Archive for August, 2007

August 19, 2007: 7:00 pm: kfarEvents

Mesquitto from Meggido

The Rabbinical School Dropouts are Sun Ra, the Hampton Grease Band, Frank Zappa and the Klezmatics all rolled into one. The music of the Friedmann brothers is fresh, imaginative and the future of Klezmer music. Their big band (featuring oboe, mandolin, bassoon, theremin, toy piano, tablas, etc.) storms through a dozen creative originals touching upon klezmer, jazz, funk, Latin, rock, and varied mishegoss along the way. Jewish garage jazz with a sick sense of humor from Long Beach, California. It’s been called Esoteric Space Klezmer, but mostly its just wild musical fun. With special guests, Lamajamal.

August 17, 2007: 1:12 am: kfarPress, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

  • Rabbinical School Dropouts
    The California big band known as the RABBINICAL SCHOOL DROPOUTS actually does seem to play at a lot of weddings and bar mitzvahs, which is hard to square with their sound. Recalling Zappa at his giddiest and least scatological, the Dropouts seem to have developed a klezmerist form of Sun Ra worship, decked out in kabbalah references and bad Yiddish puns. Vehicles Behind Comets (Ethnic Warrior), released last year, takes their irreverent Semitic space fusion well past the asteroid belt: it’s Exodus as Star Trek, with manna in the form of Guru Guru records. No matter how many metaphors I pile up, though, they won’t capture the band’s exuberant energy, heard clearly in both the dizzy instrumental pivoting of “Yeshiva School Fallout” (at five and a half minutes, it’s the longest song here; they’re jumpy spacey, not epic spacey) and the gusty grace of “Anne Frank’s Ghost.”Opening tonight’s show (presented by KFAR Jewish Arts Center) is LAMAJAMAL, a bunch of locals working a so-called Gypsy-surf style that sometimes feels like they learned it back in the old country—Generistan. But when they’re on, they’re on, arriving at a fuzzy, garagey take on Roma music thanks to a knack for sexy, serpentine grooves and a mean, mean oud player.
    - Monica Kendrick
    7 PM, Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western, or , $15, $12 in advance.
August 16, 2007: 8:30 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe


Mesquitto from Meggido
Mystical New Age Hot Dog of the Covenant
Zegatronic
The Rabbinical School Dropouts are Sun Ra, the Hampton Grease Band, Frank Zappa and the Klezmatics all rolled into one. The music of the Friedmann brothers is fresh, imaginative and the future of Klezmer music. Their big band (featuring oboe, mandolin, bassoon, theremin, toy piano, tablas, etc.) storms through a dozen creative originals touching upon klezmer, jazz, funk, Latin, rock, and varied mishegoss along the way. Jewish garage jazz with a sick sense of humor from Long Beach, California. It’s been called Esoteric Space Klezmer, but mostly its just wild musical fun. With special guests, Lamajamal.

August 13, 2007: 9:15 pm: kfarPress, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

In case you missed KFAR’s May 16 concert by ESTA, WBEZ 91.5FM rebroadcast a 30 minute excerpt of Israel’s most original instrumental band on the Radio M program this past week. Our thanks to Tony Sarabia at Chicago Public Radio and Eric Butkus of Record the World for making this possible. Click on the logo to stream the broadcast.

The show leads off with a tribute on the legendary Nusrat Fateh Ali Kahn with appearances by Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder and others. Those familiar with the Renewal movement’s melody for “Kol Neshama Te’hallelya” will recognize the melody in this broadcast as his “Allahu.” It also features “Dung Gate” by Rabbinical School Dropouts who appear @ Empty Bottle Aug 19 with lamajaml for a musical way forward from last year’s Lebanon War, and a special shoutout to KFAR Jewish Arts Center for its work. The show playlist and segment breakdown is here.

August 9, 2007: 6:43 pm: kfarPress

By Pauline Dubkin Yearwood (08/10/2007) published in Chicago Jewish News

As Adam Davis, the director of Kfar Jewish Arts Center, contemplated the fact that it has been almost a year since last summer’s Lebanon War broke out between Israel and Hezbollah, an idea for a concert bringing together the two traditions formed in his mind.

When he heard that members of the Rabbinical School Dropouts, a popular jazz-world music-nouveau klezmer band, were going to be in town for a relative’s wedding, the idea took shape.

That was the genesis of a Kfar event taking place Sunday, Aug. 19 at the Empty Bottle in Chicago featuring two bands, the Dropouts and Lamajamal, a Chicago-based world music group that has Lebanese connections among its influences.

“I was thinking about what I was doing a year ago, watching what was going on (in Israel), and I started thinking about how much in common people have, and that there was suffering on both sides,” Davis said recently. That led him to contemplate the parallels between the two bands. There’re both doing something with traditional music forms from their respective heritage ,” he says. “I was having an inner dialogue: How can we move forward, be more universal? The way forward is with more discussion, real dialogue between real people, and this is a good example. You can hear certain similarities in music. You hear things and think, wow, there’s a lot in common here.”
(more…)

August 5, 2007: 3:13 am: kfarPress

HotHouse passes with Zohar by Monica Kendrick on July 3rd – 2:55 p.m.

As if there weren’t enough going on next weekend, July 15 is the last gig at HotHouse as we know it. The headliner? The audaciously named Zohar, the world-beat, pan-Middle-Eastern, “fusion science” project of Erran Baron Cohen (yes, Borat’s brother—he scored the music for the film).

The Chi-Improv mailing list has had a fascinating ongoing discussion about progressive music venues and the best way to keep them going, and one point that keeps coming up is a culture clash involving low expectations. It’s made me think about how I expect so many of the shows I see as a matter of course to take place in small, dark, dingy rooms with nowhere to sit and minimal, if any, pay for the musicians. The South Loop incarnation of HotHouse had a way of making me feel broke and underdressed—but that’s not the venue’s fault, now is it? Nor is it the fault of other, lower-budget venues so accustomed to making do with very little that they’ve lost a certain level of ambition.

