{"id":2039,"date":"2010-05-12T05:09:09","date_gmt":"2010-05-12T10:09:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nicomuhly.com\/?p=2039"},"modified":"2010-05-12T05:15:39","modified_gmt":"2010-05-12T10:15:39","slug":"latvia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nicomuhly.com\/news\/2010\/latvia\/","title":{"rendered":"Latvia"},"content":{"rendered":"
The end of the tour was marked by a series of really intense travel negotiations. The volcano is still erupting, and while some airlines seem to have figured out ways around it, others are involved in strange compromises and re-routings. We all split up after a show in Uppsala, in Sweden, and three of us went on to play a show in Latvia, and the rest went on 24-28 hour journeys to Iceland. It’s all very old-fashioned.<\/p>\n
Latvia! I had never been there. My first piano teacher was Latvian, and I never really got a sense of what her life had been like before she came to America. What little I knew was her shouting down the hall to her husband or talking on the phone to her son or organizing piles of paper in a funny language as I arrived. In any event, this place was fabulous. We were playing in Ventspils, a Hanseatic-league town about two hours from R\u00c4\u00abga. Everybody was so-o-o-o-o nice and fiendishly well-read and curious and friendly and everything you want people to be like (occasionally, you turn up in a town and the people involved in putting on the show are wary, suspicious, unimpressed & opaque). We had a point-person with the very Dick Traceyesque name of Micks Magone (wasn’t that actually the name of Madonna’s character from that movie?). The added bonus was that this completely out of control great performance-art-cum-electro-pop band called Instrumenti<\/a> played a short set before us:<\/p>\n