Baby J Live At Lucy In The Sky Jakarta (2024)
No one moved for a full ten seconds.
The crowd roared.
He set the microphone down gently on the floor, as if putting a child to bed, and walked off stage. Baby J Live at Lucy in the Sky Jakarta
He didn’t say hello. He just pressed his thumb to the strings and let the first chord breathe.
The set twisted through originals and reimaginings. A punk song turned into a lullaby. A love song turned into a eulogy. Between songs, Baby J told stories: of a broken amplifier in Bandung, of a ghost he once saw at a train station in Solo, of the time he forgot the lyrics on live TV and just hummed for two minutes until the audience sang them back to him. No one moved for a full ten seconds
Outside, the Jakarta night was still hot and loud. But for those inside Lucy in the Sky, time had stopped. They had witnessed not just a concert, but a communion.
Lucy wasn't a club. It was a sanctuary perched high above the Sudirman traffic, all smoked glass and low-hanging stars. Inside, the air was thick with clove cigarettes, expensive perfume, and the particular electricity of a crowd that knew it was about to witness something holy. He didn’t say hello
The humidity hit Baby J like a wet velvet glove the second he stepped out of the car. Jakarta was a beast that breathed steam and diesel fumes, but tonight, Lucy in the Sky was its glowing heart.
The crowd hushed. Someone whispered, “Dia datang” —he has come.
Then the applause came—not like thunder, but like waves. Rolling. Relentless. Forgiving.