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hola my loves. 

greetings from a coffeeshop in leipzig, where i'm nursing an oatmilk latte during a hardcore work party with judith holofernes (from Wir Sind Helden) and jack, my foreign tour correspondent. 

(photo by johannes christ, a stranger we just put in the guest list for the show tonight)

i just gave judith a two-hour patreon lesson/pep-talk/deep-dive and we looked over what she's trying to put together with her community here in germany. crowdfunding women of the world FUCKING UNITE. fuck the system, do the people. 

if you are new here: thank you so much for joining the patreon, i know that we've added hundreds of new faces since hitting the road in europe, and it's always on the road when i have the least amount of time to connect with you here in internet land. but i see you all coming in, and THANK YOU. what we are creating here is revolutionary and i am so grateful for your patronage.

............

i just wanted to say a quick word about my venue choice in paris. you may have noticed that in every other city on this UK/ireland/europe tour i’m playing in grand fancy ol' seated theaters with all the fancy rigamarole that goes along with them. 

the only exception to this is bataclan, for my paris show, and it was a very deliberate decision - my european booking agent (bex majors, at UTA), was given instructions to the book the show there, even though it's an odd fit.

the dresden dolls played a historic paris show in 2006 at bataclan on our "Yes, Virginia" tour...and we felt wonderfully taken care of by the venue. 

here's a blast from the past....this is us, that night in bataclan, playing "half jack" with our friend, the french performance artist emilie bera, doing sign-language interpretation like you've never seen it done before. really. it's old footage but it still gives me goosebumps:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcPAgFXoVz0


if you wanna go further down the dresden dolls @ bataclan rabbit hole, here's footage of war pigs and sex changes.

was that really 13 years ago? fuck me.

i just googled and came across this photoset by parisian rock photogpher robert gil of that show...and i have to say, this is one of the best sets of pictures i've seen of the dresden dolls in our bizarro heyday.

so i'm posting them here. many of you have never gotten to SEE the dresden dolls. but fuckin hell, we are one heck of a crazy-ass live band. 

especially when playing to a bataclan full of weirdos in paris.

you can see the whole set here, and it's worth a gander...here are some of the very best:

https://www.photosconcerts.com/the-dresden-dolls-paris-bataclan-2006-05-18-831


(this is marie harveline, one of our fave parisian dolls fans)



.....

then, as i sure many of you know, there was an unthinkable tragedy. on november 13, 2015, there was a city-wide set of terrorist attacks in paris. and during an eagles of death metal concert at bataclan, a mass-shooting and hostage-taking occurred, midway through the concert in this venue that fits about 1,500 people. my size venue.

the papers. 


it shook the entire world, but it shook the music community particularly violently. i had friends who lost friends, everybody was a few degrees away from someone at that concert.

i had crew pals who knew people working for the band. it wasn’t a difficult leap to imagine that it easily could have been our band, our night, our community. 

i could not fathom what the members of the band are still dealing with in the wake of surviving a night like that. 

if you want to see something incredibly human and important, watch their first interview about what happened, with vice.... i remember watching this when it aired and being very humbled. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n74HBrrFnIc

........

was that really four years ago?

what has and hasn't changed. 

smh.

.....

so when i was looking into venues in europe with bex, i requested that we bring the show to bataclan even though it isn‘t totally set up for what we need: we are having to truck in 1,000 chairs... we are closing down the bar in the venue, it’s going to be a little messy and a little weird. you'll feel it. 

but it was important to me to come back here, especially given the content of the show and the stories that i tell: about the boston marathon bombing, about fear, about trauma, about compassion, and about the importance of standing unafraid in the face of the darkness that this world brings to our doorsteps on the daily. 

art heals and transforms. light into darkness. 

i can't imagine what the staff and neighborhood surrounding this venue went through. i can start to imagine. we all can.

playing in their venue - when i have a choice to go elsewhere -  seems like a good form of solidarity....

so let's pour tears and light all over that fucking stage, all over that floor where so many people felt so much pain. maybe we can help erase some of the dark still hiding in the cracks there.

............

for those of you coming to the show, i thank you for your understanding that the set-up may be a little unusual, but know you know why. 

the show (this saturday) is nearly sold out, but you can grab the last remaining tickets here:

DOORS ARE VERY EARLY: 6pm

THE SHOW ITSELF BEGINS AT 7pm sharp. 

https://www.topbillet.com/fr/meeting/9590/amanda-palmer/le-bataclan/28-09-2019/19h00


the rest of the european tour dates are rolling along...

ALL TICKETS ARE HERE: http://amandapalmer.net/shows/

PRAGUE - at hybernia on sept 26th - is SOLD OUT. (hooray).

LUXEMBOURG - at conservatoire on sept 27th -  has a god amount of tickets left. (ALSO HEADS UP, WE ARE GOING TO JOIN THE CLIMATE MARCH ON FRIDAY in LUXEMBOURG, starting around 2:30 if you can make it - meet-up info to come!!!).

COPENHAGEN - at bremen theater on oct 11th - is ALMOST SOLD OUT.

STOCKHOLM - at sodra teatern on oct 12th -  is SOLD OUT.

