Friday I was feeling under the weather, but it was a relaxed day of working at home, and then Saturday I had a very relaxed morning, so I was feeling much better when it was time to meet Tiffy downtown. It was a sunny day, but not that warm. After lunch at the Globe, we walked to the Hamel Music Center to buy tickets for the Bach St. Matthew's Passion, but apparently the venue doesn't open until an hour before the show starts. We were afraid of the tickets selling out, so we walked to the Union, and I bought them online. We passed Calvary Lutheran Hapel on the way.
The Red Gym is being renovated, and Tiffy noted that it looked like a Frank Lloyd Wright design, so I took a picture to prove it to you.

We hung out at the Union for a while, half watching a basketball tournament game on the giant TV in the Rathskeller and then moving to another area overlooking the lake. Eventually we made our way to her sister's apartment building, then as we were walking back down State Street to find some dinner, we ran into Travalon, his high school buddy, and his buddy's daughter, who were at the high school basketball tournament. They had already eaten, so they didn't join us. We thought of going to a new Japanese restaurant where the late, lamented Dubai used to be, but the music was so loud in there that we walked back out and went to our favorite Chinese restaurant on State Street. We got to the Hamel Music Center during the talk about the program beforehand, and to my surprise I saw two faculty members from my department, Kathbert, and the woman who used to run the book study I was going to on Thursday nights. The program was amazing, and all the focus on innocent Jesus being accused of crimes he didn't commit and then sentenced to death made me think of these Venezuelan refugees who were accused of being gang members because they had tattoos of their favorite soccer team or their grandmother's date of death or whatever and then being sent to a horrible prison in El Salvador. When people suffer like that, so does Jesus. He would have been closer to the prisoners in the slaves ships back in the day than to the people who enslaved them. Jesus is always with the downtrodden.
The musicians in this performance were extraordinary. Every member of the choir had at least a little solo, and we were amazed to see two oboe players playing these odd, curved instruments with a bell like a trumpet at the end. There was no explanation in the program of what they were, but they sounded good. The performance was so long that we didn't get out until after 11, and then we had to walk back down State Street, and then I had to drive home, so you can see why I didn't blog yesterday.
It may be Daylight Saving Time now, but it's also Central DuoLingo Bragging Time:
Today the bishop was at Mass, so it ran really long when I wasn't feeling that well. Also, Tiffy wondered if we didn't want to go to brunch, since she hadn't heard from us. We went back downtown to join her for brunch at the Stuffed Olive, where our poor waitress had had to work until 3 am and then get up and work the brunch shift. Yikes! I like these neon designs in the bar.
Travalon and I split an alcoholic Shamrock Shaken. Isn't it beautiful?
It was tasty too. Unlike yesterday, today was very rainy, so we waited a bit to see if the rain would subside, but it didn't. Eventually we braved the rain, and we passed an arcade bar that Travalon had a free play card for, so he played for a few minutes while Tiffy and I talked on the top floor of her sister's apartment building. When Travalon returned, Tiffy and I asked him pretty much in unison, "How did you do?" and he said, "There were a lot of dead frogs," since he was playing Frogger. Then she headed home, and we stopped by Cherokee Marsh because my old coworker who lives up there said there were pelicans there. There were indeed dozens of them, but Travalon didn't have his good camera, and anyway it was too wet to get out and take a photo.
In the evening I went to the Slow Irish Session. There had been a lot of back and forth about this with my band, because our leader wanted us to get together with the Ukrainian accordionist, but Hardingfele is the only one who could communicate with him, since Russian is her first language, and she couldn't get a hold of him. Our leader wanted me to forego the Irish session to go to band practice with the accordionist, but since there was no accordionist, the whole band came to the Irish session. It was like I was with all my buddies, because my Irish teacher who plays the concertina and the woman with the very Irish name and the curly red hair who plays the flute and tin whistle were there too. We were just missing my Shamrock Club buddy, but I don't know if she even plays an instrument. You know me, I can't let a session go by without requesting "Drowsy Maggie," and I did really well on all the other tunes too, except a wonderful tune called "King of the Fairies" that I couldn't seem to master. Maybe next time...