Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Podcast

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

What You Need to Know About The 83rd Golden Globes Awards

Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
The Windy City Word
  • Home
  • News
    1. Local
    2. View All

    Uncle Remus Says Similar Restaurant Name Is Diluting Its Brand and Misleading Customers

    Youth curfew vote stalled in Chicago City Council’s public safety committee

    Organizers, CBA Coalition pushback on proposed luxury hotel near Obama Presidential Center

    New petition calls for state oversight and new leadership at Roseland Community Hospital

    Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

    The Awkward Trade: Trae Young heads to the Washington Wizards

    Trump’s Erasure Campaign Reaches Langston Golf Course

    Why Tracking Racial Disparities in Special Education Still Matters 

  • Opinion

    Capitalize on Slower Car Dealership Sales in 2025

    The High Cost Of Wealth Worship

    What Every Black Child Needs in the World

    Changing the Game: Westside Mom Shares Bally’s Job Experience with Son

    The Subtle Signs of Emotional Abuse: 10 Common Patterns

  • Business

    Illinois Department of Innovation & Technology supplier diversity office to host procurement webinar for vendors

    Crusader Publisher host Ukrainian Tech Businessmen eyeing Gary investment

    Sims applauds $220,000 in local Back to Business grants

    New Hire360 partnership to support diversity in local trades

    Taking your small business to the next level

  • Health

    Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

    Why Tracking Racial Disparities in Special Education Still Matters 

    Dying From a Name: Racism, Resentment, and Politics in Health Care Are Even More Unaffordable

    Rural America Faces the First Cut as ACA Support Hits a High

    A World Pulled Backward: Child Deaths Rise as Global Health Collapses Under Funding Cuts

  • Education

    COMMENTARY: Structural Inequality Undermines Jamaica’s Schools

    Educating the Early Childhood Educators

    School Choice Is a Path Forward for Our Communities

    42nd Annual UNCF Mayor’s Masked Ball To Raise Funds & Awareness For HBCU Students

    It’s Time to Dream Bigger About What School Could Be

  • Sports

    The Awkward Trade: Trae Young heads to the Washington Wizards

    Trump’s Erasure Campaign Reaches Langston Golf Course

    NFL Week 18: Playoff Scenarios Include two “Win or Go Home”

    NFL Week 17: The Playoff Picture Comes into Sharper Focus

    NFL Week 16: The Playoff Picture and Clinching Scenarios

  • Podcast
The Windy City Word
News

Elastic Arts’ AfriClassical Futures series continues with the Honourable Elizabeth A. Baker

staffBy staffUpdated:No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Since January 2020, vocalist Julian Otis and Elastic Arts executive director Adam Zanolini have programmed AfriClassical Futures, a series offering an antidote to the overwhelming whiteness and deadness of the classical canon. Each AfriClassical concert invites a Black artist working in or springboarding from the Western classical tradition for an intimate live performance and conversation, though the exact form is up to the artist. Cellist Olula (who formerly performed as Olivia Harris), who came aboard as a curator of the series in its second season, explained this approach to Adam Zanolini for Elastic’s newsletter: “Because this is a ‘Western classical music’ series, it’s very important that we don’t bring in those hierarchies, that we don’t prop up the structures that we’re trying to fight against. . . . I want to continue to see a more expansive approach to [the question], ‘What is classical music?’” Previous AfriClassical guests have included chamber collective D-Composed, Milwaukee-based violin-and-cello duo Sista Strings, pianist and polymath Charles Joseph Smith, prolific composer and string player Renée Baker, and singer and composer Ayanna Woods, who’s behind some of the most engrossing choral music being written in Chicago right now. (Musical talent may be a family trait; her sister is Jamila Woods.) Next up in the series is the Honourable Elizabeth A. Baker, a Florida-born multi-instrumentalist and electronics artist whose cerebral, slow-developing music constantly reinvents itself. When she premiered her work “Strange Loops” here in October, the performance managed to amuse several AACM musicians—no small feat—by employing overlapping scales in different keys and directing musicians to bounce Ping-Pong balls inside a piano and use the bodies of other instruments as resonators, either by singing or blowing their horns into them. Ever out of the box, Baker will use this solo set to spotlight a harmonics guitar (specially designed by experimental luthier John C.L. Jansen) and the 16-channel speaker system at Elastic Arts, which the Chicago Laboratory for Electroacoustic Theatre installed just before the pandemic shutdown.

Elizabeth A. Baker, Sat 5/21, 8 PM, Elastic Arts, 3429 W. Diversey #208, $15, all ages

Related

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleDetroit Tigers fan falls 15 feet from a pedestrian footbridge on his way to Comerica Park
Next Article ‘We need to take care of ourselves’: Ride-share, delivery drivers learn about wellness, self-care as stress of the job increases
staff

Related Posts

Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

The Awkward Trade: Trae Young heads to the Washington Wizards

Trump’s Erasure Campaign Reaches Langston Golf Course

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxFXtgzTu4U
Advertisement
Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjfvYnUXHuI
ABOUT US

 

The Windy City Word is a weekly newspaper that projects a positive image of the community it serves. It reflects life on the Greater West Side as seen by the people who live and work here.

OUR PICKS

Funny Grandson’s Punishment: Car Ride Story!

Daily Driver? This Truck SURPRISES!

Why Are Hybrids Dominating the Auto Market Today?

MOST POPULAR

Empowering Black Parenting: Tips and Insights That Matter

Why Tracking Racial Disparities in Special Education Still Matters 

Dying From a Name: Racism, Resentment, and Politics in Health Care Are Even More Unaffordable

© 2026 The Windy City Word. Site Designed by No Regret Medai.
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.