WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14-15, 2009 –
TRAVELING TO KUMAMOTO, JAPAN WITH HONKY TONK TAILGATE PARTY (MARK WILLS, TRENT
WILLMON AND JEFF BATES:
Early call this morning. Got up at 4 am and departed for
the airport at 6:30 am. This is the 21st Anniversary of the
Country Gold Festival in Kumamoto, Japan. It will be much different this year
than in years past. Throughout the history of the event, we have always
brought 4 – sometimes 5 – entertainers from the U.S. to participate along with
Charlie Nagatani (our promoter) and his band the Cannonballs. It has always
been the best festival I work with. Because of the economy, we will only take
one “group” this year – Honky Tonk Tailgate Party. It’s three artists – Mark
Wills, Trent Willmon, and Jeff Bates – all using one band. I worked with this
group in Mexico and Iraq last year only Ray Scott was a member and Jeff was
not with them. Great group of guys and very entertaining show. The other
groups are all local Japanese – of course there’s Charlie and his Cannonballs,
plus a popular Japanese country band and a Japanese bluegrass band. Like they
did last year, there will be a “local band” competition on Saturday and two
winners will be selected to perform at the Country Gold Festival on Sunday.
Mark was flying out of Atlanta and one of his other guys
was flying out of another city and we were all supposed to meet in DC for the
flight to Narita 13 ½ hour trip. From Narita we fly to Fukuoka – another one
hour flight – and then a two hour bus ride to Kumamoto. At least this year,
we don’t have a staff meeting at midnight when we arrive at the hotel. Our
flight was an hour late leaving and our layover in DC was only 2 hours if we
had arrived on time. The weather was horrible – cloudy and raining and but
it wasn’t as turbulent taking off as I had anticipated. I fell asleep for a
few minutes in flight but dropping out of the sky at a high rate of speed
quickly woke me up. Fortunately, it only lasted for a few minutes. We landed
just in time to board our next flight and Mark and Keith had both already
arrived at the departure gate.
I spent the entire time in DC fighting with T-Mobile.
From my last report, you know that I was switching to AT&T as soon as I
returned from Korea. I went the Saturday after I got back, purchased their
newest Blackberry, checked to make sure I could get all my “international
services” and LOVED the new blackberry. On Monday I called AT&T to have my
international services turned on only to learn that they do not have an
“unlimited international data plan” anymore. I use my blackberry
consistently for my email and I get about 300 a day. I was going to be
charged per megabite and even if I didn’t OPEN the email, it counted because
it came into my blackberry. My bill would have been thousands of dollars a
month. The salesman who sold it to me called corporate and tried to convince
them to sell me the unlimited package but no luck. So, one week later, I took
the blackberry back to AT&T and I’m back with T-Mobile – and having the same
problems that made me leave them in the first place. The minute I leave my
“home tower”, my email stops coming in. It is so frustrating. When I get
back, I’m staying on the phone with them until it is fixed. Can’t travel like
I do and not have the services I’m paying for. T-Mobile is coming out with
the 9300 Gemini next month which is 3G and will work in Korea and Japan. I
rented a blackberry and a cell phone that will work in Japan this time.
The flight to Narita is completely full. Since the only
thing I had all day was a Starbucks soy latte at the airport, I was forced to
eat on the flight. Food was as bad as ever on United. I watched a movie that
my daughter recommended but didn’t find it as great as she said. “Hangover”
was the title and it was about a bachelor party in Vegas. My video monitor
kept fading in and out which made it even more frustrating.
There was very little turbulence on the flight. A couple
of the flight attendants remembered me from my numerous trips to Kuwait! We
landed on time and had to wait in a very long line at Immigration. Picked up
our luggage and gear and everything made it. We had bag tags showing
everything was checked through to Fukuoka and one of the agents at baggage
claim told us where to go to give them our luggage. Turns out it is a
“check-in” counter for ANA. Our tickets are booked as “through fares” and
our flight on ANA is listed as a United Airlines flight with a UA flight
number. ANA immediately began fighting with me about the number of pieces we
could check. They finally agreed that it is 2 per person which is exactly
what we had. Then they refused to let our musician carry his guitar on in a
soft case. They said the overhead bins were too small. I argued and argued
but they were going to make me purchase another TICKET for him to carry it
on!!! They finally brought out this padded box and we put the guitar in it.
Then they told us that our things probably wouldn’t go on the plane with us
tonight! That did not go over well with me at all.
When we got on the plane, the overhead bins were longer
than anything on U.S. airlines! I was taking a picture of them because ANA is
a sponsor of the festival. The flight attendant told me I couldn’t do that
and I just said, “Oh yes I can” and kept taking the photos. Then she told me
I had to turn off my telephone. I told her when they closed the aircraft
doors, I’d turn it off. Not off to a good start.
I am “Global” on United which is the highest ranking you
can have. I reserved an aisle seat on the ANA flight but when I got my
boarding pass, it was a middle seat. ANA refused to change it for me so I was
stuck for 2 hours in a middle seat. Let’s just say that the ANA sponsor for
our event and United Airlines will be getting some emails from me tomorrow!
All our luggage and gear made it to Fukuoka and Charlie
and his staff were waiting for us. There is a film crew here from Field Guide
Media and they are filming this year’s event for inclusion in a documentary.
I’ve been talking to the guy for months so it was nice to finally meet him.
