Monday, October 25, 2010

"So Alive"

The foggy white van we call our second home pulls our instruments from a trailer driving through the darkness trail blazing our way up Northern California. The highways become the hand on a clock and the scenery is the only entertainment available. You fall asleep in your row and thank God you can lay your head down for a few hours. You revisit some of the same truck stops, you see some progress in change, or you just read through pages to get on with it. How do you live life when all you could do at times is watch it? I struggled to find that hunger or vision that my eyes stare at out the window that keeps my mind sane in silence. It's been about four years since our debut at Joshuafest in Plymouth, Ca and it's our first stop on the Live Love Guatemala Tour.

When you play music and travel you always seem to end up playing with many of the same bands, meeting the same people, crew etc. Something that chaps me badly is passing people by without a hello or people you consistently see who you never conversate with. I like to notice people and I guess it's important for people to notice those you seem to see quite often. We may very well never be in this state, city, or place ever again. Somethings in life only happen once and I know our days are counted.

As time goes on you seem to realize that you aren't neccesarily where you use to be years ago playing at 9am in the morning at these festivals just to get on the bill anymore. I'm reminded of a band called "Last Tuesday" announcing our set on their prime set-time for us. I remember how much that meant to us and we were grateful to share the love for our friends in All Day Drive and Wintzend during our set this year.

We are indepted to fight the resistance, but also lend the hand that was also given to us.

We opened the set with "All That I've Got". We weren't going to use any gimics or tricks everyone else was using these days. Just four guys playing everything that was coming through the speakers. No tracks, intro's, or usual band pretense ideas. We'd set out to play our songs right where the came from, the heart. Ofcourse you forget a few parts or hits, but it's just like learning to laugh for the first time, it comes so natural. The crowds kept coming as we hit "Time To Live Again" and the rain just started to pour down like confetti at a party. I can't remember the last time I have ever felt so alive in my life like I did that day. It's like possibly falling in love for a few split seconds. It's then that you know you are home and that this body is only just a tool to express it's voice.

Our mouths breathed out cold air, our bodies rising with steam, and our faces washed with graceful precipitation from the heavens. The smiles were evident across our eyes with one another in enlightenment.

We were like kids... we were playing in the rain.
-Mani

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Like Wild Horses


There is a myth among my mind that strikes reality and aspiration. My brother's wife Laine always looks out into the desert fields of the Gila River Highway(Maricopa, Arizona) where you drive about thirty minutes to hit the nearest suburb from the small dusty town we both reside in.

There is a story of Wild Horses that live among the desert mountains, plains, and heat. These beautiful creatures don't belong to anyone and they in my heart are in complete liberation. The feeling is dawning to my soul always on the edge of my seat with my face pointed towards the sand searching for just one. 

I've been inspired to write a song about something that's been in me that I've been hurting to get out. Sometimes songs aren't about what we choose to write, but what they choose to be. The mere image of such freedom, myth, or beauty is one that lies within the unexplainable, but also the unheard.

Like Wild Horses, Lord knows I beg to be the same and more so to be as beautiful as they are to me.

-Emanuel

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Will you notice me?


I was reading at a small local library in Maricopa, Arizona when an elderly librarian woman reaches to touch my shoulder and says,"I'm so sorry to disturb you but I just wanted to congratulate you on being one of the very few people who actually come to the library and read books" 

I smiled at her and before I could say a word she was gone. What shocked me the most was what I could have possibly replied to that? My mind stalled in thoughts of what urged a woman like herself to notice me at all.

Honesty is so beautiful, but also so fearing. To be noticed is really something else and to be greeted is also a very warm reward. I kinda wish my mother or father could have been there with me being that all my days in Elementary I was terrified to read. I had a very poor ability to read properly and instead of learning to read I memorized the words until Mrs. Slowik(Second Grade Teacher) noticed me.

It's funny that though in moments ago our weaknesses may have actually become our strengths. I relate my insecurities to reading as a child to many of the giants I still face today. The greatest being "Myself" and second being the honest truth.

In how many ways do we memorize our defenses, words, pains, failures, and escape routes?

If the truth is light and if our honesty becomes grace I must confess that I no longer shall fear rejection, but yet the fear not to learn. I rather save my memories for something greater ahead. Like I learned so long ago... there's no need to be perfect. I don't need to pretend I know how to read anymore. I don't need to memorize the words that I too can conquer with a little help.

"Will you notice me?"

-Hoceas E. Sandoval