My siblings and I inherited our parents' love of music—not just listening but the proclivity for curating it, building playlists that become the backdrop of our lives. We were discouraged from singing along, though. My brother John would catch us joining the radio in the car and ask pointedly, "Who sings this song?" The answer was always the artist, to which he'd reply, "Let's keep it that way." His veto became a running joke, a family truth.
My sister, a teacher, plays creative and soothing music for her students during off moments before class or at breaks. Students return years later—a decade, sometimes more—and tell her they still remember songs from her classroom, how those melodies became woven into their memories.
Aden and I work on joint Spotify playlists together. While hiking in Banff, she introduced me to Alex Warren's song "Carry You Home," and that song became a bridge between us—a shared conversation without words. Last night Aden and Daniel accompanied me to see Alex Warren at Red Rocks, the greatest natural amphitheater in the world.
Warren became truly famous last year when his song "Ordinary" exploded on BookTok and then the radio. At Red Rocks, his voice was superb, clear and raw—the kind of voice that makes you believe every word. The sold-out auditorium sang along with every lyric, from upbeat and inspiring to melancholy, haunting lyrics of loss. Parents sat with their children, teenagers with friends. No pot in the air—a first for me at Red Rocks—just wholesome music with an edge. Concert tee shirts read "Need money for ~~therapy~~ Alex Warren tix," a joke the singer tells on himself.
The night's most poignant moment came when Warren left the main stage for a B stage near our seats. He described his father's death when Warren was nine, how his mother and siblings were left bereft, how he carried that grief alone for a long time. Then he asked the crowd a simple question: "Raise a hand if you've ever lost someone."
Thousands of hands rose into the darkness—a stunning yet unsurprising array. "We are not alone," he said. "And as long as we talk about them and keep their memory alive, they will not die a second time."
He then sang "Eternity," and the words echoed into the canyon as his voice was joined by 9,000 others:
But it feels like an eternity / Since I had you here with me / Since I had to learn to be / Someone you don't know
To be with you in paradise / What I wouldn't sacrifice / Why'd you have to chase the light / Somewhere I can't go?
Tears blurred our view of the stage and the Denver skyline beyond it. I was thinking of Dad—his love of music, his ear for a false note, his presence in these moments when his physical form couldn't be there. I found myself hoping that some part of his spirit was listening, that he could hear this crowd of strangers singing about loss and longing and the stubbornness of love that refuses to disappear. There were no false notes. He would have loved it.
Myriad cellphone lights bloomed across the amphitheater like earthbound stars, each one a person holding their own grief while singing someone else's. The music and emotion wove through the crowd, threading us together—strangers made kin by the simple fact of loss, by the courage it takes to sit in a stone bowl under the stars and say yes, I remember, I miss them, I'm still here.
This is what music does. It resurrects the dead in our hearts. It tells us we're not alone. It gives voice to what we cannot say ourselves—and in hearing it, we find we're surrounded by thousands of others saying the same thing.
I'll add another Alex Warren song to my 2026 playlist. Not to commemorate the evening, though it will do that, reinforcing a bond with my kids. But because music is how we keep people alive. It's how we keep talking about them. It's how we refuse to let them die a second time.