johnrey received international attention through a dance trend in TikTok and other short form content exposing budots to international audiences for the first time.{{Cite web |title=not found |url=https://www.youtube.com/vwg7hB1d0Y8?si=e4kOGbtyCO9OeWGL |access-date=April 25, 2025 |website=Youtube}}
Music journalists in the Philippines have criticized budots music for its lack of form, repetitiveness, DIY quality, and "cheap-sounding" effects. In contrast, they also acknowledge how the people of Davao City have reinterpreted a Western music genre and have remolded it to their own liking, as well as the flexibility of budots music in keeping itself relevant by remixing any popular song at the moment.
Budots is comparable to other electronic dance music genres that have developed in neighboring Southeast Asian countries such as full bass in Indonesia and Vinahouse in Vietnam.
Depictions in popular culture
Budots first appeared in Philippine mainstream media in 2008 when Ruben Gonzaga, the winner of Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Edition 2, performed the dance steps on national TV. An episode of GMA Network's news magazine program Kapuso Mo, Jessica Soho featured a segment about budots in 2012. In an effort to explain a regional subculture to a Metro Manila-based TV audience, host Jessica Soho called the budots dance as the Philippines' counterpart to other dance crazes at the time such as the dougie in the United States and the "horse dance" in Gangnam Style by Psy of South Korea, describing it as "seemingly freestyle like the pandanggo."{{cite web |title='Budots' dance craze in Soho |url=https://www.philstar.com/entertainment/2012/10/13/859038/budots-dance-craze-soho |website=Philstar Global |publisher=The Philippine Star |access-date=9 November 2020}} She also said that in some instances, the performers did the "spageti dance" that was popularized by SexBomb Girls, but they spent much of the time grinding while in a squatting position that it was deemed vulgar by people who were unfamiliar with the genre.{{cite web |title=SEXBOMB GIRLS – Spageti Song (MYX Performance) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uosa8k5DgCo |website=All Music MYX | date=September 9, 2019 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=10 November 2020}}
BuwanBuwan, a Filipino electronic music collective, released a playlist of budots music in 2017 as part of their monthly challenge to their producers. Each track featured excerpts from speeches of Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, a resident of Davao City. London-based collective and label Eastern Margins released a compilation album titled "Redline Legends," which features reinterpretations of East and Southeast Asian dance music genres such as budots, Vietnam's vinahouse, and Indonesia's funkot.{{cite news |last1=Bugel |first1=Safi |title=New Compilation Celebrates East and Southeast Asia's Club Genres |url=https://mixmag.net/read/eastern-margins-compilation-east-southeast-asias-club-genres-news |access-date=22 September 2021 |publisher=Mixmag |date=6 August 2021}}
D'Squared Cru, a street dance group from Davao City, won second place in VIBE PH Dance Competition in 2018 after performing a routine that featured budots tracks namely Budotz by Q-York, Asukarap, and Kiat Jud Dai.{{cite web |title=[2nd Place] D'SQUARED CRU |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRI_Sf2gT2Q |website=VIBE PH Dance Competition | date=November 2017 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=11 November 2020}} Their choreography to the Kiat Jud Dai segment became viral in China after multiple content creators on TikTok and other social media replicated the dance steps, which they referred to as the "electric pendulum dance" (电摆舞, diàn bǎi wǔ).{{cite web |title=比《卡路里》还励志的减肥歌曲,抖音超火爆的电摆舞,不信你不瘦 |url=https://www.ixigua.com/6596909204693320196 |website=ixigua.com |access-date=11 November 2020}}{{cite web |title=BUDOTS (Part 1) – Hướng dẫn nhảy Tik tok Budots dance |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLTgAhW4OEM |website=Chris Lan Huong |publisher=YouTube |access-date=11 November 2020}} Chinese celebrity Wang Yibo danced to Kiat Jud Dai in an episode of Upward Everyday variety show on Hunan Television.{{cite web |last1=Palma |first1=Clara |title=WANG YIBO DID BUDOTS AND WE ARE HERE FOR IT! |url=http://www.kstreetmanila.com/2020/07/yibo-did-budots-and-we-are-here-for-it/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200730232128/http://www.kstreetmanila.com/2020/07/yibo-did-budots-and-we-are-here-for-it/ |url-status=usurped |archive-date=July 30, 2020 |website=KStreetManila |access-date=11 November 2020}}
