KFAR 2008-05-15T00:05:26Z Copyright 2008 WordPress kfar <![CDATA[Please redirect your attention to…]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2008/05/15/please-redirect-your-attention-to/ 2008-05-15T00:04:47Z 2008-05-15T00:04:47Z Organizational Shtuss We’ve moved. This ol’ blog just wasn’t spiffy enough for us. If you’re landing here, its probably through an archived post from long ago.
But you should check out or new digs: http://www.kfarcenter.org Be sure to sign in, bookmark the new url in your browser and on your favorite social bookmarking services.

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kfar <![CDATA[The next Conversation]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2008/02/27/the-next-conversation/ 2008-02-27T22:36:20Z 2008-02-27T22:36:20Z Conversations Our next “Conversation” will be held Sunday March 9th at 4:00pm at KFAR HQ in Ravenswood!

Conversations, Connections & Culture is KFAR’s monthly gathering where people passionate about Jewish culture gather to socialize, discuss issues and share interests in Jewish arts and culture. Its also a ‘hands-on’ forum to channel our passion and shape the future of Jewish culture scene in Chicago.

Each gathering lasts about 1 1/2 hours, consisting of:

1. Schmooze and News - Social time followed by a KFAR update.
2. Show and Tell- 1-2 participants shares a cultural topic with a moderated group discussion
3. Hands-On - Ideation and planning for shaping the Jewish arts scene locally
4. Ears, Cheers, Beer - Listening party and libations (aka PBR and Playlist)

It might sound formal, but it really will be quite casual. Hope to see you there! RSVP to conversations@kfarcenter.com.

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kfar <![CDATA[Conversations, Connections and Culture]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/12/25/conversations-connections-and-culture/ 2007-12-25T01:00:09Z 2007-12-25T01:00:09Z Conversations Conversations, Connections & Culture is KFAR’s monthly “salon” where people passionate about Jewish culture gather to socialize, discuss issues and share interests in Jewish arts and culture. Its also a ‘hands-on’ forum to channel our passion and shape the future of Jewish culture scene in Chicago.

Participation is purposely limited and the monthly gatherings will each last about 1 1/2 hours, consisting of:

1. Schmooze and News - Social time followed by a KFAR update, Jewish Arts news in town and nationally.
2. Show and Tell- 1-2 participants shares a cultural topic with a moderated group discussion
3. Hands-On - Ideation and planning for shaping the Jewish arts scene locally
4. Ears, Cheers, Beer - Listening party and libations (aka PBR and Playlist)

It might sound formal, but it really will be quite casual. Unlike KFAR’s public presentations, this focuses on participants more than performer, and we’re excited about the possibilities…  Libations and snacks will be provided, as will detailed directions for those RSVP’ing in the positive.

Hope to see you there! RSVP to conversations@kfarcenter.com or do it on facebook.

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kfar <![CDATA[KNISHMAS!]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/11/21/knishmas-2-2/ 2007-12-24T19:00:11Z 2007-12-24T19:00:11Z Past Events

KNISHMAS! It doesn’t have to be a ’silent night’ for us. Once again we groove into the night with the alternative to xmas eve alternatives.

This year we welcome back the jams of Even Sh’siyah, who infuse the southern rock grooves ala Allman Brothers with Jewish flavor for a heady groove. Their third self-release album, Wake Up, dropped this year. Joining us for the first time is Brooklyn’s RavShmuel, a Rosh Yeshiva by day and beer-drinking, Phish-following singer/songwriter by night. His single “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” became a youtube sensation following the release of his debut album, “Protocols,’ on Sony/JMG.

And as a special treat, several local singer/songwriters will perform original Jewy tunes, including Rachel Katzman (of Happy Butterfly Foot), Evan Jacover and Adam Davis (yes, that Adam Davis).

Even Sh’siyah
Shir Hamaalos
Yemenite Fever
Hallelu
Hisoreri

RavShmuel
I’m in Love
Dumb World

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kfar <![CDATA[KNISHMAS!]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/12/14/knishmas-3/ 2007-12-14T00:09:26Z 2007-12-14T00:09:26Z Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe Special Events

KNISHMAS! It doesn’t have to be a ’silent night’ for us. Once again we groove into the night with the alternative to xmas eve alternatives.

This year we welcome back the jams of Even Sh’siyah, who infuse the southern rock grooves ala Allman Brothers with Jewish flavor for a heady groove. Their third self-release album, Wake Up, dropped this year. Joining us for the first time is Brooklyn’s RavShmuel, a Rosh Yeshiva by day and beer-drinking, Phish-following singer/songwriter by night. His single “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” became a youtube sensation following the release of his debut album, “Protocols,’ on Sony/JMG.

