The Axeman Cometh
- Around DB
- Nov 2, 2020
- 5 min read
DB musician and teacher Jay Javier Apungan is ready for the spotlight again, whenever it returns. Elizabeth Kerr reports
Jay Javier Apungan paid HK$10,000 to see Guns Nā Roses.On the notorious rock bandās last Hong Kong stop in 2018 Jay was getting ready for the night out with his wife, Kris Perry, and lost his wallet on the bus on his way to meet her.
āMy auntie called me so I answered the phone and put my wallet down beside me,ā he recalls with a hearty chuckle and a shrug. It just so happened he was travelling to the Philippines the next day, so heād just withdrawn a considerable chunk of change from the bank, after putting the HK$2,400 tickets in his wallet. The couple trekked out to AsiaWorld-Expo anyway and bought fresh tickets. āItās one of the most expensive concerts I ever saw. But it was worth it, even if Axl Rose canāt hit those high notes anymore,ā he finishes with a laugh.
Jay greets visitors at his DB studio looking like, well, a rock star. The space is what youād expect of a musician: thereās a double-tiered keyboard, a dozen guitars ā his baby, a\ Fender Telecaster, and a Gibson Les Paul ā are visible, and thereās a book (a gift) about living like Keith Richards propped behind the desk. Jay is rocking Black-era Kirk Hammett locks. Sadly, thereās no rock star attitude or Jack Daniels-littered sitting room. Or perhaps, fortunately. But there is a Christmas tree ā in October.
Effortlessly good-natured, Jay perches on a stool, flipping his hair every so often between sips of sparkling water. Heās alone these days; Kris and his eight and 12-year-old daughters Neve and Mia headed to her hometown of Indianapolis four months ago when the consumer electronics executive was offered a plum job. He hopes to see everyone near the end of the year, but heās happy the girls are finally settling into life in a sleepy US suburb.
āThey were born here. They canāt deal with the quiet, and being unable to walk off to Starbucks on their own,ā he says. But theyāre making new friends ā and one has joined a band. Jay still has the family cat, Daisy, an SPCA adoptee, and of course the kids that come through three times a week for music lessons.
Stay tuned
A native of a town about four hours south of Manila ā āone hour without trafficā ā Jay started singing and playing music at age nine. His father had gone blind, and he was acting as the manās eyes, and when his dad picked up the guitar so did he. The family discovered Jay had quite the singing voice and before long he was singing at parties, in church choirs, and anywhere that would help him contribute to the family.
By the time he turned 16, Jay was getting a reputation around Manila for his guitar skills āand harbouring ambitions to travel, initially to Japan. He got side-tracked, however, by local band Stay Tuned.
āI believe in luck,ā he says. āI was hanging out, having some beer with friends, and someone in the barās band recognised me from around town.ā Stay Tuned was on the verge of losing its guitarist and so asked if Jay would be interested in stepping in. One jam later they told him where to show up the next day to start. āI was very early,ā he says, laughing again. He was 18.
Jay stuck with Stay Tuned for eight years, touring in Penang and Singapore before the group disbanded following a series of minor tiffs. It was then he got offered a contract to work at stalwart Hong Kong nightspot Insomnia. He landed in 2003, and for seven years he ripped through personal and fan favourites there, and at the Hard Rock CafĆ© and Adrenaline (at Happy Valley Racecourse) among others. He cites influences including Carlos Santana and the Eaglesā Glenn Frey.
Jay gets animated when he talks about music. He describes the Telecaster as having a ābrillianceā to it, and the Les Paul as āfat and rock.ā He doesnāt quite understand
the enduring charm of Hotel California, but admits āthe solo is unbelievable.ā Heās working on mastering AC/DCās Thunderstruck ā Australians ask for it all the time ā but he has a dark secret.
āTo be honest? My favourites are oldies: Johnny Mathis, The Platters and the crooners from the 1940s, ā50s and ā60s.ā

Local shredder
Insomnia was a good career move both professionally and personally: Jay met Kris almost immediately after arriving. āIād been here about two weeks, and we met at a gig I was playing. At Chasers. That was one of the best bars Iāve ever played. I loved that bar,ā he recalls of the old Knutsford Terrace haunt. The bar may be gone but the couple flourished, relocating to DB after the birth of their first daughter.
āWe were living in Hung Hom, and there was no place for kids. I was teaching a friend of mine guitar, and he lived in DB, so I came here to teach him,ā Jay explains. Interest piqued, Jay saw a realtor and looked around ā then told Kris, who didnāt need much convincing considering the space they could get for their money.
Still gigging at the time, Jay relished the change of pace, and he still does. āAfter work itās always nice to get on the ferry and just⦠let it all go and relax,ā he says.
His daughters were also the reason he opened JK International Music Production in 2012 (www.jkmusicint.com). The late nights and boozy venues were getting to be a bit much, so he turned his attention to JK ā producing, booking and teaching during normal business hours.
āI wanted to reduce the nightshift work because it left me no time during the day. Iād finish a gig at Dusk till Dawn at 6am, my ferry would be at 6:30am, all my kidsā teachers would be on the boat, and Iām out of it,ā he says with a shake of the head. āSometimes theyād have to wake me up. It wasnāt good. I started the business so I could be home more, and pick the girls up from school.ā
Though teaching is keeping him busy, ask if Jay has missed playing live during the pandemic and the answer is an instant, āOh god, yes.ā He canāt wait to get up on stage again, pooh-poohing the idea of retiring, and laments the loss of The Big Picnic this month.
āThatās one of the best events in Discovery Bay. I love it. Itās very freeing. There are whole families in the audience, and your kids can see you play.ā For now though, he relies on low-key Sunday shows at Hemingwayās to scratch the performance itch, something he chalks up to his typical Filipino upbringing, where singing is part of everyday life.
āWe sing all the time. Weād sing carols in October. Did you notice my Christmas tree?ā He points out the aforementioned tree with a cheeky grin. āThatās Pinoy style!ā