D'Squared Cru participated in the first season of World of Dance Philippines in 2019, also performing to budots, but failed to pass the Qualifiers.{{cite web |title=World Of Dance Philippines: D'Squared Cru, nabigo na makapasok sa duels round |url=https://ent.abs-cbn.com/worldofdance/videos/68012619-dsquared-cru-nabigo-na-makapasok-sa-duels-round-185960 |website=ABS-CBN Entertainment |publisher=ABS-CBN.com |access-date=11 November 2020}} The group then flew to China that same year to participate in Shenzhen Satellite TV's Dance in Step. Their Round 1 performance featured their viral budots choreography, which impressed all three judges.{{cite web |title=Dsquared Cru (Round 1 of Dance in Step) China |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZgeyrexd0k&t=101s |website=Dsquared Cru Official | date=June 13, 2019 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=11 November 2020}}
The documentary Budots: The Craze by Jay Rosas and Mark Paul Limbaga explored the music genre and its dance style, featuring an interview with DJ Love. According to Sun Star of Davao City, the film "raises questions on creative gatekeeping and the extent of ownership", as DJ Love's music was played on Filipino TV networks without proper acknowledgment and compensation. He also alleged a YouTuber claimed ownership of his popular mixes. The documentary premiered in 2019 at the Cinemalaya Philippine Independent Film Festival and was nominated for Best Documentary at the 43rd Gawad Urian Award.{{cite web |title=43rd Gawad Urian names winners |url=https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/showbiz/chikaminute/763597/43rd-gawad-urian-names-winners/story/ |website=GMA News Online |date=November 10, 2020 |publisher=GMA News |access-date=11 November 2020}}
A restaurant in Cagayan de Oro had its waitstaff dance to budots once the disco lights were turned on.{{cite news |title=Waiter, pag-budots please |url=https://rmn.ph/discovery-waiter-pag-budots-please/ |newspaper=RMN Networks |date=April 6, 2018 |access-date=14 November 2020 |last1=Rider1990 |first1=rob }} An advertisement for Lucky Me! Pancit Canton in 2019 used budots as a mnemonic device for its "No Drain Cooking" method.{{cite web |title='Pag No Drain, No Pain with Lucky Me! Pancit Canton |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-cgw3FarHA |website=Lucky Me! | date=March 23, 2019 |publisher=YouTube |access-date=11 November 2020}}
In February 2023, Manila Community Radio won Boiler Room's sixth Broadcast Lab grant to mount a showcase spotlighting budots and its many mutations.{{Cite web |title=Boiler Room's announcement of Manila Community Radio, the winners of its sixth Broadcast Lab grant powering ideas in the broadcasting space . |url=https://www.instagram.com/p/CoNT2sIuZ6K/ |website=Boiler Room (Instagram)}}{{Cite web |last=Basbas |first=Judine |date=April 17, 2023 |title=Manila Community Radio wins Boiler Room grant, to showcase emerging artists and highlight 'budots' music |url=https://www.bandwagon.asia/articles/manila-community-radio-wins-boiler-room-grant-to-host-showcase-highlighting-budots-music-april-2023 |website=Bandwagon}} The Broadcast Lab grant scheme funds ideas in the broadcasting space, and brings new audiences to underrepresented scenes, communities, and artists.{{Cite web |date=December 6, 2022 |title=OPEN CALL: BROADCAST LAB #6 |url=https://boilerroom.tv/article/open-call-broadcast-lab-6 |website=Boiler Room}} The recording session took place in April 2023 at an undisclosed location, featuring DJ Love, Libya Montes, Teya Logos, Showtime Official Club, T33G33, Hideki Ito, obese.dogma777, and Pikunin.{{Cite web |title=MANILA COMMUNITY RADIO |url=https://boilerroom.tv/session/manila-community-radio |website=Boiler Room}}
Budots remixes of popular songs have become mainstays in Philippine festivals, local radio stations, and Christmas parties. It has also become a form of "uncool" yet non-derogatory self-expression.