And as a special treat, several local singer/songwriters will perform original Jewy tunes, including Alan Sufrin, Miriam Brosseau, Moshe Averick, Evan Jacover, Rachel Kohl Feingold and Adam Davis.


Even Sh’siyah
Shir Hamaalos
Yemenite Fever
Hallelu
Hisoreri

RavShmuel
I’m in Love
Dumb World

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kfar <![CDATA[JEWMONGOUS @ Beat Kitchen 12/9]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/11/16/jewmongous-beat-kitchen-129/ 2007-11-16T03:30:27Z 2007-11-16T03:30:27Z Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

“The bastard love child Tenacious D and Fiddler on the Roof never had.” - SEATTLE STRANGER

“Part of a new breed of Jewish hipster comedy that includes Jon Stewart, Sacha Baron Cohen, Sarah Silverman and Heeb Magazine.” - PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS

JEWMONGOUS is a solo comedy song concert with occasional guests, is the colicky, uncircumcised brain child of SEAN ALTMAN: the golden-voiced, song-writing wiz behind the pioneering comedy song act What I Like About Jew and the founder and former leader of the vocal group Rockapella. Sean was featured in Time Out New York’s cover story “The New Super Jews,” (with Jon Stewart and Sarah Silverman) and in the New York Times feature about “the Jewish Hipster Movement.” He debuted JEWMONGOUS in 2006 and has garnered press accolades coast to coast (see them below).

JEWMONGOUS’ debut album Taller Than Jesus will be released on Christmas Day 2007 (to give Jews something to celebrate that day) but is already available exclusively at http://jewmongous.com. The Taller Than Jesus CD release tour hits 16 cities in December 2007. All faiths welcome, even the faithless.

Tickets are $15 in advance, $18 door, $10 students. 18+ show.
Beat Kitchen, 2100 W. Belmont, Chicago Map it

They Tried to Kill Us
Blow Murry Blow
Simchas Torah
Long Tongue Shloime
Be My Little Shabbos Goy
Today I Am A Man
Taller Than Jesus

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kfar <![CDATA[Wide Angle Gallery Night]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/10/09/wide-angle-gallery-night/ 2007-10-09T21:34:55Z 2007-10-09T21:34:55Z Special Events

Calling all artsy Jews who like to party for a purpose. The Jewish Caucus of PACT (Public Action for Change Today) and KFAR bring you Wide Angle, 8pm on Sunday October 14th @ Lakeview Broadcasting Co.

This is a social event with social action undertones. We will be showing images captured by 3 indy-photographers who teamed up with a group of homeless youth from around Chicago to provide an artisitic view into the homelessness situation through the eyes of those actually facing such issues on a daily basis.

$12 cover at the door, $10 if you if you RSVP. 21 and up.

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kfar <![CDATA[CJN: Aiming for Young Jews]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/10/03/cjn-aiming-for-young-jews/ 2007-10-03T12:00:45Z 2007-10-03T12:00:45Z Press Support

By Pauline Dubkin Yearwood (09/28/2007) published in Chicago Jewish News
Since he founded Kfar Jewish Arts Center five years ago, Adam Davis says he’s been “living like a shul mouse” while he runs the organization on a shoestring.

Those days may soon be over. Donors are starting to recognize and support Kfar (the name means village in Hebrew), which produces musical and performance events designed for young Jewish audiences. Board members are signing up. And Davis is planning to reach out to more audience members in more demographic groups.

All this may come as a surprise to some observers since Kfar also suffered a major blow (as did the whole Chicago music scene) in the past year: the closing of the HotHouse, the Chicago world music club where the organization put on many of its shows. (continues after the jump)
“That was unfortunate,” Davis says. “It really helped our shows and events” to have them at the club. “Jewish cultural events in general do really well when they’re framed in the context of being part of this broader world culture. It legitimizes what we’re doing, brings it out of the ghetto, both for Jews and for the broader community. The general public is far less willing to venture into a synagogue or community center for these events, and, for better or for worse, mostly worse, so are most young Jewish adults,” he says.

Studies, including one done this year by several prominent Jewish sociologists for the National Foundation for Jewish Culture, bear him out, showing that many Jews in the 18-34 age group connect to Judaism better through cultural programs than any other types of events. Those same young Jews regularly pack New York City venues for the kind of cultural events Kfar produces in Chicago.

The study and others like it “proved the correlation between young adults and Jewish cultural events and proved out everything I’ve always thought about, the foundation on which I created Kfar. That was a formative part of our identity,” Davis says.

So he remains upbeat. With the demise of the HotHouse, he says, come more opportunities. A Sept. 30 Kfar-sponsored performance by Golem, a folk-punk-klezmer band, is at Schubas, a prestigious Lakeview venue, and Davis is also working with the Empty Bottle, another popular club in Wicker Park, and Wild Hare, a reggae club in Lakeview.

