We were there as the backing band (according to the compère, we were “Sarah Dunant and the Sacred Hearts”) to a semi-staged reading of Sacred Hearts by Sarah herself, Niamh Cusack, Deborah Findlay and a lovely young actress from Cork, Molly Lynch. The stress leading up to the event was, at times, unspeakable – but, rather like childbirth, although I can remember the fact of the pain, the pain itself has already mercifully been blocked out. Days of communication failure, email/text badgering and panic invested in trying to sort out the sound requirements were ultimately wasted, as the sound guy had never been given the microphone plot, had an incomplete equipment list and arrived over half an hour late. Mobile phones – or at least my wretched O2 iPhone – were useless on site; performers had to battle uncomprehending minions who had not been warned of their need for early check-in; and it is a tribute to the resilience of the singers and the ever-serene Claire Williams that the performance went on at all. There was competition from the first sunshine in 24 hours, rap, techno, township jazz and, bizarrely, another female-voice chorus (albeit one that sings U2 covers), but in the end the performance was greeted with whistles and cheers of approval from a packed-out tent.
Our yarnbombing campaign didn’t quite go to plan, either, as the torrential rain on Saturday made it impossible to find dry places to leave our small army of nano-nuns, who were carefully tagged to bring punters to the gig, promising a free download of our trance track. Still, the little sisters must have made someone happy. And we are taking commissions now…It’s still hard to tell whether our appearance will have rewards beyond being able to say we did it – CDs sold like a hotcake (miserable festival organization left our merchandise selling-point well hidden, while the Comedy merchandise and signings took place outside the Literature Tent… go figure). But it was a nice day out, and we made a few people smile. And it could have been the first performance of Palestrina by an all-female ensemble in jilbabs, rosaries and wellies.












So I was pleasantly surprised to find out that Ferrara’s city administration has decided to provide free wi-fi in its city centre – a group of piazzas surrounding the castle and cathedral – to anyone who signs up. Excellent! No matter if it’s slower than a slow thing on a slow day (I was about to say “than an Italian archivist’s response,” but that’s not fair as I have been granted the most helpful archivisti imaginable on this trip), it’s still a connection and it’s free. Thus, although I am writing this in the privacy of my hotel room, if it ever makes it to my blog, it will be because I have trolled my computer down into town before dinner. (Ed – and I have, so I’m uploading this from the steps of the cathedral).
But I will have to get my feet out of the bidet first. There seems to be no escaping sore feet, even this early in the trip. When I’m on a research trip I tend to walk everywhere, not just because I like taking in the city but also because it’s the only practical way to get around when you don’t understand the buses/trams and can’t/won’t afford taxis. In some ways, I’d rather be this cat, although I wonder if it is able to retain its relaxed demeanor when the car engine starts.
I'm an American-and-naturalised-British academic who tries to juggle musicology with family life, singing, extreme knitting and football. Most of the time I succeed in keeping the balls off the ground.