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Chicago Tango Week Festival 2009

Enjoy the festival of Argentine Tango Dance and Music: Chicago Tango WeekSkokie, IL – DoubleTree Hotel and Conference Center Chicago North ShoreTHE 2ND ANNUAL CHICAGO TANGO WEEK WILL TAKE PLACE FROM JULY 1-6; PRESENTING THE FINEST CLASSICAL AND CONTEMPORARY ARGENTINE TANGO MAESTROS AND MUSIC BY INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED ELECTROTANGO BAND OTROS AIRES FROM ARGENTINA AT AN OUTDOOR DANCE SUMMERDANCE, GRANT PARK.The DoubleTree Hotel and Conference Center Chicago North Shore is located at 9599 Skokie Blvd, Skokie, IL 60077Festival packages can be purchased at http://www.RegOnline.com/ctw2009 and the festival website is http://www.ChicagoTangoWeek.com. The organizer can be reached at 312-823-4859.ABOUT THE FESTIVALChicago Tango Week is a festival produced by Tango Éclectique, owner of the ARTango Center in Chicago and held in July each year to facilitate the promotion and development of established and emerging Argentine Tango dancers’ and musicians’ work by building appreciative audiences and increasing the active participation in dance for all ages.Highlights of the festival:- Argentine tango workshops from Thursday, 1 July through Sunday, 6 July- Absolute beginners workshops on three days to make this festival an all inclusive event- Outdoor concert by Otros Aires at the Chicago SummerDance at Grant Park on Thursday, 2 July-The aims of the festival are to:• Increase, enhance, and support Chicago society’s appreciation and experience of Argentine tango as a social dance• Showcase emerging artists and a diverse range of new and unique perspectives in social dancing• Develop new audiences for Argentine Tango music and dance by attracting a broader mix of festival attendees• Make the ballrooms as accessible and family friendly as possible by means of affordable and discounted admission, accessible venues, and hospitality.• Use ARTango Center to make Argentine tango accessible to the public and foster Argentine culture and history.• Students will receive a discount on most festival packages
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MacArthur, Boeing, Others Provide $500,000+ for New Business Model for Arts Organizations

CHICAGO—The Chicago Human Rhythm Project (CHRP), embarking upon its third decade as the world’s first year-round presenter of American tap dance and contemporary percussive arts, has announced the establishment of the Collaborative Space for Sustainable Development (CSSD—working title), which will serve as a shared, affordable and eventually self-sufficient education, rehearsal and administrative facility.

CHRP’s CSSD has secured financial support of more than $500,000 to date. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is providing $275,000 over four years toward the CSSD’s development and implementation. This crucial contribution follows lead support for program development from The Boeing Company, The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, Pamela Crutchfield and the Arts Work Fund for Organizational Development. Most recently, the Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation approved $120,000 of support, and the James S. Kemper Foundation and the Polk Bros. Foundation committed funding. Jenner & Block LLP and ProTen Realty Group are providing pro bono support.

CHRP’s mission and 21 years of program development are rooted in community organizing and collaborative action. “The gift from MacArthur, which may be the largest ever to an institution dedicated to American tap, is significant in a national and international context for the tap dance field,” commented CHRP Founder/Director Lane Alexander, who was appointed last week to Mayor-elect Rahm Emanuel’s Arts and Culture transition team. “It demonstrates that the funding community has confidence in the singular value of this new initiative and is comfortable with a non-mainstream institution leading the way.”

About the Collaborative Space for Sustainable Development

CHRP’s CSSD will centralize and professionalize the administrative, rehearsal and education space needs of several resident companies, as well as numerous additional arts space users. The facility will maximize space, equipment and shared service use through a well-designed suite of facility and service options customized and economized for each participant.

CSSD will be managed as a CHRP program initially, with collaborating resident companies to include:

Jump Rhythm Jazz Project
Kalapriya, Center for Indian Performing Arts
Luna Negra Dance Theater
Ping Pong Productions, which facilitates collaborations between Chinese and international artists
River North Dance Chicago
CSSD is creating a physical space for smaller and mid-sized organizations to stabilize operations and pursue facility-centric program growth opportunities as resourcefully and cost-effectively as possible. CSSD will provide a long-term platform for stability and growth in several key areas by:

responding to the near-universal need among small and mid-sized dance and other arts organizations for professional administrative, rehearsal and education spaces as well as a desire to unify as many organizational functions as possible in a single location creating a venue that will allow arts organizations to develop and maximize earned income from tuition-based education programs while lessening reliance on subsidies
enabling longer-term program planning as well as enhancing the potential scope and impact of tuition-based education programs managing the facility, mitigating many users’ current space management burdens Initial funding has supported the hiring of respected arts administrator Suellen Burns as program director. CSSD has a lead space option in downtown Chicago and continues to pursue additional funding, which would facilitate a development timeline culminating in a grand opening in fall 2011.

Project background

The brainchild of CHRP Founder and Director Lane Alexander, CSSD grew from CHRP’s two-year strategic planning process, led by then-Board Chair Susan Oppenheimer (Ph.D., organizational development), which produced a plan for 2010–12 focusing on long-term opportunities for collaborative space and earned income development. In cultivating other prospective resident companies, CHRP found many groups that cited similar priorities, as well as the need to streamline operations and reduce overhead, as both fundamental challenges and untapped opportunities.

Most cultural institutions in the United States, regardless of size, have experienced declining ticket revenue while education programs have held steady or grown. The medium- to long-term trend may require cultural institutions to recalibrate the balance between performance and education, and CSSD will create a sustainable platform for that purpose. In studies funded by the Chicago Community Trust and the MacArthur Foundation, as well as from a market survey donated to CHRP by the Boston Consulting Group and CSSD’s more informal information-gathering, there was a strong desire for centralized space for meetings, performances and classes.

