Chicago

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bort2.0
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Re: Chicago

Post by bort2.0 »

TxTx wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 11:46 am A coworker just reminded me of Eric Larson’s “Devil in the White City” which is set in Chicago in the 1890s and mentioned that there are two buildings remaining from that world’s fair. Neato.
The boat architecture tour really is pretty neat. A little expensive, but it's about 90 minutes long, and the volunteer staff that give the tour are excellent and talk for 100 of those 90 minutes. :laugh:

There's a tour of the Rookery building too, although just going in the (small) lobby is worth a few minutes.

I think there's also an observation deck at the Hancock building, but I haven't been.

And although it's not open yet, the Obama presidential library is an interesting place to see. Besides politics, President libraries are sorta interesting places.

Oh, and if you do go out for the "pizza" thing, eat before you go. The line is long, and once you're there, it takes a long time for the casserole to cook, and then cool enough to be eaten. Or, go find real pizza. :laugh:
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TxTx (Thu May 28, 2026 8:35 pm)


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Re: Chicago

Post by daktx2 »

Grant Park orchestra is a blast! Concerts are free right in the center of downtown, mostly in the early evening, just bring a picnic blanket. You can also purchase reserved seats. They have free open rehearsals outdoors during the middle of the day, which are also a lot of fun to observe.

I'll second the architecture tour from the river. If you're not into the history but just want to see stuff and be on the water (and save some dough), you can just take the water taxi from the northernmost point on Michigan Ave to the southernmost point at Chinatown for a great lunch, then take the train back to your hotel.

If you're super into architecture, you can take the Green line to its terminus in Oak Park, where you can see the Frank Lloyd Wright home and studio plus about a half dozen homes he designed.

As for restaurants downtown, check out Italian Village for dinner (nearly 100 years of operation, old school red sauce Italian), and for lunch on a weekday, Oasis Cafe (long running falafel place hidden at the back of a jewelry store).
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TxTx (Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:55 pm)
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hrender
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Re: Chicago

Post by hrender »

bort2.0 wrote: Thu May 28, 2026 7:26 pm The boat architecture tour really is pretty neat. A little expensive, but it's about 90 minutes long, and the volunteer staff that give the tour are excellent and talk for 100 of those 90 minutes. :laugh:

There's a tour of the Rookery building too, although just going in the (small) lobby is worth a few minutes.

I think there's also an observation deck at the Hancock building, but I haven't been.

And although it's not open yet, the Obama presidential library is an interesting place to see. Besides politics, President libraries are sorta interesting places.

Oh, and if you do go out for the "pizza" thing, eat before you go. The line is long, and once you're there, it takes a long time for the casserole to cook, and then cool enough to be eaten. Or, go find real pizza. :laugh:
We did the boat architecture tour last time, and really enjoyed it. I don't know if you can still go up to the observation deck on what used to be the Sears Tower, but I did that a few times back in the '80s, and it was always a treat. The Hancock building should have a better a better view of the lake IIRC. There's also the Shedd Aquarium, but I've never been there.
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TxTx (Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:55 pm)
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bort2.0
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Re: Chicago

Post by bort2.0 »

We went up on the Sears (Willis!) Tower deck. Very fun, but it was cloudy so not the best view. Still really cool.

Shedd is under renovations, so we skipped it.

Planetarium was decent.

Field Museum was really cool!
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TxTx (Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:55 pm) • hrender (Sat Jun 06, 2026 9:46 pm)
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bloke
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Re: Chicago

Post by bloke »

Back when I was doing the bLoke Conservatory once every 2 or 3 months (hitting three or four of the nation's top orchestral players all in a two-day weekend for private instruction) I took my son with me one of those times. When I did my Chicago stop - and the lesson was in lawn chairs in the parking lot of Ravinia (with their tailgate open and with a citronella candle lit to discourage bugs)...
It was during a rehearsal when a Mozart symphony was being rehearsed. My son listened to that while I was doing my lesson. I took him up in the Sears Tower, bought him a good Chicago pizza, and we then rushed on to the next place. (At that time, Alan was still in Milwaukee, and I had to bust my tail to get there only two hours later for that scheduled lesson.)

summary:
As far as Chicago was concerned - and being in a terrible rush, I felt like taking my son up to the top of the Sears Tower, feeding him a Chicago pizza, and entertaining him with the Chicago Symphony (for free) was a pretty good hurried visit.

post script:
"Hey bloke, what was it like having four different masters critique you're playing in four different ways?"
Each time, I would arrive home with my head spinning (a combination of all of that information mixed with driving exhaustion). After two or three weeks, all of that information expressed in different ways sort of came together as my mind would realize that a lot of what was said to me was synonymous, but just expressed in different ways.
This may raise some eyebrows, but I would say that - if any private instruction teacher tells someone that they should not be studying with any other teacher, it might be time to find another primary teacher. 😳

...something else:
I took one of my shop employees with me one time (who was also studying the tuba at a local university). After one of the lessons (whereby they were allowed to sit in and listen), we were driving frantically on to the next lesson and another city, and my employee said to me, "You sound better than Blah-Blah" to which I responded, "I'm not studying with them to copy their sound. Rather, I'm studying with them to gather their insights in countless other ways."

funny:
Even though my employee who accompany me on that particular trip was in college, they were already married at that time. Cell phones were already a thing (I didn't have one), and I now recall that they called their wife when I was driving from that lesson to the next one, whereby their wife answered how the weather was where we were... to which my employee answered "the weather's really nice, other than the fact that we are driving into about a 95 mph headwind". :laugh:

warning: a JOKE (you know: for LAUGHING at)
well...Its sort of a joke...

