Join us for concerts, workshops, and more with Rajab Suleiman & Kithara. Events are free and open to the public! Co-presented with IMAN.
Sunday, September 18, 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM · The Humboldt Park Boathouse, 1301 N. Sacramento Ave. Chicago World Music Festival: The 606 Walk + Peace Picnic » Join the The 606 Walk + Peace Picnic with Juicebox Concerts along The 606 at 12:30 PM, ending at the Humboldt Park Boathouse for the Global Peace Picnic at 2pm, featuring World Music Festival artists including Rajab Suleiman & Kithara. |
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Tuesday, September 20, 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM · Kusanya Café 825 W. 69th St. 60621 Food, Tea, and Conversations from Zanzibar » Join neighborhood residents at Kusanya Café in Englewood for an event showcasing tea, treats, and artistic expression from Zanzibar. Rajab Suleiman and Kithara will do a short performance and engage in dialogue about life, culture and music in Zanzibar. |
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Tuesday, September 20, 6:30 PM · Old Town School of Folk Music, 4544 N. Lincoln Ave. Room B4 Workshop: Music of Zanzibar with Rajab Suleiman and Kithara » Rajab Suleiman and Kithara from Zanzibar will present a participatory workshop on the genre of taarab and maqam music theory from the East African coast. |
Free! Reserve Here | |
Wednesday, September 21, 8:30 PM · Old Town School of Folk Music, 4545 N. Lincoln Ave., Szold Hall Rajab Suleiman & Kithara Concert » On tour as part of Center Stage | World Music Festival Chicago | World Music Wednesday |
Free! Reserve Here |
Tanzanian instrumentalist Rajab Suleiman threw caution to the wind. He took up the vexing, beautifully rewarding qanun, a zither with dozens of strings that features prominently in music around the Mediterranean and Middle East. What followed is renewing one of Africa's syncretic wonders, the poetically allusive, melodically lush, and rhythmically sophisticated music of Zanzibar, the Arabic classical-meets-East African taarab. In the form's heyday, taarab orchestras could include 60 or more musicians: violinists, singers, qanun, accordion, and oud players. During the last 20 years, synthesizers and drum machines displaced musicians. Virtuosity--and audiences--were lost.
To revive the form's striking colors, Suleiman and a few younger players broke off from the venerable Culture Music Club in 2012 to form Kithara, a pocket orchestra capturing all the sonic specialties of acoustic taarab in an original, dynamic way. In uniting older and younger generations, Kithara's musicians are reckoning passionately with the music's Arabic and Ottoman underpinnings, calling out influences from Cuba to India, and welcoming Zanzibar's ngoma folk rhythms and stories. As Peter Margasak noted in his review for Chicago Reader, Chungu, the band's debut album released in 2014, captures this “gloriously and richly acoustic” sound with its “deft real-time interplay and magnificent singing.”
This rejuvenation will be on show as Rajab Suleiman & Kithara make their U.S. debut tour in 2016, as part of Center StageSM, an exchange program of the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, produced by the New England Foundation for the Arts. From July-December, Center Stage will bring five ensembles from Algeria and Tanzania to the U.S. for month-long tours.
The group's musical heart doesn't demand pondering. Instantly engaging, redolent of Zanzibar's many-layered heritage, Kithara speaks gracefully of what cultural dialogue and intermingling can do. “Zanzibar is an island where many people have come to live and trade for many centuries, so our music is mix of African, Arab, Indian and also European influences,” Suleiman muses. “It's not all that different from America, in that way. In the U.S., many cultures have come together and the music that America is famous for now around the world is a mix of the different cultures coming together in one place.”
The presentation of Rajab Suleiman & Kithara is part of Center Stage, a public diplomacy initiative of the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, administered by the New England Foundation for the Arts in cooperation with the U.S. Regional Arts Organizations, with support from the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art. Center Stage Pakistan is made possible by the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan. General management is provided by Lisa Booth Management, Inc.
Learn more at centerstageus.org/artists/rajab_suleiman_kithara.
special thanks to our sponsors
The Old Town School of Folk Music, Inc.
4544 N. Lincoln Avenue, Chicago IL 60625 • 773.728.6000