Rock in Roll Therapy

A Night at the Goldenlight with Matt and Trystyn

There’s something holy about the first night back under neon after months of hospitals, waiting rooms, bad news, and staring at the ceiling at 3 a.m. wondering what comes next.

Tonight wasn’t about running from anything. It was about remembering I’m still alive.

First night back at the honky tonk in months.
And there may not be a better place for a resurrection of the spirit than GoldenLight Cafe & Cantina sitting proud on historic Route 66. The kind of place where the walls sweat history and every beer sign has probably seen a fist fight, a first kiss, and somebody crying into a jukebox before sunrise.

After months of doctor visits, sickness spreading through myself, my father, and my mother-in-law… tonight finally felt a little like freedom again.

Not perfect. Not cured. Just human.

The evening kicked off with Trystyn Sanchez — originally out of Stanton, Texas, now calling San Angelo home — bringing his own brand of dusty hippy folk to the stage. The kind of songs that drift through a room like desert smoke. You can hear shades of Townes Van Zandt in there, but not in some copycat way. More like a young West Texas soul that’s spent enough lonely nights with a guitar and too much truth.

Then came Matt Moran and the Palominos.

Loud enough to shake the sickness out of your bones. Honest enough to make you feel something again.

Cold beer sweating on the table. Boots sticking to old dance floors. Guitar amps humming like highway tires headed west after midnight. Folks laughing too loud like they’ve all survived something too.

Next week might finally resemble something close to normal — or at least whatever version of normal I can patch together with prayer, stubbornness, and good people around me.

Sometimes healing doesn’t happen in a hospital.

Sometimes it happens under neon lights on Route 66 with a rock band turned up too damn loud.

The Willing Few

My quest for live music took us to the top of Texas yesterday. Last night at the Golden Light in Amarillo we saw our buddy Travis Roberts and his band The Willing Few along with somewhat a resident artist at the Golden Light , Maggie Burt.

The Golden Light Cantina, a little out of the way Honky Tonk and in my opinion the best burger I’ve ever eaten.. (I didn’t get a burger last night however as I was still full from The Big Texan Steak House.. but that’s a whole other story.) The Golden Light was established in 1946 at the exact location it still stands today. Then the road it is on was known as Route 66 today it’s called Historic Route 66, other than that not much has changed…

Travis and The Willing Few are on their very first actual tour as a band.. I was glad they picked their home town for one of the first stops. Currently the band is cutting a full length album which Travis shared was about 1/2 way done, he plans to get the rest of it recorded and tracked and hoping for a release before the first of the year.

Last night was special as Travis played many songs that will be on the album, songs I had never heard, yet I could relate to. He has a way of putting pen to paper and letting out his troubles in a song. As He has a similar past as me, I can insert my troubles and pain as I sing along. He also played the songs of his that everyone knows and it was awesome to look around the crowd and see so many people singing along. We had a great visit and I am looking forward to seeing him again soon. He has so much energy it spills over into his audience.. If you hadn’t seen Travis Roberts perform live you need to make plans to do it, I promise it’s well worth it..

Travis Roberts GoldenLight Cantina 7/29/23
Maggie Burt at the GoldenLight

Back on the roads this weekend and seeing Travis was the perfect cure for my cabin fever.

Pancho.