http://machi-tobaye.livejournal.com/ (
machi-tobaye.livejournal.com) wrote in
tampered2008-06-19 05:11 pm
Log - Completed
When: Thursday evening
Rating: G
Characters: Machi Tobaye (
machi_tobaye and Gren With-The-Long-Name (
notapreacher)
Summary: Machi comes to hear some jazz at Lux.
Log: Machi isn't sure if he's technically allowed in here. Bars aren't generally hospitable to small people like him, even when they're quiet, seated off to one side and don't try to order alcohol. However, Machi's at home at Lux - the sounds of the jazz band draws him in. Lux is far nicer than the club in Borginia his career started at, but that can be said about any place that followed any sort of standard of hygiene.
Still, it's a calm feeling of nostalgia as he listens. The band's better than most, then again, for a place with chandeliers that's hardly surprising. He doesn't really watch the band, just listens, eyes going unfocused behind his dark glasses. He turns his coffee around and around in his hands, not really paying attention to it.
The saxophone surprises him. There's sweetness and longing in those notes. Machi doesn't play wind instruments, wonders if it's different, breathing your soul into your tool rather than striking it softly. When the set's over, Machi stands up carefully. He wants to play that piano, but he doesn't have permission, of course. So instead he just lingers nearby.
Rating: G
Characters: Machi Tobaye (
Summary: Machi comes to hear some jazz at Lux.
Log: Machi isn't sure if he's technically allowed in here. Bars aren't generally hospitable to small people like him, even when they're quiet, seated off to one side and don't try to order alcohol. However, Machi's at home at Lux - the sounds of the jazz band draws him in. Lux is far nicer than the club in Borginia his career started at, but that can be said about any place that followed any sort of standard of hygiene.
Still, it's a calm feeling of nostalgia as he listens. The band's better than most, then again, for a place with chandeliers that's hardly surprising. He doesn't really watch the band, just listens, eyes going unfocused behind his dark glasses. He turns his coffee around and around in his hands, not really paying attention to it.
The saxophone surprises him. There's sweetness and longing in those notes. Machi doesn't play wind instruments, wonders if it's different, breathing your soul into your tool rather than striking it softly. When the set's over, Machi stands up carefully. He wants to play that piano, but he doesn't have permission, of course. So instead he just lingers nearby.

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After the set he heads over toward the bar for something to drink: playing's thirsty work, especially with this type of music. Being part of this band keeps him on his musical toes; it's a bigger variety and he likes it that way. There are only so many soulful sax pieces out there and sometimes... well, sometimes it's nice to be able to fade into the crowd.
Armed with his standard club soda with a twist, he nods to the... is that a kid? It's hard to tell.
It's also hard to tell if the kid can see him. Those dark glasses are either for looks or protection, and he'll wait and see which it is before he says the wrong thing.
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Machi wants to talk to every piano. And this one probably has a lot of stories.
His hands are still sore from the curse yesterday. He flexes them, reaches them out. Is touching an instrument case like he can't actually see it, habit, to see with his fingers.
His dark glasses take up half his face and cover what little expression he may have. Hard to tell what he's thinking.
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"Can I... help you with something?" He shakes the dark -- and right now, annoying -- mane of hair back from his face, trying to be as polite as possible without stepping on anyone's toes either literally or figuratively.
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As far as he's concerned, there really is no disturbing a piano. Only disturbing the crowd gathered around one.
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"I'm Gren. You look like a fellow musician." A small one, but a fellow musician nonetheless. "I don't think we've met before."
In fact, he knows they haven't: it's just polite bar chatter, something he's very good at.
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He pauses, embarrassed by his own outburst and suddenly troubled by the memories of everything that comes after that in the story. "I... just arrive. A week ago, I think. I on my way to press conference, now I am here. It is not bothering me. Darkness is same everywhere."
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"The owner of this club is a man named Ishiah. He's really great. If you're looking for work, you might want to talk to him sometime. I'm not sure what his stance is on hiring pianists now -- there was one who played on Saturdays, but now I have that night covered for him -- but you never know. And if it doesn't work out here, there are other clubs."
One thing about the musicians he knows is that it's a tight-knit fraternity: they help each other out whenever they can. Music is competitive, sure, but there's enough audience for everybody.
"I didn't catch your name."
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So not everyone's like him. Not all musicians live to play their chosen instruments: he knows that. "All right. No playing for an audience. My mistake, Machi. How are you, though, playing without an audience? Just with one or two other musicians, maybe?"
If he has one obvious fault, it's being a little too passionate about music and he knows it.
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...Mozart. That's a beautiful and familiar piece; he learned to play it on piano ages ago, although he doesn't really play it any more. He shakes his head: "Welcome to the City and its curses. That one yesterday got me too. I didn't like it at all."
And there's an understatement.
"You need another cup of coffee or anything?" At least he thinks that's what was in the cup on the table. "I'll buy you one before the band starts up again."
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Machi isn't a child: that article he read about the harp player's coming back but in bits and pieces, like trying to remember fading fragments of a dream upon waking. There was something about his age too, but... he can't remember what it was.
Maybe next time he reads the paper he'll pay more attention. Of course, he won't be reading the arts section of the Callisto Courier at this place.
"Here. I haven't tried the coffee here to know if it's any good, but I hope it is. As if it was some kind of strain to bring the coffee over, he brushes a stray hair away from his own forehead and looks back to the stage. The length of set breaks with the house band aren't his to determine, so he has to keep an eye on things.
"Do you at least... like the music you're hearing tonight?" It isn't that he lives for appreciation from other musicians -- far from it -- but he does like to know. "Or anything you wanted to hear that we haven't played? I can suggest it to the band leader."
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It's a classic combination: torch songs need a singer and a piano and nothing else. Well, maybe they need a low-cut dress and some dim lighting. He has nothing against that classic jazz club archetype.
"Or did you mean something else?"
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Still, he can't help but sneak a surreptitious look at the not-child with the dark glasses. There might be a time and place for another little question-and-answer session, but this isn't it... even though the image painted by Machi's words is almost impossibly beautiful in a musically poetic sort of way.
"A different world." That's all he says: he's still getting used to the concept himself. And then before he knows it he makes the offer. "Anything else I can do for you in this one?"
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Not everyone is soft or nice; not everyone needs something; not everyone has something to give. These are lessons he ought to know intimately but he winds up learning them over and over and over again, on an almost daily basis.
"I don't want anything. You do, but you hide it well."
And that's just fine: nobody owes anyone anything.
"Take care, Machi." If Gren's feeling confusion or disappointment or even concern, he doesn't let it show. He of all people knows help can be offered, but it can never be forced. He and his soda find their way back up to the stage; he goes about the very serious business of adjusting the sax mouthpiece to where it's going to be absolutely perfect.
It's easy to keep busy when music is there as a distraction and a passion.
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He stays and listens to the rest of the set, then leaves, shivering in the night.
It's getting late and Klavier might wonder where he's been.