On Wednesday night, I was at a Qawwali performance at the Statler Hotel. It was one of CP's gigs, so I reported to work at 4:30pm. We finished loading all the equipment back at WSH at 1am. Whew!
We loaded the truck with tons of sound equipment, including some new EVs that CP is testing out. We droved into the Statler parking lot; I "borrowed" a cart, and we rolled most of the equipment into the auditorium. The stage was re-done so there's not as much space, but the stage can be mechanically lifted and lowered so that helped a lot.
The performers arrived after 7:30pm; the show was supposed to begin at 8pm so sound check was hurried and incomplete. But there were a lot of people waiting outside, so the PSA let them in. I think people enjoyed the music. I think a lot of them just wanted to learn more about it, so that was cool. The lady next to me kept on asking me questions, but thanked me before she left for answering them. That felt nice.
The performers were Farid Ayaz Qawwal and Brothers. It was a man who was around 76 years old, his brothers, and his 4 sons. They were enthusiastic and kept on encouraging the audience to clap. They sang some songs that I even recognized, like Mere Piya Ghare Aya. I also found it rather funny that they somehow managed to slip each other paan during the performance. The lead vocalist got rather emotional, and sweated a lot. From the heat and excitement prolly. All and all, cool experience.
Then we had to strike everything. That took awhile. But we loaded everything in the truck and drove to WSH., only to find a Cornell Dining truck blocking the loading dock. So we had to look around for the baker who apparently had the keys. We walked in this room where all these freshly made muffins and breads were just made (at 12:30am). It smelled so good! Anyway, Pete finally went into the truck and found the keys already there. So he moved the Dining truck, which was surprisingly an automatic. We loaded all the equipment back into the office, and called it a night at 1am.
I woke up the next morning; muscle sore. Oh, and then I had spinning too. I sweated so much, yuck. My hand towel had also fell, but the songs were fun with S Club 7 and whatnot.
Then we went to the Blast into the Past dinner at Alice Cook House. Sheila and I won tie dye shirts. She rolled an 11, I rolled a 7. Oh she brings such good luck!
Afterwards, I went to the Islam Awareness Week event; a talk by Ahmed Younis in Goldwin Smith. He's a national director for the Musclim Public Affairs Committee, and has been working on a national level for Muslim civil liberties. He's been on several televison programs like the O'Reilly show and CNBC programs. We talked about Muslim integration into American society, and the need for it in order to be a part of the counter terrorism movement. We also talked about the Danish cartoons and the Dubai company port situation.
After the talk, it was hailing, snowing, raining. I was lucky to be not blinded as hail went behind my glasses. I prolly looked like a drenched cat when I got back to Casca.
THEN, we watched the Olympics: Ladies's Figure Skating, Long Program. Wow, I would not have expected the results. Arakawa of Japan won gold. Her performanced wasn't one of those "one-in-a-lifetime" free skates, but it was good enough with no falls to capture the top spot on the podium. I was happy for her, but also felt sort of sad for Irina Slutskaya of Russia. It was probably her last chance, but I admire her work and courage.