Except for the afternoon filk concerts I spent pretty much all day
Saturday talking with people. Mainly the lovely Moira Stern (who should
comment to tell me whether I should use her LJ ID, real name, or both
interchangably), whose concert came after mine. With a concert harp and
three kids, she certainly needed help gear-wrangling, and it made a good
excuse to talk.
Had dinner with the Rubins, after which I hooked up with Moira again (we
were at the same restaurant in the hotel). After that I party-hopped,
which made for a couple more good conversations and a fair amount of tasty
stuff containing ethanol. Trying to be gluten-free is annoying.
The concert went well; the Wolfling was trailing the beat a little -- we
need to work on that -- but I was mostly on. It was all stuff I've been
singing recently, so I was actually able to look at the audience a
little. Tearful hug from Moira by way of a review. We really should have
swapped sets; she needed time to tune the harp. And it's really hard to
follow QV, or start one's set after one has been crying.
No, I'm not sorry about that.
My setlist, cobbled together mere minutes before the concert, consisted
of:
1
The Toolmakers (3:06)
2
The River (4:00)
3
Wheelin' (3:15)
4
Keep the Dream Alive (4:18)
5
Quiet Victories (12:00)
Side note on gear: I took my notebook up on stage, which let me jam my
watch fob into one of the rings where I could see it. Very useful. I
found myself wishing that I'd taken one of the cup-holders, though.
I find the fact that I spent essentially the entire con as the
Middle-Sized Bear
to be deeply odd. I have noticed that I've been spending
more time talking to people, and much less time in programming. And I've
noticed a tendency recently to spend a lot of my time talking to one
person during a con, usually somebody I want to know better. (It was
cflute at Baycon, for example, and
joecoustic at
OVFF.) I love it, but it does mean that I get to meet fewer new
people. (On the gripping hand, I've always had trouble meeting
new people.)
On the whole, I'd rather spend my time deepening old friendships and
making new ones than sitting around in a circle waiting for a good opening
to slip a song into. Swapping songs with a small number of people is a
lot of fun, though; I'm not sure how to find a good balance there.