Miami Is Getting Ready For Ultra Music

894549_10200679253962227_419398061_oThe annual outdoor electronic music festival, Ultra Music Festival, is happening this weekend, precisely in the next two weekends, March 15-17 and 22-24, and Miami is ready for it. It used to be held in Miami Beach when it first began and then moved to Bicentennial Park but since they are building in the property, where are they not building in Miami, it is now held at Bayfront Park. The festival which began in 1999 and created by two business partners, has grown into this gigantic event with big names in DJ and music world. It is a three day event featuring a mix of over two hundred artists, DJs, producers and promoters such as Swedish House Mafia, Nicky Romero, Snoop Dogg, The 2 Bears.

893435_10200679251002153_1930193263_oFrim the looks of things, it is going to be one marmalade and vegetable soup occasion. There will be many stages, I heard twelve as they are expecting close to 100,000 people and the crazies that comes with it. The ticket price? A whooping $370.00. I wonder if it includes meal and board, well drinks, pay your own. Feel sorry for whoever has to work around the surrounding buildings on these two weekends. Hooray to traffic!

887333_10200679252762197_1358002820_o-1For more info check here ultramusicfestival.com

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Vatican Museum and Sistine Chapel

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The view from outside our hotel. Michelangelo Hotel. how appropriate. Yes, we were this close.

Today the eye of the world is on Italy and the Vatican, as the Roman Catholic Church’s College of Cardinals elected Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio Of Buenos Aires as a new Pope Francis I. Back on Sunday, October 15, however, I was there as member of the Lady of the Lakes church choir, singing at St.Peters Basilica Cathedral. Yes, you heard right, I sang in the St.Peters Basilica.

IMG_6525Let’s just say, I have no words. No, I don’t because for a catholic, there is not one great word to describe the flow of emotions one feels when one sets foot inside that majestic building. It is an out-of-body experience, the one that I will soon not forget. But I will leave that for later. For now, the road to Sistine Chapel.

IMG_6532Yes, it is a road. A road of well choreographed multitude of bodies, walking side by side in the enormous, long, artistically domineering corridor, wobbling silently, trying to respect each other’s space, each other’s admiration to this man made yet Godly fearing creation, Sistine Chapel and Michelangelo fresco. A design structure heaven, I may add!

IMG_6536I know, God did not physically build it but matter as well.

IMG_6553Our guide prepared us for the grueling day ahead. Having arrived in Rome from Venice, Florence and Sienna the night before, we kind had a sense what the marathon was going to be like. Wear comfortable clothe, shoes and carry an umbrella because major rain was expected. Perhaps, it was the one that later hit Venice and caused all that flooding. It drizzled a little but was over before it even began.
IMG_6583So, gone we were.

IMG_6593I must confess I had no idea what was up in the menu. Which museums and parts of the city we were going to visit, how long the visits were going to be, what time we had to be at each place, or if in the morning or the afternoon. I was living in the moment and would have done my homework had I not on a pilgrimage. I just knew I was just going somewhere and with the crowd I went, adventuring inside my own click.

IMG_6595We went to the Coliseum and other monuments around the city in the morning and broke up for lunch by the Vatican Museum.

I had my eyes on a pizza but settled on a good ole pasta. I mean, when in Rome do what Romans do right? Funny, how my palate went on a strike with pizza. I did not even try one. Go figure!
IMG_6611I was having butterflies, feeling anxious, excited. I mean, we just visited Uffizi Gallery in Florence, what could topple that?

I heard about it. Seen pictures. Studied Michelangelo and his works. I heard the conversations but had never seen it in person and all I can say is, Oh My God!

IMG_6615What to say about a body of work that was completed ages ago and yet, looks like it was just done yesterday?

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The stars from Sistine Chapel to St. Peters Basilica

As a person I was engulfed in admiration, at awe, overwhelmed by the surrounding majestic work of art but as an artist, I was perplexed. How in the world without today’s existing techniques and materials, one man, Michelangelo, was able to apply and produce that quality of work? It is besides me. How many of us can say that we produce our best work laying down on our back while hanging way up in the ceiling? I mean, I never tried but can positively say that I wouldn’t then again, I am not a muralist. I wonder if he used a ladder. Just so you know, pictures are strictly prohibited. So, if you want to see inside the chapel? Google it!

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We had to strike a pose. Taken at the pew at St. Peter’s Basilica

Habemus Papa!

r-POPE-FRANCIS-hugeHe is from Argentina, the first Latin-American Pope and from the Americas. He is 76 years old, son of Italian immigrants, only has one lung, lost it at early age, ultra conservative, against abortion, against same-sex marriage…. but known for his advocacy on behalf of the poor, primarily in his home country.

What is in a name? Francis of Assissi cared for simplicity, cared for the poor… He takes the bus, make his own meal. He is a Jesuit. What a change!