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  • a Chicago Be-In at Promontory Point, 1967

      What’s a Be-In? Check the video below from the Lincoln Park Be-In for more background on the celebration of  “Turning on and Tuning In”. Around the time of Chicago’s storied Blizzard of 1967 which dumped 23 inches of snow over the course of about 35 hours, out in San Francisco, the first “Human Be-in”…

    March 7, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Chicago Cultural History
    Chicago, Ebony, Ebony (magazine), Lincoln Park, Promontory Point, South Side Chicago
    a Chicago Be-In at Promontory Point, 1967
  • Pat and Pam: sisters in soul.

    Pat and Pam Cordell were twin singers who followed in the great tradition of Chicago Kiddie (or in their case, Teen) Soul in the early 1970s. They also happened to be original WVON Good Guy Lucky Cordell‘s daughters. Lucky Cordell (pictured at left) was a disc jockey turned General Manager at one of the most…

    February 27, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    the Freshness
    Chicago Soul, Local Chicago Soul, Lucky Cordell, Pat and Pam, Twins
  • The Buckinghams: Chicago’s answer to the British Invasion.

    The Buckinghams were by far one of the biggest pop-rock hit makers to come out of our city. Named for The Buckingham Fountain in Chicago (of course), the group was originally known as the Pulsations. They changed their names to a British-sounding name in hopes of benefitting from the British Invasion, the trend in the…

    February 20, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Chicago Cultural History, Local Chicago Music, Music
    British Invasion, Buckingham Fountain, Buckinghams, Chicago, Chicago Rock, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, James William Guercio
    The Buckinghams: Chicago’s answer to the British Invasion.
  • A whole new (art) thing? Chicago’s 2012 Cultural Plan.

    CITY OF CHICAGO LAUNCHES 2012 CULTURAL PLAN INITIATIVE Public Town Hall Meetings Begin Tonight! The Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) is asking residents, cultural organizations and community groups for their input in developing the 2012 Chicago Cultural Plan.  The plan will deliver a set of recommendations to support the arts and artists…

    February 15, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, the Freshness
    Chicago, Chicago Cultural History, Chicago Cultural Plan 2012, DuSable Museum of African American History, National Museum of Mexican Art, Navy Pier
    A whole new (art) thing? Chicago’s 2012 Cultural Plan.
  • La Cade: The little hair care company that made some big waves.

    La Cade Products was another of many Chicago-based black hair care firms (that I detail here) during the late 60s through the 1970s. Though not as well-known as Supreme Products (who created Duke and Raveen) or Johnson Products (who created Soft Sheen, Afro Sheen, and Ultra Sheen), La Cade left behind scant but fascinating evidence…

    February 8, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, Chicago Cultural History, Jive Culture, Local Chicago Music, Magazines, Music
    Black Business, Black Hair Care, chicago black businesses, Danny Hunt, Ebony, Ebony (magazine), Ebony/Jet, La Cade Products, La Cade Records, Last Tango in Paris, Legal Cases, Tom Tom Washington, Walter “Butterball” Davis
  • Don Cornelius: made Soul a household name.

    One of the most amazing things about the life of Don Cornelius (and to be clear, this post is about his life… not his death) is the trajectory of his rise to prominence as an ambassador of Soul. Starting out as a radio journalist here on Chicago’s WVON in the early 1960s, he built important…

    February 1, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, Chicago Cultural History, Commentary, Film and Television, Local Chicago Music, Music
    Al Green, Brighter Side of Darkness, Don Cornelius, Joe Cobb, Johnson Products, Sly Stone, Soul Train, WCIU, WVON
    Don Cornelius: made Soul a household name.
  • See Potential: helping us all envision the rebirth of abandoned buildings on the South Side.

    See Potential in what’s around us. That’s the goal of photographer Emily Schiffer’s See Potential initiative: affixing huge weatherproof photographic works to undervalued community assets. It’s a great idea that can help harness the public imagination for the greater good. It’s the sort of greater good that Schiffer always hoped her art would serve. She…

    February 1, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Arts & Culture, Commentary, Lack Versus Fat, Photography
    Center for Urban Transformation, Chicago, community activism, community building, emily schiffer, gladys’ luncheonette chicago, Kickstarter, lack versus fat, Orrin Williams, photography, see potential, urban planning
    See Potential: helping us all envision the rebirth of abandoned buildings on the South Side.
  • Darkjive’s February Dance Card

    Brown Sugar Bakery’s Artist Market Saturday and Sunday February 4th and 5th 328 East 75th Street (75th & Calumet) Chicago Il 60617 773.224.6262 Come have some fun if you are stepper, you like to spank… How about a lil Al Green?  Real music off of Real records! All Artist’s work is Handmade, Original, & One…

    January 31, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    the Freshness
  • Growing Home: reclaiming the earth beneath the concrete.

    I’m itching for spring. Here in Chicago, the weather has been mercifully mild… Visions of a vegetable and herb garden in my backyard dance in my head. I am swooning over Kale and Basil! But dreams of building up my South Side neighborhood (through green jobs, better food, and economic empowerment) dance, too. I’m a…

    January 27, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Lack Versus Fat, the Goodness
    Center for Urban Transformation, Chicago, community gardens, gardening, Growing Home, Kitchen garden, localism, Orrin Williams, South Chicago, South Side Chicago, Urban Agriculture
  • More and More: Little Milton’s plea for more as the cost of living was skyrocketing.

    Whew. That was a long blogpost title, huh? I know. But, let me explain: In late 1967, Chess Records’ Checker subsidiary released this record entitled “More and More” by Little Milton, where the chorus sings and growls: “More and More… all the time!” Ironically, the flip is a meandering soulful blues cut called “The Cost…

    January 26, 2012

    ayanacontreras

    Local Chicago Music, Music
    Blues, Chess Records, Chicago, Chicago Blues, Chicago Soul, Cost of Living, little milton, Local Chicago Soul, Music, St. Louis
    More and More: Little Milton’s plea for more as the cost of living was skyrocketing.
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