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![]() Click for stage events Rhyme-Players The Second Annual Hip-Hop Theater Festival is back at the MCA
Last year, MCA audiences were Hop-Fu fighting right along with
turntable rival DJs Excess and IKL, dazzled by rhythmic raconteur Will
Power and his solo show "Flow" and floored by the breakdance-ballet
fusion techniques of Montreal's Rubberbanddance Group. Is it any
surprise that Chicago's first ever Hip-Hop Theater Festival set
record-breaking attendance numbers at the Museum of Contemporary Art? But if you still think "Hip-Hop Theater" is only about "DJing,"
"B-boying," "MCing" or "graffiti," some of the more recognizable
hip-hop elements acknowledged by old school hip-hop pioneer DJ Kool Herc
in his fascinating forward to journalist Jeff Chang's seminal 2005 book
"Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation," think
again. As this year's two theatrical centerpieces prove, HHTF artists
are returning to storytelling basics and an emphasis on the text,
highlighting substance as well as style to tell their topical and
sobering stories. "Coverage on the conflict from a hip-hop perspective" is how
well-known performance poet Jerry Quickley--self-proclaimed "B-boy in
Baghdad"--has been described for his solo shows and journalistic
reporting work for KPFK Radio Pacifica in Los Angeles. Indeed, there's
no denying the power of the prose in "Live from the Front," Quickley's
take on his personal experiences in Iraq during the early stages of
post-9/11 American military action. Describing the night of the first
bombings: "Baghdad is unstrung in a corset of sound. Murder and chaos
are concussive. They don't just shout in your face they grab you by the
collarbone and blow into it. The tune is so familiar. Allah retreats
into the Euphrates as Jesus shapers cluster bombs." Also buoyed by a
gently satirical wit--the short section about his Iraqi chaperone's
emotional response to a Celine Dion song deservedly gets one of the
evening's biggest laughs--the performance is memorable for the
understated authority with which Quickley delivers his rhythmic
reportage. Comfortably ensconced behind his desk with notes neatly laid
out in front, and with only a few bottles of water to get him through
the marathon ninety minutes of exposition, Quickley may very well be a
street-smart Spalding Gray for the hip-hop generation, a performance
artist quietly eschewing sentimentality yet inviting existential
examination of the self in the craziest of places. There are plenty of raw emotions--almost too much to sometimes
bare--in performance artist and social activist Rha Goddess' "Low,"
her solo show charting one woman's harrowing psychological journey from
emotionally neglected child to clinically depressed adult. She's famous
for a vocal delivery known as "flowetry" (flow-e-tree), a style that
combines hip-hop spoken-word consciousness and song. Whether stringing
together a series of disturbingly image-rich sentences in a single
breath or effortlessly vacillating between primal screams and whispered
confession, Goddess attacks her dialogue's rhythmically tricky
linguistic hurdles with the élan of a verbal gymnast. With little more
than that voice, a chair for a prop and an effective kaleidoscope of
colored lighting, Goddess drives home the universal perils and pitfalls
of low self-esteem, clinical depression and women today with an
unstoppable energy and street style all her own. Rounding out the festival are post-show talks, roundtables and local
appearances by several Chicago artists and troupes including the Chicago
Bears' Brendan Ayanbadejo, South-Side star Rhymefest, Chicago
breakdancer BraveMonk and Phaze II/Crosstown Crew and Congo Square
Theater Company. The Hip-Hop Theater Festival runs at the MCA Theater, 220 East
Chicago, (312)397-4010, through May 6. Complete program schedule at
www.mcachicago.org or www.hiphoptheaterfest.org. $10-$20.
Also by Fabrizio O. Almeida Tip of the Week
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