HOW TO VACATION AT HOME
A CONVERSATION WITH MATTHEW LOGAN VASQUEZ
Mathew Logan Vasquez has recently released his third solo album, Light’n Up. Here, he finds a delicate balance between a happy, stable home life and his life as a musician on the road. For Vasquez, an accomplished songwriter, the new collection is the most profoundly personal output in his catalogue. Light’n Up is as much about being away from the family home as it is about waking up in it.
βI spent my 20s in the most 20s way it could be. When youβre young and youβre poor and on tour, you arenβt really living for anything other than your fellow bandmatesβ says Vasquez. βWhen you fall in love with somebody, that becomes your primary source of self-esteem, and spiritual growth is that connection. That moves things away from the center a little bit.β Vasquez continues to craft hooks and memorable songs, just like in his years playing with Californian indie outfit Delta Spirit, but his musical inspirations are centered by his wife and their shared experiences.
βIβve got it backwardsβ laughs Vasquez as he describes his professional and personal balance. Lead single βVacationβ is an ironic statement for him —Β βAll of the time working hard for vacation/Ainβt got no time for lives and relationshipsβ) — as his real vacations are his time with family away from his office on the road. Spending so much time touring is difficult, but the Vasquez family has learned to make it work by linking his tours with family trips, several of which inspired songs on the new record.
βA lot of songs are really inspired by one doing something for your wife, whom you really love, and also the seeking of places that you feel really centered, spiritual homes.βΒ While most of the songs comment on a happy Texas home life, the albumβs final song makes a poignant shift to Olso, Norway, where Vasquez and his wife spent time after her fatherβs diagnosis with Alzheimerβs disease. βEverything had just gotten settled for us in Austin, Texas. My wife had been an expat for seven years, so it was real crucial to get to be with her dad as he was sliding down the hill.β Writing the lyrics of βOsloβ was a literal experience for Vasquez in documenting one of his lifeβs most difficult episodes. No longer a carefree wandering rock βnβ roll guitarist, he is driven both personally and musically by his wife and child.
βI canβt do 290 days on the road like I did with Delta Spirit back in the day, trying to cut it down to 150 and keep the tours under a monthβ remarks Vasquez. βWhen you have a child, introducing a kid, it really brings a whole other thing. It makes you think of your experiences of a kid and what you want for your childrenβ says Vasquez, who titled one of the albumβs songs βI Love My Boy.β Vasquez of course relishes his time at home with his family; βthe traveling sucks but when Iβm off, Iβm the best stay at home dad everβ before adding βextra available!β
As its name implies Light’n Up is an overall positive affair, as with many of the albums, other songs reflect a happy home existence. The bright and hopeful βTrailer Parkβ echoes the energy and joy of relaxing out in Texas hill country with lyrics such as βMiles of hill country/Life is evergreen.β
Mathew Logan Vasquez has traveled with his music extensively, yet continues to be drawn back to his Texas home. βIt feels like weβre always on the runβ says Vasquez; βIβm happy about paying tribute to my little neighborhood. Itβs about moving.β