Soldier Stories
A
benefit for veterans’ health care
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009 8 p.m.
Freight & Salvage
Coffeehouse
1111 Addison Street
Berkeley, CA 94702
(510) 548-1761
Laurie Lewis & Tom Rozum and the Soldier Stories Band (Nell Robinson, Mayne Smith, Harry Yaglijian, Dave Gooding, with Jonathan Schiele and Johnny Harper) will perform an evening of music reflecting soldier stories from before the American Revolution to current conflicts.
The musicians involved care about soldiers and their families and have arranged for all proceeds to support veteran health care projects through two excellent, local non-profits: Disability Rights Advocates and Swords to Plowshares. A former military brat, with family and good friends serving in Iraq, Nell Robinson says of the show, “We are deeply concerned about the sacrifice and burden on the shoulders of a very small number of US servicemen and servicewomen while we here at home can go about our daily lives without having to confront the war. A friend of mine has called this the ‘true national debt.’ I have learned that suicide rates for recent vets have doubled, divorce rates have increased by almost 80%, thousands of vets are homeless, and over 500,000 vets are still waiting to receive promised mental health care. We hope our music and this show will raise awareness and funding for the soldiers who have given so much.”
Lou Ponticas of San Francisco, who, along with Nell Robinson co-founded the Take the Stage band performance workshop, and is a musician and soldier currently serving in Iraq, has written us a letter about the role of music in his life there. This is the first Soldier Story:
I know that many folks in the Bay Area and
across the US see the war in Iraq (or any war) as a big mistake, do not support
it, and hope for its speedy conclusion. For me, the decision to join superseded
my political views. There was a fire burning, fellow soldiers and Marines
needed help putting it out, and I felt compelled to help. Once the fire is out,
I reasoned, we can talk about who started it.
There is a long line of men and women,
stretching back to the time of the Revolutionary War, who have left their
families, farms, factories or offices to put on a uniform and serve their
country in a time of need. With the need passed, the lucky ones have returned
back home to start again. Whether we are talking about the Greatest Generation,
Vietnam Vets, or the Minutemen, these people are my heroes and I am proud to
stand in that long line with them.
Thank you for thinking of veterans past and present, and thank-you the musicians organizing the “Soldier Stories” benefit. I hope many of you can attend. Harmonizing voices, accompanied by acoustic instruments, is a wonderful antidote for the hustle and bustle that creates the noisy soundtrack of our busy lives. It’s even more powerful and essential medicine for dealing with life in a combat zone…while we’re here and long after we’ve come home.
Please join us on May 27th, show your support and concern, and if you can, make a special gift: $100 in the name of a veteran listed in the program, $250 to provide 2 free tickets to the show for vets, or $1000 to sponsor the show. For more information contact hilary@nellrobinsonmusic.com or 510-708-3147.
(FULL
PONTICAS LETTER BELOW)
Lou Ponticas of San Francisco, who, along with Nell Robinson co-founded the Take the Stage band performance workshop, and is a musician and soldier currently serving in Iraq, has written us a letter about the role of music in his life there. This is the first Soldier Story:
Hello Friends and Neighbors!
I’m writing to you from Iraq, where I am
serving as a platoon sergeant with a California Army National Guard unit. We’re
a little better than halfway through our tour here. My home is in San
Francisco.
This is my third deployment with the
military. I first came over here in 1991 with the Marines in the first Gulf
War. In 2003, long after leaving the Marines and a couple years past my 40th
birthday, I felt compelled to serve again. Too old for the Marines, I joined
the California Army National Guard. Much to my chagrin, while my unit shipped
out to Iraq, I was sent to Bosnia. This time around, I’m here in charge of a
platoon of 48 soldiers, conducting convoy security missions in northern Iraq.
Like most soldiers, I’ve always had some sort
of music with me to help me unwind, relax and otherwise briefly escape from the
Army and the stresses that accompany service in a combat zone. It’s funny to
think about how that’s changed over time.
During Desert Shield/Desert Storm, I carried
a Sony Walkman and one tape cassette with Willie Nelson on one side and Emmylou
Harris on the other. I wore out that cassette tape so much that I could hear
Willie singing backup on Emmylou’s songs sometimes.
By the time I got to Bosnia 13 years later,
an old friend sent me an iPod. Unfortunately, I had no music to load onto my
new iPod, but I did have access to the Internet. Not only did I order those
same two Willie and Emmylou albums, but I also ordered a guitar and my first
bluegrass album. I came home from that deployment determined to keep playing
the guitar and bluegrass music.
Here in Iraq, I’ve got my guitar with me
again. I also brought along a mandolin I’d bought on eBay, thinking I might
have time to learn how to play it. (Soldiers continue to stop and ask what kind
of instrument I’m playing.) Lucky for me, there’s a medic in my platoon who
plays and sings, mostly country. He borrows my guitar and I plunk away on the
mandolin whenever we have time…
My iPod from Bosnia finally gave up the ghost
just before we shipped over here, so I had to get a new one. This time, I’ve
got Willie, Emmylou, Laurie Lewis, Rhonda Vincent and hundreds of other
bluegrass artists and songs to help me unwind and escape. While most soldiers
have iPods or MP3 players these days, I haven’t found any that have bluegrass
loaded on theirs like I have on mine. Occasionally when we’re out on mission, I
plug my iPod into my vehicle’s intercom system and treat my crew to a little
“bluegrass in Babylon.”
“Guitar Hero,” the interactive video game
where you get to play rock star, is pretty popular here. There’s a setup at the
base rec center for soldiers, and several of my guys go crazy with it on their
own game consoles in our makeshift barracks. (There’s no “Mandolin Hero” out
yet, but perhaps one day…)
When I bought that first bluegrass CD a few
years ago, I was trying to reclaim a memory from my teen years in Baltimore.
Back then, the only country music radio station in town would feature a
bluegrass hour on Sunday nights. A single line from a single song remained
stuck in my head for all the years since. It took a bit of surfing on the Net,
but I was eventually able to find the song on a CD by Dry Branch Fire Squad.
In that song, “Atlanta is Burning,”
a Confederate soldier lies dying on the battlefield, thinking of his home in
Georgia, springtime, and his wife and infant son that he will never see again.
It was a powerful song when I first heard it decades ago and it resonates ever
more strongly with me now as I think of the wife, home, and friends that I have
left behind.
I know that many folks in the Bay Area and
across the US see the war in Iraq (or any war) as a big mistake, do not support
it, and hope for its speedy conclusion. For me, the decision to join superseded
my political views. There was a fire burning, fellow soldiers and Marines
needed help putting it out, and I felt compelled to help. Once the fire is out,
I reasoned, we can talk about who started it.
There is a long line of men and women,
stretching back to the time of the Revolutionary War, who have left their
families, farms, factories or offices to put on a uniform and serve their
country in a time of need. With the need passed, the lucky ones have returned
back home to start again. Whether we are talking about the Greatest Generation,
Vietnam Vets, or the Minutemen, these people are my heroes and I am proud to
stand in that long line with them.
Thank you for thinking of veterans past and
present, and thank-you the musicians organizing the “Soldier Stories” benefit.
I hope many of you can attend. Harmonizing voices, accompanied by acoustic
instruments, is a wonderful antidote for the hustle and bustle that creates the
noisy soundtrack of our busy lives. It’s even more powerful and essential
medicine for dealing with life in a combat zone…while we’re here and long after
we’ve come home.
I look forward to coming home and playing
music with my friends again.