Posts tagged The Beatles: Rock Band

The Vegas Vacation Part IV: The Beatles LOVE

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FUN FACT: I lived in Orlando for almost a decade and never once went to see the Cirque Du Soleil – La Nouba show at Downtown Disney.  I always meant to, but since it was always there I assumed I would just “get around to it” at some point.  Getting around to it never happened, I now live in South Florida, and I only just got to see my first Cirque performance.

While in Las Vegas, we saw The Beatles LOVE at the Mirage.

So, why would we choose The Beatles themed show as our first foray into these shows?  Simple: Shannon loves The Beatles. If there is anything that really proves that she was born about two decades too late it’s her fascination with the music of George, John, Paul and Ringo.  Living in our generation, though, has allowed her countless hours of The Beatles: Rock Band, so, in my opinion, it all balances out.

I am familiar with and have a layman’s knowledge of the Beatles and their music.  Who doesn’t?  Growing up, though, my house wasn’t the most musically inclined environment.  I remember my mom constantly reminding me that Elvis was the greatest and I recalled her not exhibiting much enthusiasm for the Fab Four.  When I saw her for Thanksgiving last month, I asked her why she didn’t like the Beatles.  Her face grimaced at the mention of their name and she explained to me that “The Beatles thought all American girls were twits and looked down on them.  They were very pompous.”

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why there is chocolate and vanilla.

Meanwhile, back in Las Vegas: I got up early one morning and walked from the Luxor to Tix 4 Tonight (the Vegas equivalent of New York’s TKTS) to snag our seats for the show.  Tickets for where we planned to sit usually run about $130, but we scored a great pair for $95 each.  Needless to say, for almost $200 worth of tickets I was really expecting something spectacular.

Happily, The Beatles LOVE lived up to the price of admission.

The show is presented in a theater in the round format where the audience surrounds the stage and everyone watching is presented with the entertainment from differing angles.  It’s hard to describe the layout and we weren’t allowed to take pictures.  So the photo you see here doesn’t exist:
The Beatles LOVE

As you can see we had GREAT seats.  We were dead center and high enough up to see the full show.  If you ever go see a Cirque show, don’t worry about being close to the stage.  If you’re TOO close, you will miss out on the variety of things taking place during the performance.

There is so much to describe from The Beatles LOVE that I could write an entire blog dedicated strictly to the details: the sound system in the theater, the retracting drapery screens, the lighting, the fiber optic rain, the remote control props, the break away sets, the shadow puppetry, the giant cloud sheet in the audience, the cool disappearing effect of the giant cloud sheet in the audience… it goes on and on.

Two of the most delightful elements of the show came in form of the performers and the music.

The performers are a site to behold.  Just watching the focus on their faces as they perform feats achieved through years of near perfect physical perfection and coordination is something that can mesmerize even the most stoic observer.  Looking at the ripped muscles on their physique immediately made me feel like I had somehow failed human evolution because I wasn’t as awesome as them.  The dancing, the webbing and sheer acts of acrobatic amazement made the show something you just couldn’t take your eyes off.  I mean, they even had rollerblading on half pipes live on stage, people!

The music was cleverly selected.  Did I know all of it?  Nope.  THAT is the genius to it, though.  The writers and creators didn’t just go the easy route with the dozens of pop hits to choose from.  The music of The Beatles is an eclectic mix spanning decades, and a number of selected tunes were obviously during the experimental drugged up years.  The song choices played directly to the narrative and worked in concert with the stage presentation to make you feel carried along in an experience.  It was an audio and visual bonanza that serves less to tell a story and more to create a feeling.

If the other Cirque du Soleil shows are HALF of what The Beatles LOVE was, I may have to take the drive back to Orlando sooner rather than later. :)

So I spent the past 48 hours…

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Slacking.

I tend to be “on” all the time.  Always “on” a project on “on” the job with something I am working on “on” my mind.  Due to my workaholic nature, though, it is very hard to turn things off when I want to.  The past two days were a stint at being rebellious… I did little more than play video games and watch TV.

The Good? I had fun with my wife.  She and I played Resident Evil 5 co-op mode.  This was a blast since (for Christmas) we go a second Xbox 360.  Now we can play in the living room (56 inch 1080p DLP) and the bedroom (42 inch 1080p LCD) against each other while playing video games.  In games where Shannon tends to get upset (i.e. anything that is not a puzzle game) she tends to hit the person playing next to her and yell a lot.  My bruise-free arm rejoiced in the separate room gaming.

We also played The Beatles: Rock Band – which was fun for me and REALLY fun for her.  She’s a true Beatles fan through an though.  I like the band and the music, but I was never really into The Beatles.  By the end of the night, though, my voice was shot from singing songs I didn’t know they had sung.

The Bad? I came home Thursday night with one of my infamous lists that I tend to write of things to get done over the weekend.  I have, as of this morning, completed 2 of the 17 things I wrote out.  That means that I have today/tonight to get the rest done.

I got up at 8:00 AM this morning, took a shower, got dressed, let the dog out, and spent a couple of hours working on one of my consulting gigs.  Shannon (who could sleep through an earthquake) is still napping off a night of sixties music and drumming mayhem.

And so it goes.

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