What a weekend

June 3rd, 2011

I’m sitting here on my couch drinking tea and listening to Neil Young’s Harvest album (for the first time in probably over ten years for some reason), recouping from and reflecting on what was one of the most fantastic weekends of my life so far. I love doing things outside of the norm, breaking life’s routine with a spontaneous or drastic decision, action, or trip out of town. Usually it’s in our own power to create these experiences, but we rarely do. One example I think of often in my own life is the fact that I live an easy day’s drive from the Grand Canyon, but have never just gotten up one morning, spontaneously driven there with some buddies, done a hike and camp for the night, and then come back the next day. It would be so easy and so epic, so why haven’t I done it yet? There are so many things like that I can think of, and it just comes down to being comfortable in what we know, and routine. Routine has it’s place, but it’s also a suffocating cage preventing people from experiencing moments in life that really breathe freedom, power, and perspective into the soul. The thing is it’s a cage most of us love being in, so people aren’t even tripping off of what is being missed by not swapping the cage for a penthouse now and then. So usually it’s up to ourselves to create and choose when we do something super random or “crazy,” but this last weekend for Inspired Flight was extremely unusual and epic, and was created for us rather than spontaneously by us. Months ago we had it in the books to play two festivals the same weekend: Bella Music Fest in Minnesota, and Lightning In A Bottle (LIB) in SoCal. We really wanted to have a spare travel day in between the two festivals, but the way it ended up having to be booked is that we played in MN on Saturday, and then had to be in SoCal for an early LIB set on Sunday! We had a lot of anxiety and reservations about flying with all of our gear across the country, playing a festival, driving back to the airport to get hardly any sleep and wake up before the crack of dawn to fly to LAX with all of our stuff again, have a friend meet us with our van full of a bunch of other gear we would need for LIB, and then successfully play LIB though we would be exhausted and sleep-deprived. There was hardly any room for error; had a flight been delayed, missed, or any gear lost, damaged, or not brought up in our van it would have been a disaster. In other words, choosing to break the usual routine with flying to MN to play a festival one day and then fly back home to play another the next day is something I would NEVER choose on my own. But what a weekend it was!!! As it was all happening it felt so good, it made sense… We flew on Friday to Minneapolis early in the morning, and all of a sudden there we were in St. Louis killing time eating at Chili’s in the airport. Then all of a sudden there we were driving across the beautiful MN country, then suddenly there we were checking into a hotel and eating dinner at a Perkins diner, and then all of a sudden there we were arriving and setting up at Bella Fest, and so on… Why was all of this happening? Why were we there? To play music! It was tiring, it wasn’t something we would do on any other weekend spontaneously, and we probably lost money on the whole weekend, but to even have the opportunity we had to play back-to-back music festivals across the country on back-to-back days is such a blessing, and to take advantage of the opportunity despite all of the reasons it may not have made sense is so beautiful. To be at a point in our career where we are playing festivals, even if we aren’t playing the main stages at night, feels really, REALLY good.

Both festivals were great in their own way, though LIB was definitely the highlight of the weekend, if not the main highlight of iF’s career so far. Bella was very small, and very hippie trippy. That’s not a bad thing, or a judgment, but it’s really what it was. I’ve never been in the midst of such a concentrated gathering/culture of people with the “hippie” vibe. It kind of felt like a time warp to my parents’ era and what they may have experienced as youth, and the music there was mostly jam bands and bluegrass. There were cool arts and crafts, and the best festival food I’ve ever had, but it was a very small scene, and almost didn’t feel like a music festival (though my only notion of a music festival before Bella had been Coachella, which I now realize is happening on some crazy epic proportions). All of the staff at Bella were super cool and helpful, and we had a really good set, though there sadly weren’t many people there to watch us. The whole thing felt like a rehearsal for LIB the following day. Thankfully we played Bella, made it back to the airport, flew to LAX, and met up with our friend in our van without a hitch. No lost gear! No delayed flights! No strange car troubles or other unforeseen mishaps! We were tired, especially Eric who couldn’t sleep at all Saturday night for some reason, but we made it to LIB with a few hours to spare, which were completely filled with checking in, unloading gear, finding and setting up our camping area, problem-solving with the stage/sound crew at the Bamboo Stage where we played so that we could actually perform there (there were a lot of issues we had to work through to pull it off on that stage), connecting with Eligh and Scarub and going over how our set was going to go down, and many other things. Before I knew it we were on stage setting up and it was time to start. And…………..(drum roll)…………. there were people there! LOTS of people, gathered in front of the stage, spilling off in all directions across the festival grounds, and they were attentively watching us, and dancing to us! It was amazing, and the response we got from the crowd was so awesome. The best part of all is that nothing about playing there felt weird or uncomfortable; there was no nervousness really. It just felt right, and we were confident and excited, and we had a great set. To write about what LIB is like, and how the whole vibe there changes at night, and to share what my day and night was after we played would take way too long to write, at least right now. But it was amazing, and people were stoked off of us, even more-so than I thought they would be, and we did some really great networking. It feels good to be home now, still drinking my tea, which is now cold, and listening now to Al Green after playing Harvest twice through in it’s entirety. I suppose I should get off of my couch and go do stuff now; normal routine stuff. I like being back in the cage this week. But I am so grateful for getting to experience such an unusual, fun, eventful and adventurous weekend. I’m looking forward to the next crazy traveling adventure playing music will bring. And next time I won’t have so much anxiety; we now know that some tight-scheduled traveling is doable. It takes some planning and effort, but really all you have to do is just do it. Life really boils down to that notion, which Nike so greatly turned into the slogan of all slogans: Just do it. We did it…

-Chavez

Bella Music Festival 2011

Bella Music Festival, MN, 2011

Bella Music Fest 2011

Tent where Inspired Flight played, Bella Music Festival, MN, 5/28/11.

