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Khruangbin
Lake View
Ever heard of Thai funk? How about surf soul? If not, this Houston-based band is the perfect introduction. After discovering the ’60s and ’70s genres on Thai music blog Monrakplengthai, the group began crafting delicate and densely layered songs in their likeness.
DETAILS:Schubas. 8 p.m. $13–$15. lh-st.com
15–Oct.
9
Man in the Ring
Hyde Park
Google the brutal welterweight showdown between Emile Griffith and Benny Paret at your own risk. After Paret reportedly lobbed homophobic slurs at his opponent leading up to the fight, the 1962 matchup turned deadly, with Griffith pummeling Paret into a coma (eventually fatal) on national television. Michael Cristofer’s world premiere digs into the battle. Whether or not fights are your thing, this drama has knockout potential.
DETAILS:Court Theatre. $45. courttheatre.org
15–Oct.
16
Tug of War: Civil Strife; Henry VI Parts 2 and 3, Richard III
Navy Pier
Part 2 of Barbara Gaines’s mega-adaptation of multiple Shakespeare history plays runs an estimated six hours, charging through the kingship of Henry the Sixth and into the dastardly reign of Richard the Third. Henry is a minor king by any estimation, but Richard is a thoroughly fascinating beast, from that famous opening soliloquy (“Now is the winter of our discontent”) to his blood-soaked rise and fall.
DETAILS:Chicago Shakespeare Theater. $100. chicagoshakes.com
15–Nov.
6
Visiting Edna
Lincoln Park
It’s a family hour of sorts at Steppenwolf, where actor Michael Rabe stars in the world premiere of a play by his Tony-winning father, David Rabe, about a woman with cancer and her troubled relationship with her son. Factor in direction from Anna Shapiro and a knockout ensemble (K. Todd Freeman, Sally Murphy, Ian Barford), and you’ve got a premiere more than worth checking out.
DETAILS:Steppenwolf. steppenwolf.org
16–Oct.
16
Hand to God
Lincoln Park
Puppets are front and center in playwright Robert Askins’s irreverent screed about an evangelizing puppeteer and a Satanic hand puppet. Gary Griffin directs a story aptly billed as Sesame Street meets The Exorcist.
DETAILS:Victory Gardens Theater. $20–$60. victorygardens.org
17
Belly
Lake View
Twenty years after its members parted ways, the influential dream-pop band Belly announced a reunion tour in February. With the group’s new music and a collection of summer tour dates, old fans (and new ones acquired despite two decades of radio silence) ought to flock to the energy and charisma that first defined Belly in the ’90s.
DETAILS:Vic Theatre. 8 p.m. $29. etix.com
17–18
City Made Fest
Andersonville
Local innovators, brewers, and performers turn out to support the Andersonville Sustainable Community Alliance. Everything you drink, eat, and buy at the event is made right here in the Windy City, with local acts providing the score.
DETAILS:Clark between Argyle and Carmen. $5. andersonville.org
17–18
Elgin Symphony Orchestra
Elgin
ESO conductor Andrew Grams leads a Shostakovich overture and Rachmaninoff’s Symphonic Dances, then brings a fresh face to a familiar form: 19-year-old Simone Porter, sizzling on Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto.
DETAILS:Hemmens Cultural Center. $30–$65. elginsymphony.org
17
Tadashi Endo
South Loop
Buto master Tadashi Endo opens the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago’s 43rd season with a one-night-only solo performance. Fukushima Mon Amour channels the Japanese experience in the wake of the 2011 tsunami and resulting Fukushima nuclear disaster—and the resilience that carried the country forward.
DETAILS:The Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago. 7:30 p.m. $24–$30. colum.edu/dance-center
17–18
L’isola Disabitata
Lake View
Franz Joseph Haydn, a composer well-known for his symphonies, also penned a skein of little-known operas. Haymarket Opera Company, Chicago’s bastion of the baroque, day-trips into the classical period and isolates L’Isola Disabitata, the story of two marooned sisters and their rescue by one’s husband, reaffirming that preposterous plot coincidences in Haydn’s day were a feature, not a bug.
DETAILS:Haymarket Opera Company at Athenaeum Theatre. $15–$67. haymarketopera.org
17–Dec.
11
Tseng Kwong Chi: Performing for the Camera
Evanston
This relentlessly inquisitive photographer died young at 39, but left a body of over 100,000 images—mostly of New York’s hip downtown scene, including portraits of Warhol, Haring, and Basquiat in their studios. Not just a documentarian, the artist also showed his identity on film as a gay Asian immigrant adapting to the tumultuous 1980s.
DETAILS:Block Museum of Art. Free. blockmuseum.northwestern.edu
18
Ensemble Dal Niente
Roscoe Village
By winning a competition on the YouTube channel Score Follower, the composer Julio Zúñiga received a commission from Ensemble Dal Niente, one of Chicago’s fiercest new art acts. The result, a quartet for soprano, viola, harp, and piano, premieres here at EDN’s season opener, alongside works by new composition faculty at Chicago universities.
