When
the band plays… when the time comes… when. It’s simply a question or simply
stating something that will happen. In any event the person using it always means
it to be a certainty. Sometimes its best to know when is WHEN. I'm glad I do. Enjoy the story.
Kisses. m.
When…
“When
the music used to play…” he tells me in the sweet drawl of a voice that reminds
me of being a little girl sitting under the lemon tree listening to his yarn.
And just like then my grandpa pauses for a moment so I can ask the question
that sets at the front of my mind. Because he knows I have a question.
“Tell
me about the music and how it used to play,” I tell him with a smile. It’s the
same bright wide-eyed smile that only the inner child can produce from true
sincerity. That inner child is something we never lose, some people simply
forget that it’s there waiting to be released.
“Well
then, let me tell you about the music.” he says before telling me the story.
Now a
story from my grandpa was always a surprise to be sure. Sometimes wasn’t what I
expected to hear but it ended up being what I needed to hear. There are some
men in this world that some might call a prophet for the knowledge they possess
and share is true. When these men speak that truth they tell it with the hope
that others will soon discover the truth for themselves. I like to believe my
granddad was something of a prophet for all those things he used to share with
me always made sense in their own way at some later time.
“And
how it played on and on so very long ago.”
When the music played the good old boys in
the band always sparked up the same way. It lifted their spirits and took their
melodies soaring to new heights. Yet it was the same ol song no matter how they
played it. And sadly it was the only thing they could muster the courage to
play. It was the only one they knew. The only one he taught them to play.
Reese De La Beautran was an interesting
fellow. He had the gift of music from an early age. Earlier than most folks but
later than others. He wasn’t a prodigy by any means. None in the least. But
something happened when that boy picked up the violin. Magic and the movement
of the soul. Reese couldn’t make heads or tails of it, but the people all
around him seemed to come alive when he played. And that made his heart soar.
It lifted and grew to new levels of joy within to see others happy. And it was
by something so small that he could gift to them. As he could put no price on
the value of their joy.
Joy and happiness followed Reese wherever
he went. It wasn’t something that he’d often thought twice about. His luck was
something of a gift and whomever he was in league with benefited from that good
fortune as well. It was something of a knack, his sweet music and so he went
along playing it. Took his song with him to every city and every town.
Now Reese was a happy type of fellow but
like any other man he fell upon bad times once and again. Yet it wasn’t like
other men when he did. Something about Reese went directly hand and hand with
his music. Some might say that it was a blessing to be able to put your
emotions into the work. Other simply called it curse. Mostly on account of what
happened.
And there are many accounts of what
happened… it could only happen that way once.
It was a show out in the middle of a tiny
poke of a town, not much bigger than a dot on the map. Something was in the air
that night. The folks that were there that night said it was like a hand
crawling up your spine. The energy in the crowd was mighty strange. They didn’t
know whether to enjoy the show or give into that odd sensation that had come
upon them.
See, on that night before the band started
up there had been a bit of misfortune. Reese learned about the passing of his
mother. It wasn’t what one might call a simple passing. It was one of great
pain and suffering. To talk about the pain won’t help you understand only know
that what was told to Reese went without question as a nightmare come to life.
The man wrestled with his thoughts, his wits and his own personal character
before summoning the courage to walk out on that stage.
But in the end all the wrestling couldn’t
stop Reese from giving a performance. A show that some might have called the
performance of a lifetime as it was purely driven from his soul. Others say
something wicked took hold of that man when he stood out there playing his song
that night. For what happened in the crowd was something unforeseen.
When the band played it wasn’t the same.
Reese called upon a new song that he’d been deep in thought about. When he told
the boys “play it by ear” they knew it wasn’t the some old song they’d done
before. Well the people took it in sweet somber, just like the same melodies
they’d known. Starting out slow and crawling up their spines. Nice and slow it
went. Richer, deeper and a bit of melancholy for flavor went the new melody.
With every beat the crowd grew intoxicated by the rhythm. Some danced. Some
cried with joy. Some laughed. Some made no sound at all.
You see listening to someone’s song is an
intimate experience. And on this night people where taking in a part of that
man’s soul. Much like a painting captures the soul, a single note music heard
carries a piece of that musician’s soul. And when Reese poured his soul into
his craft on this occasion it surely changed the way a man takes a hold of
another man’s music. For the melody shifted into a faster frenzy just as Reese
transformed the sound something about the crowd shift.
Much to people’s dismay there wasn’t not
much anything that could be done.
One by one the silent people began to collapse
without rhyme or reason. Tears moved to hysterics. Laughter became screams.
Dancing became feverish. And many stayed
on listening without affection other than a foot tap or hand clap. Yet all involved
were entranced by the song. A song that kept them facing onward. Reese
curiously watched as both joy and pain wrapped into an interesting combination before
him. An unusual spectacle to be sure of. Every person in the audience ensnared
in the final moments of chaos.
The band loved every note of it. Like a
hungry animal they ate at every inch of direction he led. Nearly exhausted
Reese kept the band moving upward and onward with the sound anticipating what
would come next. The climax.
Without a doubt it came. And Reese came down
with it when it came. The end of the music and along with it came both applause
and screams. It was as though they had awoken from a trance. The man saw his
masterpiece equally as a curse. He saw the aftermath. The bodies of the
unconscious strewn out among the happy and sad filled his heart with a small
sadness. Even as he listened to the band weep behind him, begging for more he
knew that this was it. Deep down from the grief he felt inside for his mother,
Reese knew that there would be no more like that song. A song that he’d never
forget but would tear at his soul.
“And
now when the band plays… they play the same ol song. It just never sounds the
same way twice. But it’s sure enough the same.”
“It’s
not the same if it’s different?”
“How
can you be sure?”
“I can’t.
I guess I will know when I do.”
“And
you’ll know when the band plays…”
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