2024-Oct-16, Wednesday

dorchadas: (Cowboy Bebop Spike Gun Bang)
Classic example of Man Suffers Through 30 Minutes of Jazz Before Realizing He Just Likes Cowboy Bebop.

(That's a lie, I like Bohren & der Club of Gore too)

Last night was the Cowboy Bebop Big Band concert at the Athenaeum! I heard about it thanks to the anime club and immediately went out and bought tickets up on the balcony (at [instagram.com profile] sashagee's request) and my parents came and picked up Laila after her gymnastics class so we could go. When I got home she wasn't feeling well and had apparently been napping for four hours until right before I got home, but she had gotten ready in going-out clothes and after I sat down and drank a glass of water, we called a Lyft and went to Farm Bar.

Food pictures )

We finished with twenty minutes left and a five-minute walk before our show, thanks to Farm Bar actually implementing interesting functionality into their QR code menu instead of just uploading an annoying-to-navigate PDF of the menu and calling it a day. The menu lets you thumbs-up, thumbs-down, or heart items and you can even leave reviews on them. Relevant to the topic, you can always pay through the website, and that's what we did so we weren't stuck there like when I've been to the Gage in the past before going to the symphony and had to wait half an hour or longer for the check.

We walked over the Athenaeum, took our seats, and then waited twenty minutes for the show to start, around fifteen minutes past the start time. That's jazz, I guess. But it was worth the wait:
2024-10-15 - Bebop Big Band

I was initially worried when they started with actual audio from the screen, since I was used to Distant Worlds where they just played silent video to accompany the music, but they did it for a reason--they had a progression to the video through the main story of Cowboy Bebop and played the songs to accompany them. They started with "Tank!" of course, did character introductions for each member of the Bebop's crew, like "Bad Dog No Biscuits" for Ein and "Too Good Too Bad" for Jet Black, and then songs for some of the crew's escapades. Through it, some people came out and did some of the songs--the host sang "Call Me Call Me", Wendee Lee (original voice actress for Faye Valentine) came out on stage to sing "Don't Bother None", and one of the saxophone players sang "The Real Folk Blues", though sadly they did not have a full chorus to sing "Green Bird" so they just played it on the screen. They ended with "What Planet is This?" as the encore and then we left. It had much more flow to it than Distant Worlds or Symphony of the Goddesses, where they just kind of play some of the greatest his songs in whatever order the program designer thinks they need to be played.

Shout out to the lead saxophonist for doing most of "Space Lion" as a solo with computer-added reverb. Emoji happy flower

At intermission I was actually sad that we were up on the balcony, because while we had a great view of everyone, there were some interactions between the host and members of the band (particularly the drummer on the left) that we couldn't see. We had a good view of the screen, but if I wanted to watch Cowboy Bebop I could just watch it--I can't get the interaction at home. What we did see was fun, though, and I'd recommend the show if they come to your city. I'm not sure how long they've been around, though they said this was the first time they'd ever been in Chicago. Hopefully we can see them again, maybe with a better location.