ursamajor: strumming to find a melody for two (one chord into another)
Almost a month ago I went to see Vampire Weekend at the Greek, and even with all the 50 SPF sunscreen in the world, my arms remain the most tan they've been in decades. I guess that's what happens at an amphitheatre matinee when the entire shebang faces west! They played a long set and an even longer encore (nearly three hours! not including opener Mike Gordon); impressive endurance. I mostly knew songs off their first album; the rest of the set ranged from fun to weird, but pleasant to listen and bop along to. It was great to catch up with Jill, whom I hadn't seen since high school, and to realize the interests we'd cultivated separately in common throughout the years intersecting (library nerds, progressive politics).

Vampire Weekend setlist for posterity )

Two days after that, [personal profile] hyounpark and I went into the city to see the San Francisco Opera perform Innocence, in the best seats I've ever had at the Opera House (third row orchestra), comps for performing at the related seminar on opening night. I grew up watching the SF Ballet with my dad in that same venue, climbing dozens of marble stairs all the way up to the balcony. Aside from the subject matter, the primary thing I noticed was the rotating cube set, and how it affected staging. It's been a long time since I'd seen a play or other storyline show, so seeing two performances with very similar sets within 10 days of each other (The Lehman Trilogy at ACT being the other) made me wonder how common this kind of setup was now.

The next morning, we flew to San Diego for work. I managed to squeeze in both a ride on the Coronado Bayshore Bikeway and visits to the Book Catapult and Meet-Cute (where I even found a delightful queer Victorian romance about a bike race?! Hello, intersecting interests compelling me to read something I wouldn't usually! (Victorian; my tastes generally run more contemporary/sci-fi/romantasy).

I came home briefly to do laundry and because I had a ticket for Iron and Wine at the Fox.

Amythyst Kiah opened; lovely deep rootsy contralto. Looking forward to digging into her repertoire now that I'm home for awhile. I wish she'd duetted with Sam on All in Good Time like she would a few days later in LA; ah well.

Then Iron and Wine took the stage; full band for most pieces, along with additional artistry from Manual Cinema. When I tell you all June 2024 was the most immersed I've been in the theatre in decades, this was a prime example. Using a projector and a wide variety of objects, they did some kind of shadow puppetry light play to accompany a good portion of the program, in real time as opposed to the typical running a film strip in the background. I loved seeing that level of interaction between the artists; they were another instrument doing their part in live performance.

Even so, my favorite part of the show was still when Sam let it all fall away and it was his voice and maybe some guitar. Especially so for Flightless Bird, Call It Dreaming, and Each Coming Night. Seeing Sam Beam in a 2800 seat theatre even more enchanting than seeing him in an 18,000 seat amphitheatre; I really do prefer the more intimate venues, and if he ever plays the Freight again, I'll be there. (If he somehow books in somewhere as small as Passim? Goals.)

Iron and Wine setlist )
ursamajor: people on the beach watching the ocean (Default)
I think I am pretty much doomed to never catch up.

a few days in Boston )

And then I get back Sunday afternoon and [personal profile] hyounpark greets me with "I said yes to performing at the Opera House this week, but I don't know if you've been checking your email, but I think they're assuming you're performing too because that's what happens when a married couple joins a choir?" Me: "A who in the what are we doing now?"

I'd thought our season was over. But our choral director got a last-minute call for us to close out a symposium on gun violence prevention and the role the arts can play in community healing, being done in conjunction with one of the operas San Francisco Opera is doing this season (Innocence) about the aftermath of a school shooting. So I went to Boston to recover from tech week and then came back into a surprise tech week, heh. Still very glad I did it, though. Afterwards, us singing in the stairwell of the Opera House, even more ethereal and better acoustics.

In the middle of that tech week, though, we had tickets for Sarah McLachlan at the Greek, and damn, I hope I still have those kind of pipes when I'm her age. I'd been expecting she was just going to do the songs off Fumbling Towards Ecstasy, but she began with a full set before that.

Feist opened: )

Sarah McLachlan setlist )

Somehow, this has become the month of shows - on top of our long-extant plans for SML, we saw The Lehman Trilogy last Saturday with CJ and Elana; for our part in singing in the symposium, we have tickets to go see Innocence next week; I have tickets for Iron and Wine at the Fox at the end of the month. And then my freshman year roommate messaged me a few days ago and was like, "Do you like Vampire Weekend? I've got an extra ticket for their show at the Greek." So definitely keeping busy!

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ursamajor: people on the beach watching the ocean (Default)
she of the remarkable biochemical capabilities!

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