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TxTx (Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:55 pm)
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Re: Chicago

Post by LargeTuba »

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TxTx (Fri Jun 05, 2026 11:55 pm)
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Re: Chicago

Post by hrender »

bort2.0 wrote: Fri May 29, 2026 7:50 pm We went up on the Sears (Willis!) Tower deck. Very fun, but it was cloudy so not the best view. Still really cool.

Shedd is under renovations, so we skipped it.

Planetarium was decent.

Field Museum was really cool!
I forgot the Field Museum. My dad (who grew up in Chicago) used to say he haunted the Field and the Museum of Science and Industry as a kid.
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Re: Chicago

Post by gocsick »

The FIeld museum is one of my favorite places int he world to visit. I like it because it is mostly still an old school museum where you read the little tag and look at what is in the case.

I have a fulls set of the Wax Mold Dinosaurs.. both the vintage ones and the newer designs

Image
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TxTx (Sun Jun 07, 2026 11:55 pm) • hrender (Mon Jun 08, 2026 10:57 am)
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Mark E. Chachich
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Re: Chicago

Post by Mark E. Chachich »

Not music, but worth the trip:

Museum of Science and Industry (already mentioned)
If you go and have time check out the U505

Another place that I like is the Shedd Aquarium (second on my list)

Like any large city, there are many fantastic things to do then you will have time for.

enjoy your visit,
Mark
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TxTx (Sun Jun 07, 2026 11:55 pm)
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Re: Chicago

Post by tadawson »

gocsick wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 9:43 am The FIeld museum is one of my favorite places int he world to visit. I like it because it is mostly still an old school museum where you read the little tag and look at what is in the case.

I have a fulls set of the Wax Mold Dinosaurs.. both the vintage ones and the newer designs

Image
I loved those, but at Science and Industry. I don't think that they are wax though . . . all references i see are to polyethylene thermoplastic. They come out far too hot to be wax. https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/m ... ld-a-matic
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bloke
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Re: Chicago

Post by bloke »

The last time I went was helping to tend a booth at Midwest (McCormick Center - duh).
I stayed at a nearby hotel (which served a breakfast that could be bought...reasonable...not fancy) and ate at a sandwich shop a few blocks away (walked).

no sight-seeing.

There were a bunch of sirens 'n' stuff, but no bullets flew anywhere near me. :coffee:

That was probably at least 8 - 10 years ago.
(the first year that JP came out with the Hirsbrunner HB-21 C tuba - whenever that was)

Ever since then, my destination has been Wisconsin (Sheboygan/Manitowoc) so I've (using a lot of 4-lane US-51 with its town-bypasses, rather than I-57) swung way over to Rockford, IL to enter Wis...ANY path through Chicago (ANY time other than 3 - 4 A.M.) is a traffic disaster, and costs money...I actually left my car in the walled-in hotel lot the entire time I was at Midwest, that year.
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Re: Chicago

Post by shovelingtom »

Mark E. Chachich wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 10:45 am Not music, but worth the trip:

Museum of Science and Industry (already mentioned)
If you go and have time check out the U505

Another place that I like is the Shedd Aquarium (second on my list)

Like any large city, there are many fantastic things to do then you will have time for.

enjoy your visit,
Mark
I used to live about 4 blocks from the Museum of Science and Industry, and went a few times a year. Always noticed something new.

At the time I worked at the Oriental Institute Museum (Now called the Institute for the Study of the Ancient Cultures) at the University of Chicago. It's close to the Museum of Science and Industry, maybe a 15 minute walk. Great place if you're interested in the history of Egypt, Israel, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, or Sudan. Free admission too (or at least it was when I worked there), easy place to spend a few hours if you like archaeology.
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hrender (Mon Jun 08, 2026 3:32 pm)
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Re: Chicago

Post by shovelingtom »

. see below
Last edited by shovelingtom on Mon Jun 08, 2026 12:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Chicago

Post by shovelingtom »

Mark E. Chachich wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 10:45 am Not music, but worth the trip:

Museum of Science and Industry (already mentioned)
If you go and have time check out the U505

Another place that I like is the Shedd Aquarium (second on my list)

Like any large city, there are many fantastic things to do then you will have time for.

enjoy your visit,
Mark
I used to live about 4 blocks north of the Museum of Science and Industry, and went a few times a year. Always noticed something new.

At the time I worked at the Oriental Institute Museum (Now called the Institute for the Study of the Ancient Cultures) at the University of Chicago. It's close to the Museum of Science and Industry, maybe a 15 minute walk west of there. Great place if you're interested in the history of Egypt, Israel, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, or Sudan. Free admission too (or at least it was when I worked there), easy place to spend a few hours if you like archaeology.
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Re: Chicago

Post by shovelingtom »

. see below
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