DETAILS:Constellation. 8:30 p.m. $10–$15. constellation-chicago.com
20
Rodriguez
Pilsen
Four years after the documentary Searching for Sugar Manrehashed his life story, Detroit native Sixto Diaz Rodriguez is experiencing newfound popularity. Rodriguez’s eerie yet poignant blend of folk-rock resonated first with listeners in South Africa, where he is said to have been bigger than Elvis Presley, and a new generation of cult fans has rallied around him. Catch the once-unknown legend before he goes off the map again.
DETAILS:Thalia Hall. 8 p.m. $46–$66. ticketweb.com
22,
23, 27
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Loop
The CSO and music director Riccardo Muti kick off the 2016–17 season in frightening fashion with Night on Bald Mountain, the Mussorgsky piece that spawned nightmares when you saw Fantasia as a kid. Richard Strauss’s tone poem Don Juanseduces you back to calmness. Bruckner’s leviathan Symphony No. 7 closes the opener.
DETAILS:Symphony Center. $34–$220. cso.org
22–25
Ravi Coltrane
South Loop
The popular jazz saxophonist (and son of John) returns to Chicago behind In Movement, his latest collaborative effort with Jack DeJohnette and Matthew Garrison. Expect more of Coltrane’s signature postbop grooves in this weeklong residency that should please even the most discerning of jazz fans.
DETAILS:Jazz Showcase. $25–$40. jazzshowcase.com
22–25
Expo Chicago
Navy Pier
Want to visit the world’s best galleries? For four days, you can catch them all at Navy Pier. Chicago’s largest international contemporary art fair displays today’s trends and tomorrow’s potential masterpieces, attracting leading thinkers such as local artist Kerry James Marshall and Dominic Molon, curator of the Rhode Island School of Design Museum. See “Five Prime Spots to Discover Rising Local Artists” and “Tony Karman Shares His Favorite Things.”
DETAILS:Navy Pier. $20. expochicago.com
22–29
Reeling: The Chicago LGBTQ+ International Film Festival
Various neighborhoods
The 34th season of this prestigious eight-day event will screen more than 75 independent films, many with characters and story lines that counteract stereotypes about the LGBTQ+ community.
DETAILS:Various venues. reelingfilmfestival.org
23–25
Chicago Gourmet
Loop
Bon Appétit hosts this toast to our city’s finest food in a majorly ritzed-up version of Taste of Chicago. The three-day event features talks from host Rick Bayless, numerous tastings, and a hamburger party on the roof of the Harris Theater.
DETAILS:Millennium Park. $40–$205. chicagogourmet.org
23–Dec.
11
Día de los Muertos: Journey of the Soul
Pilsen
Chicago’s National Museum of Mexican Art hosts the largest Day of the Dead exhibition in the United States, with ofrendas, or altars, by dozens of folk artists honoring their ancestors with paintings, masks, dolls, sugar sculptures, and cut-paper displays. This year’s celebration features an installation by Sandra Cisneros, the author of The House on Mango Street, in tribute to her mother.
DETAILS:National Museum of Mexican Art. Free. nationalmuseumofmexicanart.org
23
Lupe Fiasco
Jefferson Park
Did you know that the East Garfield Park Grammy-winning hip-hop star Lupe Fiasco is also a painter? Unlike his raps, the wordsmith’s series of geometric abstract canvases are eerily calm, and replete with hidden skulls.
DETAILS:Ed Paschke Art Center. 7 p.m. Free. edpaschkeartcenter.org
23
Secret Keeper
Roscoe Village
This Brooklyn-based group is a natural fit for Constellation’s rambunctious bill, which specializes in all things avant-garde. Secret Keeper (Stephan Crump and composer Mary Halvorson) crafts spatially dense tunes that emphasize the piercing energy of the guitar and bass.
DETAILS:Constellation. 8:30 p.m. $10. ticketfly.com
24–25
Hyde Park Jazz Festival
Hyde Park
The 10th annual fest boasts its best lineup yet, including performances by Miguel Zenón and Spektral Quartet, Matana Roberts, and Dee Alexander Quartet with Dwight Trible. Read more in our guide to the fest.
DETAILS:Various venues. $5 donation, $125 for preferred seating pass. hydeparkjazzfestival.org
25
Historic Berwyn’s Bungalow Tour
Berwyn
Tour classic homes used for modern living and learn historical tidbits about this charming district in the southwest suburbs.
DETAILS:Berwyn Historical Society. Noon. $20–$25. berwynbungalow.org
27
Hamilton
Loop
Lin-Manuel Miranda’s show about the Founding Father without a father is the theater event of the season. Tickets may cost an arm, leg, and kidney, but for hardcore Ham-heads, that’s a small price to see the groundbreaking musical in its first run outside of New York. That said, there’s no rush. The show will be in Chicago at least two years, and at some point, demand will wane. Maybe.
