Monday, November 25, 2013

The Story Behind the Song: THE INCREDIBLE SADNESS OF SONIA



One night, back when Brian and I first started writing songs together, I was sitting on the couch with my foot up (I was recovering from surgery on my foot) when Brian came into the room and said he wanted to write a sad song.  “How sad?” I asked.  “Really sad,” he answered, “the saddest.”  He went back into the studio and started writing and arranging the music, leaving me on the couch (with a brain full of post-surgery painkillers) to write the lyrics.  

As you can tell from some of these lyrics, I am a big fan of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass (the books, not the movies – although the movies are really good).  In fact, the original working title for this song was “The Incredible Sadness of Alice” but the Tim Burton movie (the one with Johnny Depp *swoon*) came out just as we finished writing the song, so we had to change the name a bit.  But why did we choose to change the name from Alice to Sonia?  Well …

Sonia is another name for Sophia.  Sophia is a goddess of wisdom.  While the song deals overtly with depression and suicide, the sub context is the death of wisdom (the ability to make correct judgments and decisions based on experience) by the accumulation of too much knowledge (information gained through researching a subject, with the intention to use it for a purpose).  In today’s world, it often seems that people are so full of knowledge and facts that they no longer realize or embrace the wisdom of personal experience.  As T.S. Elliott asked, “Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?”

Incidentally, this is also a theme in the book Kasojeni Bay that Brian wrote (you can order a copy here or here or here).  In this book, he meets Sonia and learns about the depth and reason behind her incredible sadness and, in the process, rediscovers his own true wisdom.  If you ever wondered how our songs all tie together, this is the book for you.




The Incredible Sadness of Sonia

In a garden full of little heads
The cat no longer smiled
Mad as any hatter
She looked around and sighed
Children laughing at her
She turned her back and cried
She turned her head and lied
Then turned off her mind and died

Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
She was a precious child
She was her daddy’s smile
All that remains is a dream
Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
Now my poor heart it seems
Is all shredded and cold
For my dear Sonia

Like the Woolf before her
She loaded her pockets with stones
And not looking back
She waded in deeper
“It’s cold,” she gasped, “Oh, so cold.”
Wine-soaked and sleep deprived
She’d somehow lost her way
With silent screams of apathy
She hummed the song of day

Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
She was a precious child
She was her daddy’s smile
All that remains is a dream
Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
Now my poor heart it seems
Is all shredded and cold
For my dear Sonia

Sonia, cara mia, quanto ti amo
Non รจ giusto che ne sei andata

The ghostly embrace of winter’s first kiss
On Ferris wheels in the dark
She gestured with a hand that shook
With the sadness of her soul
The rabbit hole is empty now
The hatter’s no longer mad
The Cheshire cat no longer smiles
The Red Queen only laughs

Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
She was a precious child
She was her daddy’s smile
All that remains is a dream
Did you hear of what happened?
She died in the black of the night
Now my poor heart it seems
Is all shredded and cold

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Costume Party at Brewskis!




FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Acoustic punk Halloween fun at Brewskis Saturday, October 26


Utah’s most entertaining acoustic punk bands Juana Ghani and Salt Lake Whalefishers celebrate Hallowe’en at Brewskis on Saturday the 26th of October.

Ogden, Utah –  Utah’s number 1 acoustic Gypsy punk band Juana Ghani is joining forces with the comedic folk punk duo Salt Lake Whalefishers and sponsor Only In Ogden to bring the most exciting and fun-filled Hallowe’en party in town to Brewskis (244 Historic 25th Street) on Saturday, October 26.  With live music, dancing, on-the-spot art and a costume contest to end all costume contests, it promises to be a night of insanely fantastic Gypsy folk punk mayhem and madness.

Eclectic Gypsy punks Juana Ghani (www.juanaghani.com) are known for their always titillating live shows and songs that are full of “semi-nightmarish fantasies of violence, revenge, desire and struggle” (Savannah Turk, City Weekly) and music that is “full of love, death, sex, grief, passion and vodka.”(Oliver Arditi, LiveUnsigned) Their live shows not only bring fabulously infectious original music, but often include the area’s most amazing belly dancers and performance artists. Juana Ghani’s featured dancers for this amazing night of Hallowe’en fun are Stefanie Harrington, Heather Gardner, Jennifer Payton, LaNae Surerus, Marlene Dayton, Tatum Ramos, and Katie Fernbach.

Armed with a tenor banjo, acoustic guitar, and two drum machines in a brief case mounted on a cymbal stand, folk punk duo Salt Lake Whalefishers (http://www.saltlakewhalefishers.com) bring a healthy taste of irreverence and hilarious hooliganism to their live performances.  Always clever and unabashed, the Whalefishers’ ridiculous lyrics and rhythmic melodies give even the horribly uncoordinated a need to dance.

