The Breath of Stone
The air in high places tastes of thin, cold iron and ancient dust. It settles in the back of the throat, a dry sharpness that reminds you how far you are from the sea. I remember the feeling of a reed flute against my own lips—the wood was cool, polished smooth by the oils of a thousand hands, vibrating with a hum that traveled straight through my teeth and into my skull. It is a hollow sound, a lonely sound, yet it fills the chest until you feel as though you might float away with the wind. We carry these echoes in our marrow, the way a mountain holds the heat of the sun long after the light has retreated. Why do we seek to capture the sound of a breath, when the breath itself is already vanishing into the thin, unforgiving air? Does the song exist because of the player, or because the mountain finally found a voice?

Daniel Schnyder has taken this beautiful image titled Cuzco, zampoña. The way the musician holds the instrument feels like a prayer caught in the stillness of the Andes. Can you hear the melody rising from the silence?

Frame in frame, by Minh Nghia Le