Drew B.
Yelp
Whenever you visit an historical city, there are the "must-see" things that everybody knows about. Then there are the things you never knew about that blow your mind. For San Antonio, we all know The Alamo and the River Walk ... but The Saga at San Antonio is the "must-see" everybody need to know about.
On Tuesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 9 and 9:30 p.m., San Fernando Cathedral lights up with a kaleidoscope of moving images and accompanied by generations of music. The Saga is artist Xavier de Richemont's 24-minute video/art projection piece, run in conjunction with the 300th Anniversary of San Antonio.
It's all there: the early days of the Payaya people; the Spanish settlements and the building of the missions (including The Alamo); the arrival of the Canary Islanders (isleños), the battle of The Alamo, the Civil War; multicultural immigration (including the Germans, the largest incoming group); the Reconstruction Era; the 1900s and the growth to modern day. The visuals are STUNNING.
The music is also awesome. Everything from early Native American songs to polkas to the Maple Leaf Rag to Donovan's rendition of "Remember the Alamo" to 18th Century Spanish Baroque ("Jacaras por la e") to Mariachi to Civil War era songs ("Battle Cry of Freedom") to folk (Ashokan Farewell) to The Allman Brothers Band ("Jessica"). If you don't like at least some of the tunes, you simply don't like music.
There's plenty of seating and tables as The Plaza is right in front of it. There were a few food trucks if you get hungry. And we're in Texas, so the weather usually cooperates.
The city of San Antonio looks beautiful at night, The Saga makes it even better.