“We are proposing to alter the traditional business model by offering arts groups the opportunity to shift their reliance on earned revenue from ticket sales and contributed income to self-sustaining revenue via educational programming,” commented Alexander.

About CSSD Program Director Suellen Burns

Suellen Burns was program manager, then executive director, of Arts Bridge, the nation’s first business incubator for the arts, which doubled the number of groups it served during her eight years. Burns led Arts Bridge’s 1997 facility project, developing and securing a new home for its Incubator Program as anchor tenant in the Athenaeum Theatre Building, a multi-purpose arts complex. Burns’ experience also includes positions with Friends of the Chicago River, Suzuki-Orff School for Young Musicians and Guild Complex. She has lectured on organizational development and arts stabilization at dozens of local and national forums. She served as project leader, contributing author and contributing editor for Incubating the Arts, a book published by the National Business Incubation Association in 2000.
About Chicago Human Rhythm Project

Founded in 1990, Chicago Human Rhythm Project (CHRP) builds community by presenting American tap dance and contemporary percussive arts in world-class and innovative performance, education and community outreach programs. During the last 20 years, CHRP has produced multiple community-based collaborations including shared revenue programs, concerts and touring opportunities, including:
annual National Tap Dance Day concerts, featuring an array of tap and percussive dance artists a shared revenue program designed to assist Chicago’s budding tap community to build capacity through audience development, created in 2001

 

Thanks 4 Giving, another innovative shared revenue program launched in 2005 as part of its annual Global Rhythms concerts at the Harris Theater, through which CHRP has partnered with more than 100 Chicago-based nonprofits to raise funds for a wide variety of service agencies participation in the 5th Anniversary Beijing International Dance Festival, assembling 70 artists to represent the United States CHRP’s vision is to establish the first global center for American tap and percussive arts (The American Rhythm Center), which will create a complete ecosystem of education, performance, creation and community in a state-of-the-art facility uniting generations of diverse artists and the general public.
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The MacArthur Foundation supports creative people and effective institutions committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. In addition to selecting the MacArthur Fellows, the Foundation works to defend human rights, advance global conservation and security, make cities better places and understand how technology is affecting children and society.

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Chicago Tango Week and ARTango Center Chicago presents......

Latin Grammy Nominee electrotango band Tanghetto live in Chicago on Thursday, 20 May 2010.

Event times:
Doors open at 7:30
Concert at 8:30
Milonga (Social dancing) from 10:30-2 AM
Prices: $20 online and $25 at the door

17 & up
Buy tickets online: http://www.regonline.com/tanghetto

Styles: tango / electrónica / jazz / world

Website: http://www.tanghetto.com Official

MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/tanghetto

http://www.myspace.com/tanghettoacoustic

Official YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TanghettoTV

Buenos Aires based Argentine group formed in 2001. Their innovative sound is a mixture of modern and traditional tango with jazz, electronic and diverse South American influences. The band’s names is inspired in Argentine Diaspora, evoking “a little Argentina” in many Europeans cities.

The “Tanghetto sound” is unique; it's a fusion of diverse sources of inspiration, both contemporary and traditional, that unite with the bandoneon, the nostalgic and characteristic instrument of the traditional tango. Bandoneon takes the singer's role and is surrounded by diverse acoustic instruments and a sonic wall of synths and samplers.

The band was nominated twice for the Latin Grammy Awards and Gardel Award (the argentine equivalent to the Grammy Award).
The band debut album “Emigrante” reached platinum status in Argentina and was nominated “the best instrumental album” . Album “Hybrid Tango” renewed the sound of tango and was nominated as the best tango album.

Tanghetto played in more than 100 cities in 25 countries. Last time Tanghetto visited Chicago was in 2007 for Chicago Tango Week Festival (former Tango Joven).
Most video clips from Tanghetto’s DVD (released in 2006) were on MTV and others music TV stations.
In 2007Tanghetto recorded a BBC Unplugged in London.

TANGHETTO DISCOGRAPHY:

Emigrante (Electrotango)

Released December 2003
Debut album, platinum in Argentina and nominated for a Latin Grammy Award in 2004. Among tango people (dancers or not) and world music enthusiasts is considered a classic. Some notable songs are “Inmigrante”, “El Boulevard”, “Una Llamada” y “Emigrante”. This concept album tells how Argentina began
its history as a country of immigrants, becoming the opposite in recent times.

Hybrid Tango

Released December 2004
This album was nominated also for a
Its creators define it as "cosmopolitan tango". This side project from Tanghetto’s musicians is a fusion of tango with eclectic and diverse elements, such as jazz, electrónica, flamenco, candombe and other latin rhythms Latin Grammy Award, Includes “Barrio Sur”, “Mas de lo Mismo”, “El Deseo” and “Tangocrisis”.

Buenos Aires Remixed

Released October 2005

Live in Buenos Aires

Released July 2006
DVD (NTSC). Full concert (19songs) + videoclips.

El Miedo a la Libertad

Released on 10/02/2008. The album is a winner of the Premio Gardel 2009. Includes 12 songs, 9 of them originals (such as "Buscando Camorra", "El Arte de Amar") and a selection of covers in the band’s style (Eurhythmics’ “Sweet Dreams are Made of This”, a jazz/tango/reggae rendition of Sting’s “Englishman in New York and Hancock’s jazz standard “Cantaloupe Island”. Argentine guitarist Esteban Morgado plays in three songs.

Más Allá del Sur

Released on 26/11/2009 "

The album is a balance between listenable and danceable, acoustic and electronic. This is so far the closest approach to a pure tango language, but the band carries on its innovative quest. Includes “La Milonga”, “Tango Místico”, “Zita” (from Astor
Piazzolla).




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