Archive for the 'S.H.I.R.I.M' Category

March 7, 2004: 8:00 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe, S.H.I.R.I.M, Past Events

Celebrate Purim with The Rabbinical School Dropouts. Sun Ra, the Hampton Grease Band, Frank Zappa and the Klezmatics all rolled into one, the music of the Friedmann brothers is fresh and imaginative. Their ten-member 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.

“Frank Zappa and Dr. Seuss intersect with John Zorn and the Art Ensemble of Chicago by way of Naftule Brandwein and Joseph Moskowitz in a largely improvised musical co-directed by Woody Allen and Howard Stern, with Eddie Cantor offering spiritual support from the great kibbutz in the sky.” -George Varga, Union Tribune

“Makes me wanna dance naked with my Uncle Shlomo.” Judd Handler, San Diego Jewish Times (read full article)

“The complete amalgam of new Jewish music run riot…You will be sucked into the hypnotic, swirling world of the RSD and then be showered by a water cannon of absurdity.” Tom Jurek, All Music Guide (read full article)

MP3 : Mosquitto from Meggido


http://www.kfarcenter.com/images/logos/ticketweb.gif Tickets: $15 on safe, secure ticketweb.com

Presented as part of KFAR’s concert series

February 20, 2004: 5:20 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe, S.H.I.R.I.M, Press, Past Events, Support

By WENDY MARGOLIN
Staff WriterFebruary 20, 2004–Adam Davis, founder of Chicago’s KFAR Jewish Arts Center, presented the first concert in the concert series Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe and hoped it would attract 50 people. When 150 showed up to hear YIDCore–a group that Davis describes as “a weird little punk band”–he knew he was onto something.

Now, after two years of single-handedly founding and building KFAR, an endeavor to bring arts and culture to the Chicago Jewish community, Davis will present the Rabbinical School Dropouts as a Purim festival at The HotHouse. Past KFAR concerts at this venue have garnered so much interest that Davis has had to turn people away. The “esoteric space klezmer” band that mixes klezmer, jazz, funk, rock, and more is expected to attract a large crowd, many of them loyal to the endeavor that Davis describes as more of an adventure than a business.

KFAR is part of a growing movement of Jewish arts and culture organizations that are helping to fuel what Davis calls a “Jewish Renaissance.” A loose network of similar organizations is emerging, seeking ways to collaborate on major, national-scope Jewish cultural events focused on engagement through arts and music.

“We need these programs not just to reach people, but to reflect on and contemplate who we are as a people, where we’ve come from and where we’re headed in the future. I guess you’d call that ‘KFAR for art’s sake’,” says Davis.

Davis says his love for music is rooted in his childhood at Congregation Bnai Tikvah in Deerfield, where the rabbi and cantor believed the congregation should be the chorus. “On Shabbat I would go to services and sing along. When everyone was sitting in the back giggling, I was one of the kids who would sit up front. So from an early age I was harmonizing, and I was interested in not just music, but Jewish music,” says Davis.

Davis went on to receive a degree in musical theater and established a successful career in Chicago. But when it came to Jewish life, he was disconnected. “I was unable to connect to the Jewish community the way I wanted, because I didn’t have my Friday and Saturday nights free. I wanted to meet other young Jews that were like me.”

Though Davis left the theater scene, it was not until a marketing stint made him dissatisfied that he found his niche in the Jewish community. “I found myself working at a job that I wasn’t happy about and I said, ‘How did I get from doing what I love to doing this?’ I wanted to get back to it [the arts] and I wanted to do something that really involved something about being Jewish.”

At the same time, Davis says the Jewish music scene was growing on the coasts and there was nothing that mirrored it in Chicago. “I thought, this is a great town with a great arts scene and a sizeable Jewish population. There is no reason that we shouldn’t have something interesting going on here in terms of Jewish music and Jewish theater.”

Davis founded KFAR Jewish Arts Center by e-mailing a few friends information about Jewish cultural events. The list and events grew, and today KFAR presents a season of concerts featuring local bands and bringing in groups from around the country. Though the bands range in style, Davis has a good sense that if he likes the sound of their music, there are others who will appreciate it too. The center is working on expanding to include other cultural events, including theater and poetry readings.