DETAILS:Broadway in Chicago at the PrivateBank Theatre. $65–$500 at broadwayinchicago.com.
27
Angel Olsen
Pilsen
Angel Olsen is no longer a Chicagoan, but her haunting freak-folk made a lasting impression on the city, with a number of similarly smart, innovative songwriters coming out of the woodwork since her departure. Her latest album, My Woman, drops this month, and though much of it skews more accessible than her previous work, Olsen’s off-kilter rhythms are still front and center.
DETAILS:Thalia Hall. 8:30 p.m. $20–$210. ticketweb.com
28–29
Hamlet: The Revenge of Prince Zi Dan
Loop
The Chinese theater company Shanghai Jingju reimagines Shakespeare’s Hamlet, moving the tale to the fictitious Red City and employing traditional Chinese dramatic aesthetics.
DETAILS:Harris Theater. $18–$63. harristheaterchicago.org
29
Lewis Black
Skokie
In 2015, potty-mouthed comic Lewis Black took his career in an unexpected direction with a role in the Pixar hit Inside Out. But that doesn’t mean Black’s righteous wrath has dulled: This tour promises rants that will get down into the naked truth of our times.
DETAILS:North Shore Center for the Performing Arts. 7:30 p.m. Sold out; see resellers. northshorecenter.org
29–Oct.
1
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Loop
The soulful mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato is familiar to Lyric regulars, but she makes her CSO debut here, singing the lyrical Canzone dei Ricordi by late-19th-century composer Giuseppe Martucci. After a second Italian Romantic appetizer, Riccardo Muti leads Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7, the one Wagner called “the apotheosis of the dance.”
DETAILS:Symphony Center. $36–$259. cso.org
29
Flamenco Passion
Loop
The Auditorium Theatre’s Made in Chicago dance series kicks off 2016 with Flamenco Passion. This program from Ensemble Español Spanish Dance Theater features founder and artistic director Dame Libby Komaiko’s signature Bolero beside the more modern Mil Clavos.
DETAILS:Auditorium Theatre. 7:30 p.m. $29–$68. auditoriumtheatre.org
29
Cheryl Strayed
Highland Park
Four years after her memoir about hiking solo on the Pacific Crest Trail hit the New York Times bestseller list, Cheryl Strayed joins the Garden Talks lecture series at Chicago Botanic Gardens. Here, she’ll discuss the healing power of nature and her latest book, Brave Enough.
DETAILS:Chicago Botanic Gardens. 7 p.m. $20–$25. chicagobotanic.org
29–Oct.
1
Trip the Light Fantastic: The Making of SuperStrip
South Loop
Following its March premiere at the Harris Theater, Lucky Plush’s Tripping the Light Fantastic: The Making of SuperStripgets a weekend reprise at a cozier venue. Dance theater is more than meets the eye in this smart and hilarious story of washed-up superheroes on a mission for self-actualization in the nonprofit world.
DETAILS:Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago. $24–$30. colum.edu/dance-center
30
Concrete Happenings
Various locations
A 16-ton 1957 Cadillac DeVille encased in concrete was an idiosyncratic, underknown local sculpture by the German artist Wolf Vostell until it fell into a state of disrepair. Freshly conserved, the car-in-concrete marks its return to Chicago with a procession of events as it travels from Humboldt Park to the MCA to the Arts Club and finally to the University of Chicago, anchoring lectures and events along the way.
DETAILS:Various venues. Free. arts.uchicago.edu/concretehappenings
30
The 5 Browns
Wheaton
Who knows what crossroads these five siblings dragged their baby grands to, but all five Browns not only possess Juilliard-level piano talent but also look eternally 25 years old. At this tour appearance, they play in permutations from solo and duo up to all five at five pianos, hammering out specially arranged versions of The Rite of Spring and Rhapsody in Blue.
DETAILS:Edman Chapel at Wheaton College. 7:30 p.m. $10–$45. wheaton.edu/artistseries
30–Oct.
9
Le Vin Herbé
Lake View
Chicago Opera Theater launches into the first piece of its longer 2016–17 season—the Tristan and Isolde story Le Vin Herbé, by the 20th-century Swiss composer Frank Martin. An eight-piece chamber orchestra backs a 12-singer chorus in the piece, a sort of operatic oratorio.
DETAILS:Chicago Opera Theater at Music Box Theatre. $50–$75. chicagooperatheater.com
30
Shaw’s Oyster Fest
River North
This beer-and-fish fest celebrates the humble half shell, with help from Grand Rapids brew crew Founders. Sip their All Day IPA while sampling six varieties of oyster to a soundtrack of funk and Mississippi blues. Shaw’s Crab House, which has hosted the fest for 28 years, will have nightly oyster slurp-offs in the week leading up to the main event.
DETAILS:Hubbard and Rush. 3 p.m. $20–$50. oysterfestchicago.com