darkjive.com

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  • Listen Locally: DJ Ayana at Maria’s (because chicago has a history of tripping out)

    I am perhaps best known for spinning classic Chicago Soul records, but on Thursday, October 27, I plan to play cuts from the trippier and (even) grittier side of my Chicago Music collection. I will also feature what I like to call the Rock Hand Side of things. Artists like Rotary Connection (pictured above), Hudsen…

    September 24, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Events
    Bridgeport, DJ Ayana, maria’s packaged goods and community bar
  • Cult Movie of the Week: the spook who sat by the door.

    Goodness. I am reviving the “Cult Movie of the Week” category for a minute based strictly on this film. I am also seeking out the book it’s based on, as well as the soundtrack.  I was sucker-punched by Herbie Hancock’s future funk interpretation of a Spy/Espionage movie score. I was in love when I heard…

    September 19, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Chicago Cultural History, Cult Movie of the Week
    black film, Central Intelligence Agency, Chicago, Chicago Tribune, Cult Movie of the Week, Herbie Hancock, Ivan Dixon, Sam Greenlee, Spook Who Sat by the Door, Tim Reid
    Cult Movie of the Week: the spook who sat by the door.
  • Sophia Tareen’s Chicago Soul Food Sign-of-the-Times

    photo by Southern Foodways Alliance. Sophia Tareen’s article published on various platforms this month, entitled “Chicago Soul Food Disappearing as Blacks Leave, (excerpted below) brings up a number of over-arching issues as to why these community institutions have had some hard times, but leaves out any solutions, leaving us with sort of a hollow ‘sign-of-the-times’…

    September 13, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, Chicago Cultural History, Commentary, Jive Culture
    Army and Lou’s, Captain’s Hard Times, Chicago Cultural History, chicago restaurants, food, Izola’s, organic food, slow food movement, sophia tareen
    Sophia Tareen’s Chicago Soul Food Sign-of-the-Times
  • Alfresco Dining at Harold’s Chicken

    During these last strains of summer, I find myself seeking out ways to absorb the outdoor life. Generally speaking, there aren’t a whole lot of opportunities for alfresco dining on the South Side of Chicago. Imagine my surprise when I passed by this Harold’s Chicken (a Chicago tradition) at 64th and Cottage Grove. Get it…

    September 7, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Uncategorized
    Al fresco dining, Chicago, harold’s chicken, South Side Chicago
    Alfresco Dining at Harold’s Chicken
  • Imaginations: good stuff!

    The Imaginations were a mid-seventies Chicago-based vocal group that rose out of the ashes of Brighter Side of Darkness (best known for “Love Jones”, their story can be found here).  In 1974-1975 they put out a flurry of singles and one album, “Good Stuff”.  I originally bought the album because I had to hear “Love…

    September 6, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Uncategorized
    Benjamin Wright, Brighter Side of Darkness, Chicago, Chicago Soul, Clarence Johnson, Love Jones, The Imaginations, Tom Tom Washington
  • Disco Nights at the Cabrini Green Summer Fest, 1979

    Jamming  and juggling on a warm summer’s afternoon in the days when Jane Byrne was mayor… and Disco was king.  Two years later, Jane Byrne moved into Cabrini Green in part as a publicity stunt. Below, a bit more footage: an unnamed local group can be heard (but not seen) performing a version of Teddy…

    August 22, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Chicago Cultural History, Dance
    Cabrini Green, CHA, dance, disco, John Boguta, Public Housing
    Disco Nights at the Cabrini Green Summer Fest, 1979
  • The Ones: SDYL

    I catch Khari Lemuel (pictured below) and Yaw (top, right) all over the place (the Library, 75th street, Red Kiva), and recently, I heard them performing at the Brown Sugar Bakery to celebrate owner Stephanie Hart’s birthday.  I dug them both separately, but as a duo (calling themselves “The Ones”), they are beyond belief. Both…

    August 20, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Local Chicago Music, Music, the Goodness
    Augustin Alvarez, Corey Wilkes, Junius Paul, Khari Lemuel, Marquette Park, Marquette Park Chicago, Music, Yaw, Yaw Aygeman
  • Betty Everett: there’ll come a time

    It was last summer. I was privileged enough to hear the iconic (and prolific) arranger Tom Tom Washington play a few chords of  the tune “There’ll Come a Time” on a piano stationed at a Recording Studio on 80th and Stony Island, where in the vacant lot next door they grew cabbage. It was electric,…

    August 18, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Chicago Cultural History, Local Chicago Music, Music
    1969, Betty Everett, Chi-Lites, Chicago Soul, curtis mayfield, Eugene Record, Local Chicago Soul, There’ll Come a Time, Tom Tom, Tom Tom Washington, Uni Records
    Betty Everett: there’ll come a time
  • Garland M. Taylor: Chicago’s otherworldly metalsmith

    When I met Garland Taylor recently, it was at a Jazz concert held on the lawn of Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art. I commented on his sandals (brown leather that appeared to be custom), and he proceeded to tell me about how he blew all of his money on them some years back while interning…

    August 17, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Art, Arts & Culture, Jive Culture, the Freshness
    art, Chicago, Garland Martin Taylor, Metal, Sculptors, Sculpture, Visual Arts
  • Ebony is Back…. and fly!

    Oh. Goodness. To be clear, Ebony never left us, but it did sort of lose influence in the Black Community. But, wow, have they stepped up. And, I’m prouder than ever to pass by their headquarters here in Chicago (on South Michigan Avenue). To give a little background, Ebony (launched in the 1940s by the…

    August 16, 2011

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, Chicago Cultural History, Magazines, Printed Matters
    Amy DuBois Barnett, Black Business, Chicago, Desirée Rogers, Ebony, Ebony/Jet, Glenn Ligon, Jesse Boykins III, Jet, Johnson Publishing, Moneta Sleet Jr., Printed Matters, Vanity Fair
    Ebony is Back…. and fly!
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