Prayers (rock duo)

Prayers

Cholo Goth pioneers, Prayers. Left: Dave Parley; right Rafael Reyes, aka Leafar Seyer
Background information
Origin San Diego, California
Genres Electronic rockgothic rockpost-punksynth-punk
Years active 2013-present
Associated acts Travis Barker, Kat Von D
Members Rafael Reyes, Dave Parley

Prayers is a Chicano electronic rock duo founded in 2013 by Rafael Reyes and Dave Parley. Prayers are the first musicians/artists to use the term Cholo goth[1] to define their genre of music which lyrically explores the harsh realities of gang and street life over throbbing beats and swirling synthesizers.[2]

Prayers is influenced by Christian Death, Depeche Mode, Bauhaus, Pet Shop Boys and other Gothic rock and dark 80s music, as well as by Reyes' life as gang member in the Sherman Grant Hill Park 27 gang, one of San Diego's oldest gangs, also known as Sherman 27.[3] He was jumped into the gang as a teenager.[2] Prayers' music, lyrics and image breaks down stereotypes within the Goth and Cholo subcultures.[3][2]

Prior to forming Prayers, Reyes, who was born in Cotija, Michoacán and came to San Diego as a young child, had created two other bands, Baptism of Thieves and Vampire, and performed in a solo project, Nite Ritual.[4] Reyes and Parley, a Tijuana native, began recording immediately upon meeting.[5] In three days they had recorded their first CD, SD KILLWAVE which they released independently on first as a CD and download and then on vinyl.

Reyes conceived two videos, "From Dog to God" and "Ready to Bleed" for SD KILLWAVE. The first was shot by Charles Parker, while the second, a narrative, was filmed by Gavin Filipiak, who continues to work with the band.

Prayers' video "Dog to God" caught the eye of the Cult frontman Ian Astbury who requested the band open for them on their 2014 spring tour of California and Nevada.[2] Later that summer, Prayers released their second CD, GOTHIC SUMMER and Filipiak directed the video for the title track, which subsequently won the 2015 San Diego Film Festival Award for Best Music Video and Best Music Video Editing.[6]

On May 26, 2015, Prayers premiered the title track of the Travis Barker-produced third CD, "Young Gods" as a video single, through Noisey/Vice Magazine.[7] The video features a real brawl, with no punches pulled, between members of Sherman 27 who volunteered to be in the video. The album Young Gods was released June 23.

The follow up single, "West End Girls," released July 30, was a cover of the Pet Shop Boys' song, and the video, featuring members of Sherman 27 and women from the San Diego Goth scene, was again conceived by Seyer, directed by Filipiak, and featured on Noisey.[8] The cover and video would lead to Seyer conceiving of and co-directing with Filipiak the Pet Shop Boys' video for the song "Twenty-Something," which the Pet Shop Boys personally commissioned.[9][10]

In October 2015, Prayers scored five nominations in the San Diego Music Awards, "the most in recent memory by a new group for the SDMA"[11] and won for Best Alternative Band. Seyer, flanked by Parley and a semi-nude female escort, thanked his family and management, then derided awards for overlooking "Young Gods" in the video category, pointing out that Prayers' video had gotten 4x the YouTube views as the winner.[12] The following year, 2016, the San Diego Academy of Music suspended their awards show, and resumed in 2017, having eliminated the video and several other categories, and revised the voting procedures, so that some categories are voted on by the public (and with only one vote per email address, vs earlier the one vote per person per day). Best album and song categories are still decided upon by the members of the San Diego Music Academy. Prayers received a nomination for Best Indie/Alternative Band.[13][14]

The third single and video from Young Gods, "Drugs," featuring Travis Barker and DJ Klever, departed from the black and white style; it was animated and directed by Dani Moreno Cordero. The video was released in January 2016, in advance of the band's sold out show at the El Rey in Los Angeles.[15]

In anticipation of their 2016 Coachella show, Prayers released the single "Black Leather" featuring Kat von D. The video was shot in both Los Angeles and San Diego, with Sherman gang members and Prayers' friends from the Southland goth scene, as well as Kat von D. The single charted in Europe, knocking off Radiohead for the number one spot on Ausfahrt Indie Chart.[16]

While Dave Parley performs under his birth name, Reyes utilizes his alter-ego Leafar Seyer for Prayers.[7]

Discography

Studio albums
Year Title Label
2014 SD Killwave Prayers
2014 Gothic Summer
2015 Young Gods

References

  1. "Cholo goth". San Diego Reader. 2013-11-06. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Lisa Derrick (2014-03-25). "Prayers: Cholo Goth Is 'Ready to Bleed' and to Rock | Lisa Derrick". Huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
  3. 1 2 Noisey. "Prayers and the Cholo Goth Movement". Noisey.Vice. Vice. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  4. Holslin, Peter (2014-01-20). "Killwave > Chillwave — An Interview with Rafael Reyes of Prayers". I Heart Goat Meat. Retrieved 2014-05-30.
  5. Navajas, Memo. "Prayers SD". La Catedral del Underground. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  6. "2015 SAN DIEGO FILM AWARDS WINNERS Official Announcement". San Diego Film Awards 2015. Film Consortium San Diego. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  7. 1 2 "Premier: Prayers "Young Gods" Official Music Video". Noisey.Vice.com. Vice. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  8. Kenny-Cincotta, Raffaela. "We Talk to Prayers Singer Leafar Seyer About the Beauty of Cholo Goth Culture". Noisey. Vice.com. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  9. Raygoza, Isabela. "Exclusive: Pet Shop Boys release powerful music video for "Twenty-Something"". univision.com. Univision. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  10. Josephs, Brian. "Pet Shop Boys Soundtrack a Hard Luck Father’s Day in ‘Twenty-something’ Video". spin.com. Spin. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  11. Varga, George. "San Diego Music Awards nominees announced". sandiegouniontribune.com. San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  12. Lott-Schwartz, Hannah. "And the San Diego Music Award Goes To...". nbcsandiego.com. nbcsandiego.com. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  13. Varga, George. "Nominees announced for San Diego Music Awards". pacificsandiego.com. pacificsandiego.com. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  14. "San Diego Music Awards Nominees". San Diego Music Awards. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  15. Bronson, Kevin. "Video: Prayers, ‘Drugs’". Buzzbandsla.com. buzzbandsla.com. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  16. "Ausfahrt 20". Ausfahrt20. Ausfahrt. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
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