Friday, January 25, 2008
My Dinh Stadium in Hanoi 1/10/08
A newspaper in Hanoi wrote this in French: "The public Hanoi will have the occasion to discover Bob Livingston, a famous American group of music country, which will interpret some of the titles which made its success like Country Rain, Cosmic Cowboy Memory, Ballad of The West and Better Thing To Do. Wishing to share its love for the music country with the Vietnamese music lovers, Bob Livingston, the father of this family of singers, affirmed to want to transmit through its songs a message charged of humanism."
I didn't know any of the songs they mentioned, but no matter, we were in famous Hanoi. So many TV newsreels washed over me as we drove through the city. "The American War!" Somewhere there were bombed out structures preserved as museums, but I never saw them. There was never time for sight seeing, we were on a mission. One thing for sure, we were in a progressive city with Land Cruisers, motorcycles and airplanes whizzing by.
The show at My Dinh Stadium had everything, including a certain amount flying by the seat of the pants (on the part of the promoters) and magic (on the part of the musicians) snatching victory from the jaws of humiliation and eternal damnation to musical hell. In the end the concert, on live national television, went off without a hitch...
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Meanwhile, here are a couple of images...
Hey, I'm back in Austin. Here are a couple images to keep you occupied while I'm thinking of something to say and getting some more photos ready. We have literally hundreds and hundreds...
The first photo is of Tucker and me in front of My Dinh Stadium in Hanoi for the “Hello Vietnam” concert. It was a nationally televised show and there were about 12,000 folks there. There were several other bands on the bill, including Graham and Donna Greene and their hard rock band, Resonance. They were a fun group of cats from Australia (pictured here with Tucker in front of our hotel waiting endlessly for a ride to the gig) and we had a good time hanging out with them before and after the show.
More on all this later...
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Homeward...
I'm in the Tokyo scareport waiting to catch a train to San Francisco. This might take awhile so my second option is to take the plane leaving in an hour or so....
It's been a wild trip: enlightening, grueling, insane, fun, heartbreaking (I broke my guitar and have to take care of it when I get back), but most of all, utterly fascinating. We have met and made hundreds of new friends and discovered much about their culture I never knew. I'll write a last briefing when I get back, get some sleep and assimilate everything.
Sorry I couldn't post more photos but for the last several days, I've been in internet cafes and I can't patch into the computer with my camera. I'll take care of it when I get back.
Thanks for tuning in. See you in Austin!
Love to all,
Bob
It's been a wild trip: enlightening, grueling, insane, fun, heartbreaking (I broke my guitar and have to take care of it when I get back), but most of all, utterly fascinating. We have met and made hundreds of new friends and discovered much about their culture I never knew. I'll write a last briefing when I get back, get some sleep and assimilate everything.
Sorry I couldn't post more photos but for the last several days, I've been in internet cafes and I can't patch into the computer with my camera. I'll take care of it when I get back.
Thanks for tuning in. See you in Austin!
Love to all,
Bob
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
A funny thing happend on the way to Bangkok...
So...
Yesterday we went up north to play at a college, a "master class" with music students. The auditorium was packed when we got there - 200 music students and their teachers sitting quietly and staring. We were getting out our stuff and I opened my guitar case and looked in. I saw a string askew, brushed to one side. Thinking I had a broken string, I picked it up and said as much before I noticed the something out of place on the headstock. Tucker looked over and said, "Oh my god!" To my surprise and horror, I found that the neck of my Gibson J-45 was broken. A big major break, almost in half! What happened I will never know, but there I was about to play a show and no way to do so. The students just looked at me, nobody knowing what to do. It was so weird. Finally, one of the teachers, a young man with long hair, ran to get an Ovation he had in his office and he loaned it to me for the show.
We flew back to Bangkok last night and I spent the next several hours screaming around the city trying to find something to borrow or rent. We went to a music store here called Yellow Mama. The owner loaned me his personal Marton OM-28. It's a stellar guitar and he was ever so nice and really pulled me out of a jam.
Tonight we play a "house concert" for the US Ambassador to Thiland and about 200 guests. Then one more show on Thai TV tomorrow and then....HOME! I'm really, really ready to get back.
I'll try to post something tonight or tomorrow morning.
Onward!
Yesterday we went up north to play at a college, a "master class" with music students. The auditorium was packed when we got there - 200 music students and their teachers sitting quietly and staring. We were getting out our stuff and I opened my guitar case and looked in. I saw a string askew, brushed to one side. Thinking I had a broken string, I picked it up and said as much before I noticed the something out of place on the headstock. Tucker looked over and said, "Oh my god!" To my surprise and horror, I found that the neck of my Gibson J-45 was broken. A big major break, almost in half! What happened I will never know, but there I was about to play a show and no way to do so. The students just looked at me, nobody knowing what to do. It was so weird. Finally, one of the teachers, a young man with long hair, ran to get an Ovation he had in his office and he loaned it to me for the show.
We flew back to Bangkok last night and I spent the next several hours screaming around the city trying to find something to borrow or rent. We went to a music store here called Yellow Mama. The owner loaned me his personal Marton OM-28. It's a stellar guitar and he was ever so nice and really pulled me out of a jam.
Tonight we play a "house concert" for the US Ambassador to Thiland and about 200 guests. Then one more show on Thai TV tomorrow and then....HOME! I'm really, really ready to get back.
I'll try to post something tonight or tomorrow morning.
Onward!
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
In search of a foot massage...
Hey! I'm in northeast Thailand in an internet cafe off a side-street. The name of the city is Kohn Kaen. Cars, motorcycles and wild laughing out on the street. We played today and the day before and the day before, etc, etc. I haven't been able to post anything because here in Thailand, at least at the hotels we've been staying at, the internet is astronomical and I haven't made it to an internet cafe because we haven't had a second to spare.