Davis says KFAR has tapped into a population that previously was not being reached by the Jewish community. Many of the concertgoers are unaffiliated young people who, for various reasons, never set foot in a synagogue or a JCC, says Davis, who asks people about the other Jewish events they attend. “There’s a mix of people who are unaffiliated and affiliated. There are some people who are purely interested in music and some who are more spiritually motivated but looking for a connection through music. Among those who are “affiliated” it runs the gamut from all of the movements. There are people from West Rogers Park and Wicker Park.”

Realizing that the larger Jewish community strives to engage this unaffiliated population, Davis offers synagogues throughout Chicago an opportunity to have a second concert featuring the bands KFAR brings to town. KFAR subsidizes the events that would otherwise be too difficult and expensive for synagogues. “There’s a need to do the same kind of programming within the established Jewish world. Synagogues don’t know which acts to book and they can’t afford it,” says Davis.

Davis says the most difficult part of his endeavor is financial. KFAR is financed through Davis’s own pocket and ticket sales.

Still, he hopes his one-man operation will grow to include more help and financial assistance in the coming years. “I hope it’s heading toward a community that is further enriched by Jewish music on a regular basis. One that has access to different programming in a variety of different places and levels–from youth programs, to synagogue programs, to programs that take place at traditional arts venues like I’m already doing.”

As for the Purim concert, attendees can count on hearing some good music and enjoying hamentashen. Davis says no one should worry though, “We won’t be reading a megillah or anything.”

Rabbinical School Dropouts will play at 8 p.m. Sunday, March 7 at The HotHouse, Chicago $15 at the door, $12 in advance. More information is at the KFAR website.

Posted: 2/20/2004

Related links…

KFAR website

December 18, 2003: 8:00 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe, S.H.I.R.I.M, Past Events

evën sh’siyah is Hebrew for “foundation rock.” According to Jewish tradition, the original element of the Creation was this primordial rock, from which the entire world came into existence.

evën sh’siyah blends original folk rock melodies with lyrics taken from an array of classic Jewish texts. The band’s musical influences are eclectic, and include rock, folk, reggae, bluegrass, Mid-Eastern, and jazz.evën sh’siyah integrates these genres–creating a cohesive and unique musical soundscape of its own. The band has been playing together since 1993 and has performed at DePaul University, Northwestern University, The Chase Cafe, University of Chicago, Loyola University, the Skokie Festival of Cultures, the Greater Chicago Jewish Folk Arts Festival, as well as many other venues.

“Apparently the new role model for observant Jewish rockers is the Allman Brothers Band. Both these guys and Soulfarm (see below) are turning into ’70s guitar-driven arena-rock bands with dual lead guitars and extended jams. To their credit, Even Sh’siyah has held onto over some of the punkish elements in their sound and their sense of fun… Rating: 4 stars.” George Robinson, NY Jewish Week

evën sh’siyah is composed of seven musicians from Chicago: Elisha Prero on guitar, David Margulis on bass, Ely Cooper on guitar, Mitch Jacoby on guitar, Matt Kanter on drums, Zev Goldberg on percussion and other miscellaneous musical materials, and Mark Freedman on keyboards.

Mp3 sample: Ana Avda

@ Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation, Evanston


http://www.kfarcenter.com/images/logos/ticketweb.gif Tickets: $15 on safe, secure ticketweb.com

Presented as part of KFAR’s concert series


September 29, 2003: 8:00 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe, S.H.I.R.I.M, Past Events

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August 11, 2002: 8:00 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe, S.H.I.R.I.M, Past Events

Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe continues with The Jews Brothers Band.

En route home to Auckland, New Zealand from a summer tour of Europe’s best music festivals, these Kiwis make their American Debut in Chicago with set of performances that will keep you dancing for weeks.

The Jews Brothers Band take the best of the klezmer tradition, jazz it up, then fuse it to influences such as Shalom Secunda, Spike Jones and Django Rhinehardt to create original tunes with infectious melodies, tight vocal harmonies and arrangements that will simply amaze you.

Appearing:
8/7/02 at Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation 303 Dodge, Evanston.
8/10/02 at Nevin’s Live 140 Sherman, Evanston (across from Holiday Inn).
8/11 at the International HotHouse , just off Wabash in the Loop.

http://www.kfarcenter.com/images/logos/ticketweb.gif

Tickets: $15 on secure ticketweb.com

Presented as part of KFAR’s concert series