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AfroFuturist Weekend Day 5: An Afternoon w/ Angel Bat Dawid’s Future Youth Ensemble

Day 5 of AfroFuturist Weekend will begin with Angel Bat Dawid’s Future Youth Ensemble at Elastic!

WATOTO SOUND BATH WITH Oui Ennui 12:00 PM
Parents, Teachers, Guardians, etc. bring your children to this free music therapy sound bath with synth artist Oui Ennui (ages 0 & up).

GREAT BLACK MUSIC/PARTICIPATORY MUSIC COALITION WATOTO JAM SESSION 1:00 PM Children and guardians –stay for this Great Black Music Jam Session! Instruments will be provided, and we encourage all to BYOI (bring your own instruments) as well!

PANEL DISCUSSION WITH Composers Naima Nefertari & Mekala Session 2:00 PM Join Angel Bat Dawid as she interviews Naima Nefertari and Mekala Session. Naima Nefertari is an accomplished composer/pianist and caretaker of the estate of her grandparents, creative musician Don Cherry and visual artist Moki Cherry. Mekala Session is an incredible composer/percussionist and actively tending to the legacy and history of the @panafrikanpeoplesarkestra, whose founder was creative musician Horace Taspcott. Join Angel as she interviews the descendants of Great Black Musicians to discuss legacy and the importance of its preservation for future generations. We’ll also talk about music education, and we’ll be screening excerpts from Naima's private collection of the education work that Don & Moki Cherry did at a public school Watts in LA.

ANGEL BAT DAWID’S THE PEOPLE COULD FLY -- AN AFRO COSMIC FUTURE MUSICAL 3:00 PM

$FREE$ but RSVP please!

Chicago’s annual AfroFuturist Weekend returns, bringing five days of music, art, and innovation by BIPOC artists who are pushing the boundaries of our imagination. Now in its 8th year, the festival continues its mission to cultivate an energy of love, communal hope, envisioning positive Black futures via a reclamation of our past. Emerging from Elastics Arts’ ongoing Dark Matter Series and Residency program, which supports the creativity of the next generation of Chicago-based, BIPOC artists, the festival shines a spotlight on various groundbreaking perspectives of the future. These range from fresh interpretations of Afrofuturism to embracing ancient-future afro-diasporic mythscience and decolonial imaginings. It offers a stage for emerging voices to shine alongside established artists, encouraging collaboration and the co-creation of liberated Black futures.

Previous editions of the festival featured remarkable performers like Ben LaMar Gay, Nicole Mitchell, Angel Bat Dawid, Kwabena Foli, Ytasha Womack, Fabulous Freddie, and Ugochi. These artists carry on the proud tradition of Black art and music, weaving political commitment, historical awareness, and spiritual inspiration into their work. Additionally, a partnership between Elastic Arts and Fourtune House in Bronzeville, initiated in 2022, has extended the festival’s reach, fostering unity among Chicago’s neighborhoods.

In the spirit of pushing boundaries, this year’s lineup showcases artists spanning generations and genres. Together, they ask what the future means for us today. In a time marked by uncertainties—ranging from environmental concerns to financial instability, racism, and violence—the event presents Black radical positivity as a political force rooted in creativity, generosity, and forward-looking vision.

Among the highlights of the 2023 lineup is composer and sound artist Robert Aiki Lowe, who employs voice and electronics to uncover a past haunted by the future. The collective Brown Calculus is dedicated to the profound impact of cosmic Black music. Multimedia visionary AJ McClenon blends speculative poetics with historiography to explore water’s dual role as a container of grief and a channel for joyous future possibilities. Jazz aficionados are in for a treat with composer and pianist Sharon Udoh, whose work captures the intimacy of the present and resonates with the essence of Black, queer futures. Saxophonist and composer Elijah Jamal reimagines the rich tradition of Black music, creating a contemporary soundtrack for life. Additionally, Ayodele Drum Dance infuse the event with the exuberance of West African dance and live drumming.Together, these artists teach us that crafting new futures requires both imagination and collaboration. People from Chicago’s diverse communities are invited to join together in solidarity and camaraderie, celebrating the transformative power of art as a tool to reflect on the past, energize the present, and shape daring new futures.

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October 7

AfroFuturist Weekend Day 4: Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe, AJ McClenon, Suspended Culture, DJ Duane Powell

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October 8

AfroFuturist Weekend Day 5: AFriClassical Series w/ D-Composed, Negre/Otis/Zanolini, Sharon Udoh