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Sanay Mahalin Mo Rin Ako -1995- 108...: -cm- Gayuma

Whatever it means, “108” has become a marker of authenticity. If you see it in the filename or on a tape’s spine, you know you’ve found the real, raw version — not a later cover or a live remake. Songs like this fall through the cracks for boring reasons: label mergers, lost master tapes, or simply because they were B-sides or album cuts no one thought to digitize. The artists themselves sometimes remain anonymous — uncredited session singers, one-album-wonders, or groups that disbanded before the CD era took over.

It looks like you’re referencing a specific track — possibly a rare or vintage OPM (Original Pilipino Music) song titled from around 1995 , with “108” possibly indicating a BPM, track number, or catalog code. -CM- Gayuma Sanay Mahalin Mo Rin Ako -1995- 108...

If you’ve heard even a scratchy 30-second clip, you know the vibe: mid-90s OPM production — think S2S or early Star Records — with a chorus that builds like a suppressed confession. Slightly overdriven electric piano. A bassline that walks the line between longing and desperation. And a vocalist who sounds like they’re singing from the bottom of a stairwell at 2 AM. That number — 108 — keeps appearing alongside the title. Is it the BPM? In 1995, that would be a slow-to-mid tempo for a love song, which fits. Or it might be a catalog number from a limited-run cassette single. Some collectors point to a possible connection with OctoArts-EMI or Alpha Records ’ budget series, where numbering could get obscure. Whatever it means, “108” has become a marker

Because songs about love potions shouldn’t stay invisible. They’re meant to be found. Do you have more details on the artist or label behind “Gayuma / Sanay Mahalin Mo Rin Ako” (1995)? Drop a comment or a link — let’s solve this musical mystery together. Slightly overdriven electric piano

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