Also upcoming is Kfar’s regular “Knishmas” event, which Davis calls “our annual alternative to the Christmas alternatives-most of those events tend to be big drinkfests, and I found there was a need for something a little bit more culturally and artistically inclined.” Look for details on the event shortly.

In addition, Davis is planning a February program with an Israeli hip-hop group along with the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago’s Young Leadership Division, and is also working more closely with several synagogues to plan events.

Does this mean Kfar has gone mainstream?

Not exactly, Davis says. It’s just a matter of reaching out to different audiences. Some organizations, he contends, “are making attempts to do some ‘this is the kind of programming you want because you’re young adults’ thing, and by and large it’s reaching the same 200 or 300 people, the 20-percenters that are already involved. Everyone’s kind of preaching to the choir. I don’t see many organizations embracing a grassroots approach, letting people dictate their own interests and affinities.”

That’s what Davis hopes to do with Kfar, perhaps someday taking advantage of what he sees as another lost opportunity-follow-up programs for birthright Israel alumni.

“Programs like Kfar’s are really worthwhile as a birthright follow-up if the point is to foster a connection to Israel and to (young people’s) own identity,” he says. “What better way than through culture and the arts? I think that’s a slam dunk.”

There’s even more in Kfar’s future. “I’m hoping by next year we can move into the phase I’ve always wanted to go into, working directly with artists to develop new material. We haven’t yet had the support for that,” Davis says.

“Kfar is not just about the young adult piece,” he continues. “As we develop and grow and take on more board members, it’s going to grow beyond doing shows at clubs. Hopefully we’ll do more things with the synagogue community and bring us more to suburban audiences, and do things with artists, and things with a family focus, using the Jewish arts as a way to educate.”

That all takes resources, though, and funds have been hard to come by, “especially in a town dominated by large central fund-raising organizations,” Davis says. Yet now “there are donors starting to come forward. Thank G-d that’s finally happening,” he says. “Young people have been contributing in age-appropriate amounts. No one under the age of 40 is writing five-figure checks, but still, they’re starting to recognize the value.”

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kfar <![CDATA[Sweeten your year, support KFAR]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/09/12/sweeten-your-year-support-kfar/ 2007-09-12T20:08:10Z 2007-09-12T20:08:10Z Support

On Yom Kippur, we fast until the Shofar sounds after sundown. The anticipation for the Tekiah Gedolah increases thorughout day with our hunger, and after we hear the long call of the ram’s horn, we can join friends for a festive meal.

But what if the sound never came? We might still break our fast, but somehow the experience would be incomplete.  Were Jewish music also silent during the year, or limited to fundraisers, our cultural life would be similarly bereft.

Tshuva, tzdekah and tfilah may be the order of the day, but KFAR Jewish Arts Center is the small voice that ensures our community has great music events the rest of the year. We depend entirely on your support; help KFAR do it with a tax-deductible New Year’s contribution.

Here’s another reason to make a gift today:  A generous donor, wishing to remain anonymous, has issued a challenge incentive, matching every dollar KFAR raises in the coming months and effectively doubling the impact of your contribution!

Sound that Shofar. Break our musical fast. Nourish our community with a donation to KFAR and help bring our signature brand of contemporary Jewish cultural vibrancy to Chicago again this year.

Here’s how to support KFAR’s Jewish cultural programs!

1. Make a check out to: Foundation for Jewish Culture
2. Jot KFAR Jewish Arts Center in
the memo line
3. Mail to: KFAR, 3921 N. Janssen #2s, Chicago IL 60613
4. A tax-lettter acknowledgement from FJC and KFAR follows

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kfar <![CDATA[Golem @ Schubas on Succot 9/30]]> http://kfarcenter.com/blog/2007/09/09/golem-schubas-on-succot-930-2/ 2007-09-09T04:34:26Z 2007-09-09T04:34:26Z Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Mekhaye
Balkan Espanol
Skrip Klezmerl

Contrary to popular belief, Golem is neither a towering Jewish Frankenstein who defended the Jews of 17th Century Prague, nor a creature from Lord of the Rings. Golem is a 6 piece Eastern European folk-punk band.Golem’s JDub debut, FRESH OFF BOAT, is available now. Produced by Emery Dobyns (Patti Smith, Antony and the Johnsons, the Battles) and featuring Mike Gordon of Phish, Amanda Palmer of The Dresden Dolls, and Lenny Kaye of Patti Smith’s band!

“Stellar! A wild edgy approach with a reverance for Old World tradition.” New Yorker Magazine
“Golem produces the sort of music you’d expect if the shtetl were filled with punks instead of peasants.” Washington Post
“This is not your father’s klezmer band…unless of course Sid Vicious was your father…” NY Jewish Week

NOT EMBEDABLE
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