The 2022 Irish-Filipino horror film Nocebo also features Budots as part of its soundtrack.{{Cite web|title=The supernatural and Capitalism |url=https://mb.com.ph/2022/12/15/the-supernatural-and-capitalism |last=Arevalo |first=Rica | publisher=Manila Bulletin |date=15 December 2022}}
In June 2024, the budots song "Emergency, paging Dr Beat" by DJ Johnrey (sampled from Miami Sound Machine's "Dr. Beat") went viral on TikTok accompanying short videos of people changing into a series of outfits. It caused a surge in popularity of other similar remixes like "Emergency Budots" by Linear Phase (also budots). Unlike the exaggerated and smoother comedic dance moves in budots (which are featured in earlier videos with the song on TikTok), the later TikTok trend feature subtler and stiffer movements while walking in place, due to it achieving popularity from TikTok videos of a Roblox emote.{{cite news |last1=Kaur |first1=Harmeet |title=What to know about the 'Emergency Budots' taking over TikTok |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/04/entertainment/dr-beat-tiktok-budots-filipino-history-cec/index.html |access-date=25 August 2024 |work=CNN |date=4 August 2024}}{{cite news |last1=Colombo |first1=Charlotte |title='Paging Dr Beat': This remixed club classic from the '80s is suddenly all over TikTok. Why? |url=https://www.dailydot.com/pop-culture/paging-dr-beat-sound/ |access-date=25 August 2024 |work=Daily Dot |date=28 July 2024}}
Usage in Philippine politics
File:Mindanao Martial Law Budots Music Video.png.{{cite web |title=Budots Dance 29 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlHAifIyORA |website=sherwin tuna |publisher=YouTube |access-date=26 November 2020}}]]
During his term as mayor of Davao City, Duterte was seen dancing to budots on two occasions in 2015. One video featured Duterte dancing with Cebuano-speaking Americans from Hey Joe Show! YouTube channel,{{cite web |title=WATCH: Tough-talking Hizzoner Duterte shows off dance moves |url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/694063/watch-tough-talking-hizzoner-duterte-shows-off-dance-moves |website=Inquirer.net |date=May 27, 2015 |publisher=Philippine Daily Inquirer |access-date=1 October 2020}} while the other clip showed him dancing with local teenagers at a public park. The virality of these videos may have helped him win the 2016 presidential elections. A discourse published in University of the Philippines Diliman claims that budots has become instrumental in cementing Duterte's populist posturing as a politician for the masses who is allegedly deeply immersed in Visayan culture.{{cite web |last1=Mongaya |first1=Karlo Mikhail I. |title=Kulturang Popular at Politika ng Budots |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/336350154 |website=ResearchGate |access-date=11 November 2020}} The captions found in DJ Love's budots dance videos, such as "Yes to Dance/ No to Drugs," can be read as support for Duterte's hardline stance on the criminalization of drug abuse.
