Such
a warm handshake. Such a genuine smile. I met Candy in person at
the Paella Rock gig
in July at the Canca Bar near Alora. Singer, composer, guitarist
and founder member of the Granada based pop and roll band Hombres
Solos, José Candido Ariza was as friendly and down to earth
as I had imagined.
Since releasing their latest album last year, Que Alguien Venga
a Rescatarnos, the group, which includes bass player Alberto (Motorhead)
and drummer Lorenzo, have performed over 70 gigs around the country,
their aim being 100.
“Will you be driving back to Granada tonight after the show?”
I asked him.
“No, we sleep in the van.”
“Years ago I didn’t mind where I slept, on the floor,
whatever,” I said to him, “now I need a comfortable
bed. After 20 years on the scene, how do you do it?”
“Oh I know what you mean,” he answered with an understanding
smile, “it’s just that we get so much pleasure from
playing live that we put up with anything. It makes such a nice
change to the dull routine of daily living.”
“And how do you manage to arrange all your gigs?” I
asked, sure that especially without a manager it was no easy matter.”
“Any way we can,” he said, “by email, telephone,
surfing the web, talking to friends.”
“Your website and your songs refer to La Lucha, The Battle,
The Struggle, what does that mean?”
“The struggle is not in making recordings, it is in managing
to get people to listen.”
The Paella Rock concert for them was part of the battle won, another
occasion when they achieved their goal, their very professional
performance being heard live in concert by a very appreciative audience.
“Why do you make music?” I had asked him.
“Because I have to. It is a kind of self-therapy. I am a person
who finds it hard to get going, I need a motive in order to think,
to say or to do things. Without motivation life has no value, and
so music is the way in which I can express myself, to feel good
and relieved. There is always something of importance and if on
top of everything you have the opportunity to be heard, even better.
Music always converts me into what I want to be, myself.”
“Where does your inspiration come from?”
“The world around me. The fact that I am alive, that I breathe,
things that affect me both negatively and positively. I depart from
a type of torpor, disorder and little by little it takes shape and
becomes meaningful. All kinds of things inspire me at any given
moment, although I give priority to things that matter to me. People,
emotions, problems, satisfaction and ultimately, thanks perhaps
to what you learn as time goes by, the irony of it all. It isn’t
a bad thing sometimes to laugh at yourself.”
“Can music help the world?”
“Maybe, but I think that what it can do is entertain the world.
Music as a cause is not profitable. As a business it is. And where
we fit in with all this is quite clear to us. What I have clear
in my mind is that if one of my songs can shift someone’s
consciousness for a moment, to make someone happy for a few minutes,
to put across a message with which someone can identify then the
song has achieved its goal. On the other hand we never forget that
our songs are just that, songs. The music by Hombres Solos is made
in order to have a good time, relating things that happen to us
or to those who listen. We are not a vindictive band, none of that.
Hombres Solos is a rock band, we talk about how we live and how
we think. The world is what it is and I don’t think anyone
has the power to change that.”
“Do you like flamenco?”
“Not much. I mean I can listen to it, I listen to all types
of music, but I’m never really inclined to listed to it or
understand it. I do not share the theory that flamenco and Andalucia
are one and the same thing. Hombres Solos is a band that tries to
move away from set ideas. I respect flamenco as an artistic form,
as a way of being and a way of living, but as I say, I don’t
listen to it.”
“Is there a relationship between flamenco and rock?”
“I think that with rock the scope is wide open. Flamenco too.
Rock is a basic expression, from the neighbourhood, the streets,
the bars, everyone who plays it is different, but the message is
the same, freedom. Flamenco, like a good ingredient can be mixed
with it, just as many other styles in other countries have been
mixed with it.”
“What do you think about English rock, now and previously?”
“The truth is that almost all the music I listen to is in
English. There are few bands in Spain that draw my attention. My
record collection is 95% English and American. You know, it’s
the cradle, the beginning. When Elvis was first heard in Spain we
were walking with a swing. One of the groups that I enjoyed at the
beginning was the Electric Light Orchestra, to give you an idea.
I am also a follower of Del Amitry and the Stereophonics. I do not
share the idea that English music is more mature, clever or innovative.
To sing in Spanish is just as good, although I recognise that English
lyrics often win. Actually, rock is American and English and that
is the way it will always be. Their groups are much fresher, they
do not think so much about marketing, they just go out and play
and that’s it.”
“One further question: your latest album is entitled ‘Please
let somebody come and save us!’ Save you from what?”
“From monotony, obligations and from all that you have to
do to try to be content. What I want is to be saved from the daily
grind and for the light to continue to shine so that we can find
genuine happiness.”
Concerts
/ Eventos
http://www.portalatino.com/hombresolos |
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