Marguerite Horberg made an interesting point about how unwilling Chicago audiences are to travel to different neighborhoods, especially compared to audiences in New York City. Jason Guthartz pointed out that New York has a much better mass-transit system than Chicago, which of course makes a big difference to the carless. (Location, location, location!) But HotHouse, whether in its Wicker Park or South Loop location, has always been one of the easiest major venues in Chicago to reach by CTA. You can’t fault them for that.

So if you’re not going to Pitchfork next weekend (raise your hand if you’re already sick of hearing about it) or get bored and leave early on Sunday, head over to the HotHouse and dance goodbye.

: 3:13 am: kfarPress

File this under news that makes Chicagoist sad, the HotHouse at 31 E. Balbo will be no more. According to their press release, this is not good-bye, but a mere hiatus while they look for a permanent location. Yeah, we’ve heard that kind of thing before, but it usually involves a man, not our favorite world music club.

Last year around this time HotHouse founder Marguerite Horberg was kicked to the curb and a business manager came in to help organize the finances. A year later, Marc Harris stated that the HotHouse faces a $70,000 cash shortfall in their annual budget of $1.4 million. Horberg chimed in that she would be open to dialoguing with the newly elected board at the HotHouse on how to move forward with a community-based organization, yet her venture won’t be ready for any constructive action for a year.

A dispute was resolved with the landlord giving the non-profit “an opportunity to move out and move on” and to start the search for a permanent home. HotHouse will continue to sponsor their signature events, such as the Jazz En Clave Festival, but now they will be held at other venues around the Chicago area. A quick look at the calendar shows that there is nothing booked after the 15th of July, so there is only the present to visit this cultural gem in the South Loop.  The final show @ HotHouse appears to be Zohar, which features Sacha Baron Cohen’s brother, Erran. There are links and sound samples up on the presenter’s site, here.

: 3:11 am: kfarPress

A compilation of all the press from our 7/15/07 presentation of Zohar.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: MUSIC REVIEW

House simmers right to end

By Howard Reich, Published July 17, 2007

How fitting: Even for the final show in its longtime home, HotHouse made history, albeit in a somewhat peculiar manner.

On stage Sunday night, a genre-defying band called Zohar performed for the first time in Chicago. That the ensemble was led by Erran Baron Cohen — brother of “Borat” film star Sacha Baron Cohen — lent a peculiar tone to the proceedings, if only because of the actor’s famously bizarre screen personalities.

The Baron Cohen brothers bear uncanny facial and physical resemblance, so it was impossible to hear one without thinking of the other. Yet the music-making was top-notch, the house practically was filled and many in the crowd swayed to this irresistibly danceable music. If you didn’t know better, you might have thought the eclectic club on East Balbo Drive would continue to thrive through the ages (or at least for a few more months). But the internal dramas that roiled HotHouse starting last summer, when a newly constituted board forced out founder-executive director Marguerite Horberg, recently reached a climax. Last month, the board announced that the club would vacate the plush setting where HotHouse has thrived since 1998 (after several years in a decidedly less glamorous home on North Milwaukee Avenue).

The move, the board said in a statement, would settle a long-standing dispute with the landlord and provide an opportunity to regroup and address a cash shortfall. The goal would be to resurrect HotHouse elsewhere, at a still-to-be-determined date. “We’re looking for a space,” board President Linda Michaels said Sunday, while Baron Cohen’s ambient, heavily synthesized electronic music pulsed in the background. “But leaving here is bittersweet — it’s a beautiful space.” Not everyone believes it had to come to this. “It all could have been avoided, had these people [on the reconstituted board] resigned when we asked them to,” said Horberg, speaking by phone Sunday afternoon. Horberg had visited the room for the first time in about a year — to attend singer-pianist Yoko Noge’s farewell show — last week. “It was really wonderful in a lot of respects,” said Horberg, of the Noge soiree, “and quite upsetting in other regards.”

That same dichotomy defined the final night at the South Loop venue, for Baron Cohen’s spiritual music ennobled an otherwise funereal occasion. Though Baron Cohen cannot be considered a virtuoso as trumpeter or keyboardist, he’s a visionary in conceiving an innovative band. With ingenious use of samples from his laptop, Baron Cohen wove into the sonic fabric the cantorial chants of Hebraic liturgy, an ancient musical culture suddenly resonating in a jazz syntax.

Though the thick reverb eventually fatigued the ear, there was no denying the sensuousness of this music, which was presented by the Chicago-based KFAR Jewish Arts Center. Its director, Adam Davis, lamented the loss of this room. “Without a place like this,” said Davis, expressing a sentiment echoed by many small Chicago arts groups, “it’s very difficult for an organization like KFAR to present music.” Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune

: 3:10 am: kfarPress

Cantorial Remixes: Zohar @ HotHouse

Zohar is led by composer, producer and multi-instrumentalist Erran Baron Cohen, whose credits also include the popular Borat movie sountrack which starred his brother, Sacha. In an ironic turn of events, Baron Cohen was recently commissioned for a short symphonic work based on Kazakh folk melodies.

Zohar weaves together the beats and textures of modern club culture with hareem, hip-hop, electronica, dub and future grooves. It is a deconstruction of past, present and future, spanning Jewish Cantors, Arab Muezzins, Byzantine chants, meets today’s modern jazz and experimental musicians. Their approach is resolutely experimental and uncompromising with an instinctive feel for lush cinematic arrangements and intelligent melodies. Their acclaimed debut, One.Three.Seven, was produced by Miles Copeland’s Ark 21 label.