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Ray Barbee
— When Skateboarding Turns Into Music

Same flow, different stage

Ray Barbee playing live at El Sótano in Madrid during the Moments Festival — calm, flow and pure connection between skate and music.

Ray Barbee in Madrid, Spain:

As part of the Moments Festival, Ray Barbee’s night at El Sótano (Madrid) was more than a concert — it felt like a skate session without a board.

Under warm lights and a close crowd, Ray turned the stage into a space where music, art and skate blended together — a flowing line of beats rising and falling like his no complies in that legendary Ban This part for Powell Peralta.

Listening to Ray Barbee in Madrid, Spain

Music, style and grace — all with the same smile as always.

30 years later, Ray again

On October 16th, we headed to Madrid to see Ray Barbee live. Antonio and I wandered through La Latina with two boards under our arms, on our way to El Sótano, talking —of course— about Barbee’s timeless style, the one that’s been with us our whole lives.

El Sotano entrance logo

EL SOTANO: Calle de las Maldonadas 6,
Centro District, 28005 — Madrid, Spain

More than thirty years ago, long before we even met, we were already admiring Ray Barbee’s lines — his style, his class, and that flow that’s still one of a kind.

Even today, at almost 50, we still try to pull off that full line from Ban This by Powell Peralta.

As we got closer to the venue, we started seeing familiar faces — people I vaguely recognized from skateparks, the old Escombro D.I.Y., or random sessions shared over the years. Skaters from another time, still here, still rolling.

Antonio and I were the first ones in. There was no line, which honestly surprised me, considering what Ray means to all of us. We went down to the basement. The room was small, lit in blue neon — more like an after-hours club than a place to host someone like Ray Barbee, knowing the kind of music he plays.

Ray Barbee signing skateboards for fans after his concert at El Sótano in Madrid — music and skate culture coming together.
There he was.
Musician, photographer, skater.
Standing alone in the middle of the basement — shy, smiling,
& quietly present.
The other day someone asked me:

“What was your first impression ?”

What struck me the most, oddly enough, was his height. Not because he’s particularly tall, but because in my head he was still that smiling kid, stringing tricks together with the same effortless lightness as always. Like many who stopped skating for a few years, I missed his adult era as a skater — seeing him there made me realize how much time had passed.

Here’s Memory Screen: Ray Barbee for you.

A video by Freeskatemag that revisits many stages of his skate journey — in case you’ve got that same debt to settle.

Ray Barbee signing skateboards for the Nosebonk Crew before his concert at El Sótano in Madrid — music, skate and community on the same stage.
We got there first 🙂
Before the show, Ray Barbee signed a couple of boards for the Nosebonk Crew at El Sótano.
A calm, grounded person — few words, plenty of warmth. It was an honor.
Ray Barbee Madrid Spain: with members of the Nosebonk Crew after his concert at El Sótano in Madrid — skate community, friendship and gratitude.
Ray Barbee with Erik Ziegler and Antonio — part of the Nosebonk Crew — after the concert at El Sótano.
More than 30 years still trying to copy his no comply line.

Starting the conversation with Ray Barbee

Before the show, Ray Barbee signed a couple of boards for the Nosebonk Crew at El Sótano. A calm, humble person — few words, plenty of presence. It was an honor. He asked about the models, one a reissue, the other a newer one.
We told him we still skate, almost 50 now, and that every now and then we revisit his line from the video, trying to land it again.

Trying not to sound too groupie, I couldn’t help thinking how surreal it must be to see your skating still inspiring people after more than thirty years.
We made an effort not to stay stuck on skate talk — we were there for his music.

Ray Barbee in Madrid on stage

Barbee played for himself.
Seeing him smile and enjoy it was the best gift.

What first felt like improvisation slowly turned into a perfectly orchestrated sound —trick after trick, note after note, building and looping back, creating and inspiring in that way only someone like him can. Song after song, alone on stage, all instrumental — yet it never felt repetitive. Ray kept smiling, never looked at the crowd, completely immersed in the joy of playing.

It reminded me of a moment from the Beyond Boards podcast,
where they talked about that iconic scene from Ban This, when Stacy Peralta asked Ray Barbee:


—“How long have you been skating?”
—“Six years.”
—“When did you start?”
—“Six years ago.”
🙂

In that interview, Ray said he answered with a calm laugh — as if saying, “Stacy, stop asking. I just want to skate.”

When the concert ended, nobody moved.
The silence hung in the air for a moment.
Ray stepped down from the stage like someone finishing a perfect line — calm, no gestures, with a smile that said, “that’s it.”

Thank you, Ray Barbee, for one more night — and a lifetime of inspiration.
— Erik Ziegler “Nosebonk”

Skate, art & design
— straight from Madrid

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