Beyond Void

Life of a gaijin in Japan

Mayday Concert Review October 8, 2007

Filed under: Reflection — olichen @ 9:27 am
Tags: , , , , , , ,

Ashin and Ming- Copyright of Ashin

Ashin and Ming looking cute. Photo copyright of Ashin.

Thank you Mayday for a memorable concert in Tokyo.

Mayday’s concert was held in Zepp Tokyo (Odaiba) on October 7th.  The concert was sponsored by both Disk Garage and Pro Max, and were sold at the Zepp Tokyo venue and at Lawson’s convenient store. Unbeknown to me, the tickets had a Group A and a Group B classification.  Although it was a “free-standing” concert, those who got their tickets earlier (Group A) got to sit/stand front row, where there were about 18 rows of roughly 20 chairs.  Group B was stuck in the back (I was unfortunately B).  Moreover, never have I been to a concert that was organized so meticulously like this one.  Crew members from Zepp Tokyo had a flippable pad, and they would flip the numbers as another crew member announced the numbers over the megaphone. As the numbers were called, the ticket holders of that number would then go in.    Give credit to the Japanese for thinking of order and calm ahead of time.

There were (rough estimate) about a 1,500 people in attendance, with Japanese and Chinese supporters alike (as well as other nationalities.  I represented three nationalities right there, so I’ll give my identities an acknowledgment).  The acoustics in the venue were poor. Not only that, but accompanying TV screens that were built for concert-goers in the back were small, with one of them being dysfunctional. The sound system was good, though there was a faint buzzing at certain times (and one time static). A crew member kept running back and forth on the stage while the band was playing, and at one point, Ming beckoned the crew member over (wonder what did he tell him. Fix the amps? Get rid of the buzzing? Quit running around?).

Despite the venue conditions, Mayday put out a great performance. They showcased their guitar, bass, vocal and drum skills throughout the show. Halfway through the concert, all band members, including their accompanying pianist, performed impromptu short solos. Masa, the bassist, also performed a short piano and vocal solo while the rest of the band was off-stage.

They also interacted with the audience, with Ashin, Masa, Monster and Stone frequently asking concert-goers to clap, sing and jump along the songs. At one point during their songs (Luen Ai-ing), all the band members and supporting musicians left the stage, one by one, eventually prompting clapping and chanting from the crowd. The pause heightened the expectation, and when all musicians came back on stage, it was a jumping frenzy.

The theme of the concert centered around a short movie clip acted by all the members of Mayday. The clip was about a distant future, with the members of Mayday living on a hypothetical destroyed Earth. Just at the end of the concert, when the members took a brief rest before the encore, the ending of the movie was revealed.

Most of their songs were from their latest album, Born to Love, but they also played a sizable number of their Taiwanese hits (Garbage Truck, Good or not good, among others).

The band ended their repertoire by playfully dancing around to their latest XBox promotional song, throwing towels and guitar picks at the crowd. It was a great performance, and I hope they come back to Tokyo next year, as they promised.

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One Response to “Mayday Concert Review”

  1. Julez Says:

    Hi, do you know if mayday will be having the back to earth concert in tokyo anytime this year?

    I am not from Japan, and was not able to find much information on the concert details..


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