BRAGA, PORTUGAL - at teatro circo on feb 26th - still has TONS of tickets. (get on it, portugal people. car-share from lisbon and porto! - here's the FB event link for that show if you wanna rideshare, spread word, etc)

..........

the remaining UK / ireland dates all have tickets except LONDON, which is nearly ALL SOLD OUT (there are a few tickets left for dec 14th). NEWCASTLE and the ireland dates need the biggest help. they're all between 20-40% sold. everything is doing great.

Wed Oct 16 – UK – Bexhill – De La Warr Pavilion

Sat Oct 19 – UK – Cardiff – St David's Hall

Sun Oct 20 – UK – Cambridge – Corn Exchange

Wed Oct 23 – Ireland – Cork – Opera House

Thu Oct 24 – Ireland – Dublin – National Concert Hall

Sat Oct 26 – Ireland – Belfast – Ulster Hall

Sun Oct 27 – Ireland – Limerick – Univeristy Hall

Frin Nov 1 – UK – Dunfermline – Carnegie Hall 

Sat Nov 2 – UK – Glasgow – City Halls

Sun Nov 3 – UK – Manchester – Albert Hall

Mon Nov 4 – UK – York – Opera House

Thu Nov 7 – UK – Newcastle – Tyne Theatre

Thu Dec 5 – UK – London – Union Chapel (SOLD OUT)

Fri Dec 6 – UK – London – Union Chapel (SOLD OUT)

Fri Dec 13th - UK - London - Union Chapel (SOLD OUT)

Sat Dec 14th - UK - London - Union Chapel (ALMOST SOLD OUT)

......................

i love you all.

see many of you tonight in leipzig...you've got one hour left to claim free guest list :).

x

x

a


 

------THE NEVER-ENDING AS ALWAYS---------

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2. see All the Things i've made so far on patreon: http://amandapalmer.net/patreon-things

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Comments

Anonymous

The night of the Paris attacks was the first time I truly felt the horror of terrorism. I knew friends who were living around there, luckily nobody was hurt but as you say "everybody was a few degrees away from someone at that concert" and I've met people who lost really good friends that night. I remember the day after the attacks and the need we all felt to gather together and connect with each other. It was surreal and what happened didn't make any sense. And then, at the other end of the spectrum, my sister was working as a doctor in prison (she still is) where some of her patients are terrorists. I lost count of the number of conversations we had about fear and compassion and radical empathy. It is such a delicate yet important conversation but I feel like everyone is avoiding it. Maybe that's where we need art to create a safe space for everyone to talk honestly. I don't know what the show is going to be like but I'm so thrilled to be at the Bataclan on saturday, making new happy memories for this wonderful venue. :)

Anonymous

so nice

Anonymous

I’m so glad that you’re playing the bataclan and so grateful that I’ll be able to see you there. I remember the weeks following the attacks as venues all over France decided whether or not to continue putting on shows... the light won. Music was played, and with heavy hearts we came together to celebrate art and love in the face of hate

Anonymous

Beautiful post of sharing tragic and poignant memories. Wish I could see you at the Bataclan but hope the show is cathartic in both happy and sad tears. <3

Jake Marcus

I’d give a lot for that poster of the Bataclan gig. Very powerful. Will tour posters hit merchland?

Anonymous

Gah, you made me cry reading this blog. I'm sitting at work and started reading about Boston marathon bombing, fear and trauma. Can't wait for you to bring this show to Melbourne <3

Anonymous

I was in Paris that night and I remember exactly how it went. It started with a text from my ex (who never texted) asking how I was. I was supposed to have a housewarming party for my tiny flat the next evening. I had friends out that night who had to stay put. I couldn't do anything to help. Someone from my work field was killed that night, her dream project was launching just a couple weeks later, I had been following their progress online. A job offer went up and it was the dream job. I could not look at it without crying because I knew why the job was available. I never applied. Somehow this made it even more real, that I could still see the aftershocks in my work life, when usually those things stay far from the mundane and the everyday. It will be my first time back at the Bataclan saturday, and my first Amanda concert. I'm glad it will be with you.

Anonymous

In 2006, I went to the show in Lyon since I wasn't living in Paris yet, and Lyon was closer - I think it was the same tour, but I might be wrong (?) - I was 17 and I remember asking (awkwardly) for an autograph before the show, which you so kindly accepted. I don't think I missed any of your French shows since, and I'll be there on Saturday. I was so moved when I booked my ticket, because I knew the Bataclan wasn't a random choice. I could guess why you had chosen this place. Now, I'm looking forward to seeing you there, to live this mind-blowing experience in such a meaningful venue. See you on Saturday Amanda <3

Anonymous

Thanks for your words and love for France as always. I was at your Bataclan show as I was already working for RR France, it was intense indeed ! But I won’ t Come to the show tonight, specifically because it’s at Bataclan, I lost a journalist friend there, and I know the venue too well not to imagine / picture what happened there...I know I will go back, I want to, someday i’ll be ready to just go there and enjoy a show. And i’m Glad artists are going back there, so enjoy the show tonight 🙏🏼

Anonymous

Thank you for the show last night, it was everything...

Anonymous

I was in Paris four years ago, I work in the area, live further along the canal. It hurt. I was there last night. It was beautiful.