The bus ride from Fukuoka to Kumamoto was 2 hours. At
least this year we don’t have a staff meeting as soon as we arrive. The
promoter always has burgers and sandwiches waiting for us in the hotel lobby.
Not so, this time. They were “late”. Everyone was very tired and very
hungry. I’m very worried about this year’s Country Gold because none of our
“good staff” is returning from the past 21 years. It’s very “different” and
so far, not in a good way. Will keep my fingers crossed that things improve.
It’s after 3 am for me because I’ve been answering
hundreds of emails. Going to bed for a couple of hours now! More tomorrow.
Jude
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16TH – SIGHTSEEING IN
KUMAMOTO:
Got in bed at 4:30 am and had to get up at 6:00 am if I
was going to get my jog in. Pretty important to exercise when I’m working
this hard and getting very little sleep. It was “hard” to do though. But, a
truly beautiful day. Weather was perfect. I ran along the river where I
always jog.
Met in the lobby at 10:15 am and went to Suijenzi Park
and then to Kumamoto Castle (my 36th visit to both – I can GIVE the
tours!). Because the weather is so beautiful, it was the perfect day. The
group is so in awe of Japan and really enjoyed the sightseeing. We had a
traditional Japanese lunch at the park and they loved it. Trent eats
ANYTHING. He stopped and purchased “Horse Jerky” and then bought a bag of
“crabs”. They were tiny and he said they tasted like potato chips. YUCK.
As I mentioned, none of our wonderful interpreters are with us this year.
Charlie had a gentleman from Kumamoto City Government with us and he was going
to give us the history of the park and castle as we walked around. When
Charlie introduced me to him, I immediately noticed that he was not fluent in
English and asked Charlie about that. He said he can’t have “conversational
English and can only tell the history of the places we would be visiting. He
was a very nice man but it would have been better to have someone who spoke
English so he could answer our questions.
Got back to the hotel at around 3 pm and I went in search of the Sushi Bar
that Keiko always takes us too. It’s gone. Korean Bar-b-que there now.
L
Some of the guys went with a friend of Charlie’s to buy kimonos while I worked
in my room. Then at 5:30 pm, we met in the lobby to go to dinner. I took
them to a sushi restaurant that has lots of other things, too. Some of the
less adventurous went to McDonalds, as usual. Tonight Trent ate raw horse and
cooked horse. He actually liked it.
We went to Charlie’s nightclub for his Welcome Party. He
and the Cannonballs sang first and then called the Japanese country music band
up to perform. After they sang, one member of the bluegrass band got up with
them and performed. Then Trent, Jeff and Mark sang 3 songs each. It is so
“strange” this year not to have my 4 artists with me. The “jam session” ended
at 9 pm and I bolted for the door. Have been in my room answering emails
since that time. J
Going to make a real effort to go to bed by midnight,
sleep until 4 am and then get up and start working on emails that came in from
the U.S.
Jude
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17TH – SOUND CHECK
DAY:
I planned to sleep for 5 hours and then get up and work
before jogging. But I woke up after 4 hours and decided to start answering
emails. Did that until 6:30 and then went jogging. It looked like it might
rain but never did. Another beautiful morning and long run along the river.
Came back and showered, answered more emails, had
breakfast and was in the lobby at 10 am for our departure. Usually, we have
two buses dedicated just for the entertainers from America. Since we have
such a small group this year, the Bluegrass band was riding on the bus with
us. When we started to depart the hotel, they told Seiya that we had to
stop by the airport and pick up their other musicians. We were already late
leaving and I knew we didn’t have time to make any stops. Seiya arranged
for a taxi to take them so that we didn’t have to make a stop. Would have
been nice if someone had “communicated” that this was the plan beforehand!
Arrived at the venue and the stage was set and waiting
for HTTP to sound check. The Green Room was another matter. The caterers
were two guys that I had never seen before and they were not set up and
ready for the group. They had coffee – no creamer. They had drinks – no
ice. No napkins. The food that they prepared was good, just very
unorganized to begin with.
Sound check finished right on time and we departed for
the volcano. Only the 2nd time in 21 years that I have been able
to go up there. It is still spectacular but when I went the first time in
1989, it was spewing smoke and ash and you could see fire down in the
crater. This time you could only see green, boiling water. It was cool and
windy but not as bad as I remember the first time being.
Left there and went back to the city. I hooked Mark,
Trent, and Kevin up with Tim for some “adventure eating” while I took a few
of the guys out for Italian at Angelo’s. Our meals were terrific as usual.
After eating, I walked around the Ginza to two
department stores looking for baby clothes but never found anything. The
economy hit Kumamoto hard and so many stores have closed. Have been back
in the room working for about an hour and hope to go to bed soon.
Forgot to mention something cool in my report
yesterday. When we had lunch at the Park, I went to the restroom when we
finished. I opened the door to the ladies room, and the light came on by
itself and there was a pair of slippers sitting on a mat right in front of
the door as I opened it. Then, the lid to the toilet lifted automatically.
It was way cool. The toilet seat itself was heated and there was one of
those little “modesty” contraptions built in. This machine makes the noise
of flushing water so that no one can hear you. So….if they can make a
toilet where the lid automatically raises when you enter the bathroom, why
can’t they make one where the toilet seat LOWERS when you walk in? Would
make lots of wives very happy!
Tomorrow is the concert and we fly home on Monday.
Very short visit to Japan.
Jude