Alisi Makaafi (http://www.facebook.com/ArtByAlisi) is a Salt Lake City based artist.  Throughout the night, she will be painting live, creating a unique piece of art that expresses the energy of the night in one beautiful masterpiece.

Costumes are encouraged.  Prizes will be given to the best and most creative costumes, thanks to sponsor Only In Ogden, so let your spooky imagination fly.

Brewskis is located at 244 Historic 25th Street in Ogden, Utah.  Tickets are $5 at the door, ladies get in free.  Music begins at 10:00 p.m.  Must be 21-years or older to attend.  


Thursday, October 10, 2013

The Story Behind the Song: WHAT DID I KNOW?

(post by Leisl)

For years, Brian and I have kept a notebook ready for writing down different phrases that come to mind or that we overhear or that we read.  We have pages and pages of disjointed phrases!  Back in 2010, before we even had this wonderful group of musicians assembled, Brian had written this wonderfully happy piece of music that reminded me very much of the times I spent as a child on the harbors and beaches of LaMaddalena, but it needed words.  As a challenge, we decided to see if I could tie a bunch of these mismatched phrases together into some sort of story for a song.  It worked out fabulously!  (We were even able to use a phrase our youngest uttered one summer morning: "I love the smell of Saturdays!")  The chorus proved to be a bit more challenging for me.  We had spent quite some time trying to make some of these phrases work, but no luck.  It wasn't until I was so frustrated by the effort and felt a headache coming on that I threw up my hands and announced, "What do I know?  I can't even see right now.  The sun is shining in my eyes & it hurts."  "That's it!" Brian declared, "That's your chorus!  Now sing it."




What Did I Know?

I’m waiting for the snow to fall
And wondering if it really will
This time
I’m waiting quietly
For something exciting
But all I really know is that
Another life has been born
And I’m one step closer,
Two steps closer now to being
Not so far behind

What did I know?
I couldn’t see at all
The sun was shining in my eyes

I love the smell of Saturday
When everything is not what it seems
Frustrating bits of time
Where everybody is alive
I’m dancing like the flame
Of a candle in jar
Where everybody is alive
Everybody is, but the patient

What did I know?
I couldn’t see at all
The sun was shining in my eyes

I wonder every day
That somebody else is wondering with me
He just sort of mumbled
Then shook my hand and walked away
I feel like a hermit
In my own mind
This is a place
Where even evergreens
Even evergreens know their season

What did I know?
I couldn’t see at all
The sun was shining in my eyes

Thursday, September 19, 2013

The Story Behind the Song: BREATHING



With so many people asking about the stories behind our songs, I’ve been thinking about sharing them on this blog for quite some time.  Today, the Harvest Moon, seems like a good time start.  These posts will most likely be sporadic, but over time we will share the stories of our songs – the meanings behind them, how they came to be, what inspired them.  



BREATHING – The story behind the song.



On September 19, 2003, Brian lost his best friend in a car accident.  Marnie Gilbert was a vibrant young mother and an incredibly strong and loving woman who touched many lives.  She lives on in hearts of her children and the memories of those who were lucky enough to know and love her.  Brian wrote this song for her.  It describes the accident from three different viewpoints, almost simultaneously.

BREATHING 

(lyrics by Brian Bonell, music by Brian and Leisl Bonell)

The truck how it rolled as it tried to swerve
Fear in her eyes as the whole world turned upside down
Her mind went blank as it all spun all around
The crash and the bang,
Glass shattering
Now lay quiet and still as the chaos ensued
The whole confused scene that was desperate indeed
She laid there and she looked,
As her as her eyes took in
There was breathing.

Off in the distance, the siren’s song started.
It trickled and tumbled and cleared out the haze.
People were standing, and then there was screaming,
the wailing was coming from deep down inside of her
Blood on the ground,
Glass all around
But, why was her truck sitting there upside down?
She looked to the left and was frightened to see
Was she breathing?

Crashing and crumbling and speeding and tumbling and turning and crashing and spinning and fumbling and skidding and yelling and cursing and sliding and turning and turning and turning and spinning

They picked up the scene and took her from me
As the sun in the sky had just finished setting
This whole scattered dream, wasn’t real, could it be?
Mixed with the blood and death and ruin
We only just left to go get some food
We were hungry and it, was late in the evening
This simplest of tasks had just taken her life
She’s not breathing

Off in the distance, the siren’s song started
It trickled and tumbled and cleared out the haze.
People were standing, and then there was screaming,
the wailing was coming from deep down inside of her
Blood on the ground,
Glass all around
But, why was her truck sitting there upside down?
She looked to the left and was frightened to see
She stopped breathing.