Bamboo Stage at LIB 2011

Bamboo Stage where Inspired Flight played at Lightning In A Bottle, 5/29/11.

Lightning In A Bottle 2011 at night

Beautiful view at Lightning In A Bottle, 5/29/11.

Fo sho do Bonobo

December 2nd, 2010

iF at Music Box

     Last Friday, 11/26/10, Inspired Flight got to open for the amazing Ninja Tune artist, Bonobo! Not only do we feel blessed to have been given such a great opportunity and experience, but the night went even better than I had hoped in so many ways. One of the coolest parts of the night for me is that this is only iF’s second proper LA show, and it was at the Music Box at the Fonda. Since I began playing music in my old rock band, jack the original, LA has been this magical, competitive, and important market that I had no idea quite how to tap into, yet knew had to be played to ultimately succeed. Even as Inspired Flight has been a project for over three years now, with many shows under our belt, we haven’t even played LA until just this September when we played The Roxy. Playing The Roxy, by the way, was a huge accomplishment for me, and a huge relief! I’ve always feared that cracking into the LA market would require countless shows at random bars/venues with pay-to-play pressure on us, and dance floors looking like an old western ghost town. But our first LA show was opening for White Panda, a national-touring act, at The Roxy, and our second has been opening for Bonobo at the Music Box! How this is happening I don’t quite know, but it feels really good and I am THANKFUL!
     Another thing that made our show so special was that even though we opened the whole night at 9pm sharp, the venue was very full of people eagerly awaiting to hear us play, and all pushed up towards the stage. My guess would be that 600-1000 people were there when we played, and even if the true number is somewhere much closer to my lower guess, it’s still the biggest, and probably most attentive, audience iF has played too yet. And they showed us love! Having Scarub from Living Legends and Afro Classics come out to be a special guest on two of our songs surely helped, but from beginning to end we got a very welcoming and positive response from the crowd. I could get used to this… It was also a real joy to have our friend, Scarub, come out to support and perform with us on the show. He had a great time that night as well, and hopefully this is the start to many shows with him as a featured guest MC.
     Coolest part of the night? Hmmmmmm, that’s a tough one. What could it possibly be? I wonder….. Oh yeah… we billed with Bonobo! Nothing against Tokimonsta, who was also on the bill, and does great dub-step/low-end-theory type stuff, but Bonobo is somebody that we in Inspired Flight are really big fans of, and have been for awhile. Bonobo is even one of OpenOptics’ biggest influences for making beats and production. And the NInja Tune label he is signed to is one of our favorite record labels that we have aspirations to do business and network with. What made this so awesome though is that Bonobo and everyone in his band are super cool, down-to-earth, nice, jovial people. This is why billing with him was so fantastic! Getting to hang out and chat with all of them from the time we got there to load-in, till the time we loaded out and went home, was great, and is what really made the whole experience so wonderful. Hopefully this will lead to an Inspired Flight-Bonobo collab or remix in the future! Lets all keep our fingers crossed for that one.
     To anybody who came out to the show to see us, thank you so much! And to all of the people there that night who discovered iF for the first time, thank you for being a great audience member and for not throwing tomatoes and beer bottles at us. Thank you so much to everyone who supported us after we played by buying our CD, vinyl, or other merch. We hope to see you soon in LA again, hopefully opening for somebody else cool, and avoiding the pay-to-play ghost towns dreaded by so many indie bands, and for which LA is so notoriously known.

-Chavez

Inspired Flight Video Blog #4-Our album is done!

June 3rd, 2010

We finally finished our debut album, We All Want To Fly!  And we officially announce the winner and runner-up of the remix contest we had for It Always Takes, as a well as talk about our upcoming album-release show.

That’s a rap!

December 16th, 2009

So we’ve been working very hard on wrapping up our debut album, and one of the few things left to do is get good MCs on our songs that need rap.  We already have Eligh from Living Legends locked down on two tracks, which is awesome!  And he’s a super cool dude, which makes it all even more awesome.  Last Thursday we fit in another piece of the puzzle, and it was one of the best days I’ve ever had in my life.  Through a long chain of SUPER random events, and persistence, we got hooked up with Rugged Monk from the Black Knights, and he is now officially also on our debut album.  So we’ve got the west coast Killer Bee, Wu-affiliate involved, which is great because we’ve been big fans of Wu-Tang since they came onto the scene.  Some friends and I went up to LA and picked him up from his front door, took him here to Encinitas, chilled out all day, he wrote and recorded a really dope verse, we went out to a nice dinner, and then we dropped him off back home.  What’s so cool about it is that the vibes couldn’t have been better throughout the experience, and Rugged Monk, like Eligh, is also a really cool dude.  And he’s funny!  We had a great time the whole day and a great verse came out of it, and this is very exciting for Inspired Flight.  Unfortunately for you fans you will have to wait till our album drops sometime in March to hear it.  But it’s all good baybeh baybeh!  So now there are only two songs left that need rap; two more missing puzzle pieces, and if all goes to plan, these last two MCs are going to be big!  So keep your fingers crossed for us, and I’ll let you know when we fit the last pieces into place.  By the way, the puzzle we’re making is a huge picture of OpenOptics carrying a turntable in his mouth, and wearing a Quidditch robe from Hufflepuff.  It looks really cool if you stand far back and take it all in.  I think OpenOptics looks better in Slytherin colors, but he was obsessed with Hufflepuff’s badger symbol…….either way it’s amazing how strong his jaws are!