So I went to the Nier Piano Collections concert -- it was great!
Only about 200 people got selected, and they mentioned that the ratio of applicants to selectees was really high, but they didn't give exact numbers. (I've posted quite a bit here and on GameFAQs about how much I like Nier, and was one of the translators in the Grimoire Nier project, but didn't do this with my real name, so I don't think SE/Cavia was rewarding me or anything; it was probably random.)
People who got picked received just the one ticket -- unlike a lot of movie previews and suchlike where you get a pair -- so it felt little weird getting to the concert hall and waiting on line; each person was there alone, so it's not like with most events where you're talking with your friends and then you turn to talk with the people around you and you get a good buzz going. No, here each individual was separate, so the line was eerily silent as we waited 10-15 minutes to get to the front and show our tickets (and ID with your real name on it; they didn't want people reselling the invitations, I suppose).
As we file in they've got a big screen in front showing the title: ピアノコレクションズ ニーア ゲシュタルト & レプリカント発売記念イベント:トオク、チイサク、ハカナイ、ピアノ, which means roughly "Nier Gestalt & Replicant Piano Collections Commemoration Event: A far-away, small, evanescent piano", and OST music is playing in the background -- the awesome "Shadowlord", among others.
I didn't recognize it right away because I've only played the game in English, but the high-pitched voice of Mai Kadowaki, who voiced Emil in the Japanese game, suddenly come in telling us to take our seats, and in what approaches a very vulgar and nasty way -- Emil is relaying an order from Kaine, you see, and can't quite being himself to say what Kaine actually said!
Then the three musicians come on the stage: Keiichi Okabe, Keigo Hoashi, and Kumi Tanioka. They start chatting and Mai Kadowaki talks about how she put in an entry to go see this concert (really? they didn't just give her one) but then she got called on to host it. After more talk, Mr. Hoashi sits down at the piano and plays "Song of the Ancients" and "Emil". Good stuff.
The format ends up being piano pieces punctuated by talk sessions. They discuss all kinds of stuff -- Okabe and Yokoo knew each other in college; Hoashi thinks "Emil" is perfect for piano, etc.
Taroo Yokoo is in Los Angeles, they say, so they've set up a life-sized dummy made of black fabric and put it in a seat. Taro is on the phone (it's 3 AM out there) and there's sometimes a short delay before his voice comes through, on a microphone connected to the dummy.
Keigo Hoashi and Kumi Tanioka play more songs -- Hills of Radiant Winds, Grandma, Gods Bound By Rules, and Kaine -- interspersed with chat sessions. After "Kaine" they take questions submitted by the audience.
Director Yosuke Saito comes out and talks. Three hundred thousand people are watching live on Ustream, he says -- no, wait, that's a joke; it's more like 1500, in addition to the close-to-200 who are there seeing it live.
(Back-of-the-envelope calculation from me: a quarter of people in Japan live near Tokyo, so if that proportion would have been able to get to this concert, and thus applied to go see it, that's 400 or so applicants and 200 tickets. 50-50 odds of getting a ticket, which is pretty good.)
He thanks everybody for supporting Nier over these last two years and coming to all the events they've held, and mentions that this event will be the last one. But, he opines, he still wants to continue Nier in some form -- maybe a new game? He can't promise.
They give away some presents and are about to wrap up, and after the hosts exit the stage, someone (surely planted by SE) starts chanting "encore!" and clapping. The audience -- all of whom had come singly, remember -- had to be prodded keep it going!
The hosts then come back out (this next part was planned from the beginning, of course), and as they're thanking us for applauding them, Taro Yokoo himself appears -- he wasn't in LA; he'd been behind the stage the entire time. He tells a couple of stories, revealing that this Shinjuku i-Land Hall was in fact the place where they did the motion capture for the game.
The conversation then turns to how Mr. Okabe hasn't played anything on the piano today despite being one of the composers, so he sits down to play "Yonah". He makes a few mistakes, starts over, and then gives up after about a minute.
They joke about how Nier-like it would be if the concert ended right there (do it!), but Hoashi steps in and performs the real encore, which is "Shadowlord". Awesome stuff, and with that they really are done.
Following this, the three musicians sign a limited number CDs for people who bought them at the event, but we don't really get to talk with them much. I really wish Saito and Yokoo had been available! I inquire with a staffer as to whether the song lyrics are printed under the notes in the piano score that they published (and sold out of quickly!), and as she's getting up to ask, a youngish guy in a Square-Enix jacket brusquely tells her that they're not available. They want to hurry people out of the venue, so I didn't get to ask about how to get in touch with the producers or with main songwriter Emi Evans, who wasn't there.
And that's about it -- the CD has several more tracks that didn't get played during the show ("Snow in Summer" and "The Wretched Automatons"), and I'm listening to it now. It's great, though I admit that I like the OST more. I also picked up the drama CD, and it fills in still more backstory for the years leading up to the events of Nier. Both are worth having.
I liked the event but really wish they'd let you bring a partner or friend; it would have livened up the atmosphere quite a bit. And I wish they'd taken live questions from the audience!
Hopefully Saito wasn't just blowing smoke when he said he wants to do more with Nier! The events are good, but a game would be even better.