We go to Mahasarakham tomorrow morning early early to play at the university there. We're doing all these shows with local musicians and videotaping it all. The musicians played a traditional song in A minor and I started singing The Thill is Gone over it. Great fun.
I ate REAL Thai food two for days in a row now....
Nightmare experience: both Tucker and I sent out our laundry at the Intercontinental in Bangkok and we were still thinking (moneywise) in Vietnamese dong instead of Vietnamese bhat (which we were used to for two weeks) and our bills for a few shirts and socks was over $100 for both of us! It nearly killed me and I am determined to wear everything three to four times as long to get the most out of it.
After tomorrow's show, we go back to Bangkok and play at a party a the US Ambassador Eric John's house. I have found these "official" parties to be great fun. We'll be playing with some top notch musicians. East meets west again and again...
I have to go, this place is closing. I'm getting a foot massage next door...
Thanks for tuning in!
We go to Mahasarakham tomorrow morning early early to play at the university there. We're doing all these shows with local musicians and videotaping it all. The musicians played a traditional song in A minor and I started singing The Thill is Gone over it. Great fun.
I ate REAL Thai food two for days in a row now....
Nightmare experience: both Tucker and I sent out our laundry at the Intercontinental in Bangkok and we were still thinking (moneywise) in Vietnamese dong instead of Vietnamese bhat (which we were used to for two weeks) and our bills for a few shirts and socks was over $100 for both of us! It nearly killed me and I am determined to wear everything three to four times as long to get the most out of it.
After tomorrow's show, we go back to Bangkok and play at a party a the US Ambassador Eric John's house. I have found these "official" parties to be great fun. We'll be playing with some top notch musicians. East meets west again and again...
I have to go, this place is closing. I'm getting a foot massage next door...
Thanks for tuning in!
Saturday, January 12, 2008
Halong...has this been going on?
We played tonight in Halong Bay at the Halong College of Culture. There was a packed house of verry appreciative and enthusiastic students and teachers. Have I mentioned the fact that we have had a packed house every where we have played on this tour? Once again we played with Vietnamese musicians. One hilarious thing is the past two nights we played Oh Susanna with them. Apparently, that is one American folk song everyone knows. They really love the tune but don't have a clue as to the words. I said I'd send them along when I get back to ol' Texas.
We've shot about 15 hours of video so far. We played two nights ago at the Welcome Vietnam festival and on live TV and they are going to give us a copy of the show. They also filmed tonight's show for TV so we'll have plenty of footage to add to our continuing docudrama of the flaming exploits of Bob & Tucker...
Tomorrow morning we are going to take a boat ride in the bay. You need to Google Halong Bay, you won't believe what you are going to see. Limestone islands covered my the deepest green jut up out of the water into the sky. It looks surreal and the boat ride takes you between these formations. There is a legend how these amazing peaks and cliffs came to be. Something about a dragon fighting another monster and water spirits and land spirits fighting it out. The dragon was cut into a hundred pieces and scattered in the bay and that's what we see today. We'll be filming a video out on the water.
So I better get to bed, we have to get up very early and be on the water by 8AM. We're going back to Hanoi tomorrow after the trip and have a long drive ahead of us. Tucker and I are both about to drop from exhaustion. We literally haven't stopped moving since we got hear and haven't had a day off. BUT...YAY - we have tomorrow night off and fly to Bangkok on Monday. It looks as though the schedule has changed drastically because of the Thai King's sister's death and the enforced mourning period. But they have filled in the canceled shows with a lot of university programs and we're playing for the US Ambassador and a lot of guests. I'll post the updated schedule and some photos tomorrow.
If you like what you are reading on Bob's Blog, why not comment...one way or another. Let us know you're out there or send an email to Bob@TexasMusic.org
OK, this is really it. 'night!
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
No Rest For the Wicked...
We've been so busy I haven't had time to write much on this blog lately. I have a few minutes before we have to go to the next action packed adventure, so here goes...
The people of Hanoi are really wonderful and I like this city a lot. Hanoi will celebrate it's 1,000th anniversary soon. It's the cultural center of Vietnam and the capitol.
Night before last we played a few songs in a demonstration session with some very traditional Vietnamese musicians. There was a singer and two musicians including a 90 year old man that played a type of archaic music that was only played for kings and the royal families hundreds of years ago and is lately making a resurgence led on by this group. The woman singer is one of the most famous in Vietnam and they explained that the music was hard to understand or appreciate unless you were of royal blood. Maybe I was Prince Roberto in a past life because I enjoyed it - it was fascinating and strange. Very quiet and somber with a strong atmosphere. The old gentleman was the string player. I hope I'm still able to play at that age... We also heard another trio that played traditional music but was more lively. There was a sort of hammered dulcimer, a two stringed instrument called a "moon" and a mono-stringed instrument that the woman player played very gracefully. I'm posting a couple of photos here so you can get an idea of what the instruments were like.
Yesterday we had a master class and the Hanoi National Conservatory of Music and a performance in the theater of Hanoi University. We invited some students up to play with us a few guitarists and some traditional players too.
Tonight we play a festival with seven other bands from all over the world. It's in a stadium and we're told there will be 25,000 there. it's also on country-wide live TV with a potential audience of 20 million! I'll let you know how it goes.
We've so slammed with shows, workshops and demonstrations, we haven't seen any tourist attractions or museums yet. We head out for the Viet Bac College of Culture and Arts in Thai Nguyen tomorrow morning...
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