The Fire Starts; Camp Atlas & The Counselors

Six years have passed since I last posted on my website and a lot has changed since then. Most notably over the past six months I have been playing bass guitar for a new band in town called Camp Atlas & The Counselors. In the time since last posting on this website I have spent a lot of timing singing and playing guitar on my own at various venues, most often the local farmer’s markets where I ran into Atlas Rudder, who also featured several Grateful Dead songs in his farmer’s market sets. One day last fall he sends me a text asking if I knew anyone who played bass and wanted fifty bucks for a gig. A quick response letting him know that I myself would like to fill the bill and I was in the band. Atlas had already pulled in pianist Claire Kerschner and drummer Rodrigo Cuya, fitting me in as a piece that made for a complete musical group.

The October gig at The Fairfield in the basement Barrel Room went smashingly and we continued to play together into the winter months, learning some songs Atlas had already written, one track that I wrote several years ago, sitting on it until the right group came along to help me put some meat on its bones, and writing a few new songs as an ensemble. In February we spent a long Saturday at Plum Tree Audio in the snowy Indiana countryside, recording the first two tracks of our first release. Our first songs as a band. Kick Rocks and Touch the Sea feel like two sides of a coin, both contain the vivacity this group holds and each is a unique piece unto itself. I am personally very happy with how these songs turned out and I hope you are too.

I feel like we are making the music that I have been wanting to hear for the last decade or so. There’s something about the energy in the room when we play, the way we are able to key off each other and know what to play simply because it’s what should be played. I’m writing this right after we finished recording an episode of Meet the Music with Julia Meek to broadcast on 89.1 WBOI radio in the next six to eight weeks. It was another smashing success and I look forward to sharing that broadcast when it airs. Until then give a listen to our first single and get ready for the full album release this summer!

Slowing Down ~ Reflections on the Winter Season

As the Earth’s axis tilts away from the sun the cold winds begin to blow in frigid air with a subdued energy of hibernation and takes us on an internal journey across slippery, snow capped slopes. Within still days and serene nights winter holds great potential. This potential often flies over people’s heads as our way of life buffers them from the natural turning in process that the ecosystem goes through to a greater degree than we have been ever before in human history. All living creatures that live in a seasonal climate adjust themselves to the winter season but mankind has taken this to the extreme. This has put humanity at a disadvantage since the slow and deliberate way one must navigate the winter terrain holds much knowledge if one lets their mind adopt that same mode of operating.

There is immense value in the act of slowing down. The beautiful details of life come into focus when we slow our roll even just a little bit. There is a concept of yoga that says while practicing we take time to rest between poses to give the body time to recuperate and build up strength, which it is unable to do when it is in a state of exertion. This idea of slowing down to rest and recover is what winter is all about. A time for restoration and preparation. If used wisely the time of winter will be equally as enjoyable and productive as the days of summer but the key is using those winter months wisely. While winter is a time to slow down cabin fever does not give one an excuse to waste away the winter months. On the contrary the work one does when they slow down is often harder than work requiring physical action. How much easier do people find it to go to the gym than to sit quietly for thirty minutes and focus on the underlying discourses of their mind? Neither of these is easy for people but most would find a trip to the gym easier than a thirty minute mindfulness meditation.

This internal work is tough and tedious but it needs to be done if one hopes to live a balanced life. All the things that come into our worlds have their source in mind so to let our minds fall out of shape will lead our worlds to fall out of shape. The reverse is that if we see our world in a shape we do not like then the first step to take towards shaping up our world is shaping up our mind. All that we perceive is a reflection from our mind so we need to keep our mental mirrors clean to get clear reflections. The deep scratches in the mirrors of our minds take time to buff out so taking time to slow down and tend to the deeper mental wounds that we all possess in one form or another is key to maintaining a habitable mental space. This slowing down is a natural process and so many people are suffering in our age because we have lost touch with our natural cycle of slowing down with the Earth.

All the beautiful details that get lost in the dry dust under the summer sun can be admired in the winter for all their splendor. The immense comfort that one gets from a warm bowl of soup on a cold winter’s evening is easily compared to the relief of cold lake water after walking across a sun baked beach in the summer. The coziness we feel on a dark winter morning warm under a big blanket rivals the relaxation of a nap in a grassy field on a golden summer’s eve. The trick to appreciating the beauty of the winter is slowing down. Taking slow spoonfuls of soup to notice the steam swirling into the cool air. Stay in your toasty bed and listen to the wind blowing across your window for a few minutes in the morning. Take your time.

Life truly is beautiful all year so take the time needed to find all the little gems hidden in winter. Don’t go through winter without stopping to look at snowflakes. You will regret it come spring.

D&C Cuyahuga Falls 6/20/2018

A large part of my summer fun involves seeing the band as much as possible when they come through my neck of the woods. I had no ticket to this show but went to enjoy the lot and hang out on Shakedown Street. This turned out to be the best date to do that as I heard Cuyahuga Falls is known for having one of the best lot scenes on the circuit and I found that to be the case. I met amazing people while the sounds of the show peaked over the tops of the trees between we in the lot and those in the gates. The entire place was the party so there was no missing out being left in the lot. Enjoy!

Published in Landlocked Lyres Issue 1!

Check it out! https://landlockedlyres.com/

That’s right! I’m an online published photographer! Spring 2018 the literary magazine Landlocked Lyres released their first issue and a handful of my photos were accepted to be featured in the issue. This is super exciting to me! My name is on the cover and everything! Okay, boundless excitement aside I am incredibly thankful and grateful to have my worked shared with the likes of some massively talented writers and artists. Check out the Landlocked Lyres website for a free download link for Issue 1 and check out my photos and the other work of the talented folks that live here in the American Midwest. I have only read a small portion of the works that are in the issue but what I’ve read so far has been impressive and greatly worth the time. If you’re a reader this one is for you.

This is also the first post I’ve made on my new website and I am so excited about that as well! This site has been a long time coming and finally it has become a reality. There isn’t much to look at as of yet but as time goes on I’ll get the space all nice and clean and pretty like. Thank you for reading this and following me in the journey that is the crazy experience of life.

Happy Trails To You!

~A