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Home: P : PAX
217 : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Forefront Records)
"Engage! Tell your story to the
world. Engage! Let your actions speak love"
Some bands turn to rock music as an
escape, a refuge from the pressures and torments of the
real world. For others - and this batch includes the vast
majority of what passes for hard rock on mainstream radio
and MTV these days — it's
a platform for airing frustration, a soapbox for venting
anger and demons. "I hurt," they scream or bark
out in bursts of rap. "Share my pain, feel my fury."
Against this tide of escapist rage, the five young men of
PAX217 offer a fresh perspective. Their music is as tight
a fusion of metal and hip-hop rhythms as anything on the
radio today, but their message is what hits home the hardest.
And it hits not like a hail of grievances, but rather as
a positive instrument for change, for hope. It's a message
aptly summed up in a single word, which is appropriately
the name of the band's second album on ForeFront Records:
Engage.
"Most of the time when you think of the word 'engage,'
you think of going to battle or going to war," says
24 year-old lead singer and songwriter Dave Tosti. "But
there's a bunch of different definitions for it, and one
of them is 'to attract and hold the attention of, to win
over and involve, to interlock or mesh with someone.' As
a band and as people, we're called to embrace other people's
lives, and that's what Engage is about. It's about us recognizing
the fact that we can affect other people's lives by telling
our stories, sharing what God's done and giving people the
ability to hope."
Remarkably, that's the same goal Tosti
had for PAX217 when he first founded the Los Angeles-based
group (originally under the simpler moniker PAX, after
the Latin word for "peace")
nine years ago, when he was only 15. "I think the vision
we set forth with from day one is still there," he says. "We
want to engage as many people as we can. We don't care who
we play for — whether it's 12 year-old kids or 60 year-old
granddads. We want to impact people's lives."
Of course, like its name, the band's
sound has evolved over the years. "If it doesn't progress, it will die," Tosti
notes pointedly. Originally a casual weekend diversion for
Tosti and a handful of other school friends, PAX217 began
to gel into a focused, professional outfit when guitarist
Jesse Craig came on board as a full-time member and the band
recorded its first album for ForeFront, 2000's Two Seventeen.
Shortly after the album's completion, before hitting the
road to support it, DJ Bobby Duran ("Bobbito the Chef," after
his passion for cooking both on stage and in the kitchen),
joined the fold. The band also includes bassist Josh Auer
and drummer Aaron "Skwid" Tosti — Dave's
younger brother, who will graduate from high school the month
Engage releases. The result is a sound at once both right
in step with modern rock and several bold steps away in every
direction, encompassing metal, rap, melodic power pop and
even, on the standout love song "Move On This," reggae. "We
enjoy all those styles of music, because we're about all
people and celebrating as many people as we can," says
Tosti.
The multi-genre, multi-cultural mélange has helped
the band reach out to a broad cross-section of fans, making
PAX217 feel at home whether performing at Christian rock
festivals or in front of New York City's hardcore punks,
and even a handful of dates on the Warped Tour. "We
just feel that we've been called to play music for anyone,
anywhere — white, brown or black, Muslim, Jewish, Christian,
Buddhist," says Duran. "That's the whole theme
of Engage — telling your stories to the world, and
letting your actions speak love through the music and interacting
with people at shows."
Kicking off with the exuberant lead
single "Tonight," Engage
is a testament to everything PAX217 is about, wants to be
and has to say. Tosti says the song is "about being
all I can to be an example of love to the world." But
like the rest of the songs on the album, the medium of "Tonight" is
every bit as powerful as the message. "'Tonight' is
a fun, energetic and explosive song that we just like to
rock," says Duran. "We love to play shows where
people are able to use all their energy and just go crazy.
We feed off that." The same unbridled rush comes through
in the spiritual call to arms issued on the title track and
the fierce vocal exchange between Tosti and Duran on "PSA," a
searing "public service announcement" that hammers
home its message with single-minded, riff-raging intensity: "Our
purpose is to serve and not to be served é Let go."
"I think overall when someone listens to the record,
quite a few of the songs are like prayers," muses Tosti. "I'll
talk about everything from being loved on this record to
losing someone that you love, having someone close to you
being molested as a kid and feeling the pain of that, a lot
of different topics. I just try to look at it all through
a lens of how God might want me to see things. It's a challenge.
I call myself a Christian, but I wake up everyday and do
stuff where I fail, and that's the kind of reality that this
record is about."
Nowhere does that challenge come more
to light than in the song "What Is Love," in which Tosti wrestles with
his anger towards the man who sexually abused his wife when
she was a child, and struggles to reconcile the unspeakable
act with the bigger picture. "I meet kids at our shows
who've gone through the same thing, and I feel the pain of
my wife going through that situation when she was a kid," he
says. "My wife's not a bitter person — God has
really made a work of her life because of it, and allowed
her to share positively with so many people about that experience."
"We want to get involved in people's
lives without being political or doing anything that's
going to benefit us. Everybody can relate to wanting to
be loved. That's the bottom line. We must engage people
to make a difference."
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