Several Filipino politicians have used budots to attract voters, most notably Ramon Bong Revilla Jr., who ran for senator in 2019. He appeared in a national television advertisement dancing to budots music, which critics pointed out failed to mention any governance plans during his campaign.{{cite web |last1=Villaruel |first1=Jauhn Etienne |title=Bong Revilla on expected Senate return: More work, less 'budots' |url=https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/05/18/19/bong-revilla-on-expected-senate-return-more-work-less-budots |access-date=9 November 2020 |website=ABS-CBN News |publisher=ABS-CBN}} Revilla won the 11th Senate seat (out of 12), even doing a little dance after the official proclamation.{{cite web |last1=Faraon |first1=Larry |title=Budots |url=https://tribune.net.ph/index.php/2019/05/26/budots/ |access-date=27 September 2020 |website=Tribune.net.ph |publisher=Daily Tribune |archive-date=October 26, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201026143936/https://tribune.net.ph/index.php/2019/05/26/budots/ |url-status=dead }}{{cite web |title=WATCH: Bong Revilla dances after Senate victory |url=https://news.abs-cbn.com/video/news/05/22/19/watch-bong-revilla-dances-after-senate-victory |access-date=28 September 2020 |website=ABS-CBN News |publisher=ABS-CBN}} DJ Love claimed Revilla used his track without permission and demanded compensation from Camus Girls, the dance group that popularized the choreography.{{cite web |last1=Suarez |first1=Julianne |title=Revilla budots mixer seeks credit |url=https://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2019/05/17/revilla-budots-mixer-seeks-credit/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201028072036/https://mindanaotimes.com.ph/2019/05/17/revilla-budots-mixer-seeks-credit/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 28, 2020 |access-date=23 October 2020 |website=Mindanao Times |date=May 17, 2019 }}{{cite web |title=Squammy Girls – Budots Budots Dance CamusGirls 4.2 Budots World |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgGvaQ0lUcg |access-date=10 November 2020 |website=sherwin tuna | date=September 25, 2016 |publisher=YouTube}} Revilla's political advertisement was listed as one of the best Filipino internet memes in 2019.{{cite web |last1=Gabaldon |first1=Kathreena |last2=Villan |first2=Tyne |date=December 23, 2019 |title=From Daniela Mondragon to Mimiyuuuh: Here's a collection of 2019's best memes |url=https://pop.inquirer.net/83903/from-daniela-mondragon-to-mimiyuuuh-heres-a-collection-of-2019s-best-memes |access-date=1 October 2020 |website=Pop! |publisher=Philippine Daily Inquirer}} In a column for Daily Tribune, Larry Faraon wrote that Revilla's victory by dancing to budots reflected the culture of elections in the Philippines. Senator Panfilo Lacson lamented the "pathetic" situation of Filipino voters who are easily swayed by stage performances of election candidates, such as cracking jokes and dancing to budots.{{cite news |last1=Ramos |first1=Christia Marie |date=11 May 2021 |title=Lacson laments 'pathetic' state of electorate easily swayed by Budots, TikTok, campaign jokes |url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1430188/lacson-laments-pathetic-behavior-of-electorate-easily-swayed-by-budots-tiktok-campaign-jokes |access-date=22 September 2021 |publisher=Philippine Daily Inquirer}}
Then-Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio (daughter of President Duterte) questioned the use of the 1976 song Manila by Hotdog during the parade of Team Philippines at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games opening ceremony. She claimed the title is capital-centric and did not represent the whole country, even suggesting to use budots instead since her fellow Davaoeños "invented" it.{{cite web |last1=Sy Cua |first1=Aric John |title=Sara hits song choice in SEA Games opening |url=https://www.manilatimes.net/2019/12/02/news/top-stories/sara-hits-song-choice-in-sea-games-opening/660614/ |website=ManilaTimes.net |date=December 2, 2019 |publisher=The Manila Times |access-date=30 November 2020}}
See also
- Music of the Philippines
- Tagonggo
- Electronic dance music
- House music
- Hardstyle
- Techno music
- Electronic Dance Music genres in Southeast Asia
- Funkot
- Full Bass
- Vinahouse
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
External links
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LrIMM4xrE0 Badjao buskers performing a precursor to budots music and dance]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmQ0oR_M_-U An explainer on Pangalay, a classical dance in Sulu archipelago and a possible precursor to budots dance]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFuAxPY3fgo A budots dance competition in Masbate Province]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ecIE2wEvhA An impromptu budots dance showdown at a high school in Bohol Province]
- [https://www.youtube.com/user/sherlyn72 DJ Love's YouTube channel]
- [https://soundcloud.com/buwanbuwanbakunawa/budotsbakunawa Bakunawa Vol. 7: Rodrigo Duterte's Summer Budots Party (a budots playlist by BuwanBuwan)]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNxwudJPwuk Ramon Bong Revilla Jr's Budots Political Advertisement]
{{Music of the Philippines}}
{{Electronica |state=autocollapse}}
{{Street dance|state=autocollapse}}
Category:2009 in Philippine music
Category:Culture of Davao City
Category:Electronic dance music genres