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Reeling White Sox aiming for winning record, second place

MINNEAPOLIS — The dark space below the .500 mark is no place to be.

Not for a team in its championship window. Not for an organization that six years ago admitted to being ”mired in mediocrity” and launched a rebuild that left its fans waiting through seasons of 67-95, 62-100 and 72-89 in 2017-19 before finally reaching an American League wild-card series in 2020.

With a punchless 4-0 loss Tuesday to the Twins, the free-falling White Sox’ losing streak hit seven games.

”We didn’t have a good approach,” acting manager Miguel Cairo said. ”It’s hard to win games when you don’t score runs.”

The loss, in which Twins right-hander Bailey Ober (2-3) allowed only two hits and had a career-high 10 strikeouts in 7 1/3 innings, followed series sweeps by the younger, livelier, hungrier AL Central champion Guardians and last-place Tigers.

The Sox are plunging toward a totally unexpected losing season after two on the right side of .500. The latest loss dropped them to 76-78 and let the third-place Twins (75-79) creep to within one game of them for second.

Cairo, who was ejected for arguing balls and strikes in defense of starter Lance Lynn (five innings, four runs, 10 hits), has a clear goal in mind.

”I want to finish over .500; I don’t think we’re a below-.500 team,” Cairo said before the game.

We shall see about that.

The Sox play three games against the Padres in San Diego after this series, then finish with three at home against the Twins, who with a major-league-high 32 stints on the injured list don’t want to hear about the Sox’2022 injury woes.

It could be the eighth losing season in the last 10 for a franchise that has made it to only three postseasons (2008, 2020 and 2021) since the 2005 World Series. They won once in each of those series to go with nine losses, falling well short of the parades general manager Rick Hahn talked about during the planning stages of the rebuild.

Fans were willing to let bygones be bygones when the Sox, after patchwork upgrades just good enough to maybe be in contention around the trade deadline, did what everyone thought was the right thing by tearing things down to the studs. They traded their most valuable assets — Chris Sale, Jose Quintana and Adam Eaton — for a stable of prospects who thrust their lagging minor-league system to the top of the organization charts.

The Sox lost on purpose, and the fans didn’t care, eating up every news item they could find on prospects Luis Robert, Yoan Moncada, Lucas Giolito, Michael Kopech, Dylan Cease and Eloy Jimenez.

After the prospects graduated to the major-league team, the Sox’ organizational rankings fell back to the bottom. But the expected payoff at the major-league level came to an abrupt halt this season, manager Tony La Russa’s second and likely his last.

The Sox ”busted their tail,” Lynn said, and made a push under Cairo after La Russa left for medical reasons, but then crashed.

”You look at how hard we were going there, trying to catch up as it was,” Lynn said. ”And then it just has kind of been a free-fall since. And that’s unfortunate.

”It kind of wears on you, especially after everything you tried to do to get back into it. We were right there and then just haven’t played well since we got pretty close.”

Giolito said that no matter how this season ends record-wise, the Sox need to reacquaint themselves with having fun. That might be difficult with losses mounting.

”Be free and loose and get that good feeling, end on a high note and take that to the offseason for whatever individual work we need to do,” Giolito said.

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The Reader’s guide to World Music Festival Chicago 2022

The term “world music” has never been adequate to the task we’ve set it—even in its most benign reading, it implies a division between the listener and the rest of the world. And if that listener is in the United States, our country’s global hegemony in popular music colors the term’s meaning too. 

Americans don’t have to listen outside our borders to participate in an influential, relevant, up-to-the-moment musical culture. Much of the rest of the world does—or, more accurately, much of the rest of the world is made to feel as though it does. When it comes to music, we export much more than we import.

Looked at in such a light, “world music” represents an opportunity for Americans to recognize our privilege in this area—and to level the playing field, at least between our own ears. The World Music Festival exists to encourage this sort of curiosity, empathy, and connection. 

After shutting down for the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Music Festival is returning to Chicago in 2022, with 11 concerts at 11 venues between Friday, September 30, and Sunday, October 9. While the aspiring fascists in the Republican Party escalate their campaign to turn nonwhite foreigners into targets for fear, resentment, and hatred, our city welcomes artists from India, Colombia, Cuba, Mali, Mexico, Bolivia, and beyond. No other event gives so many of Chicago’s diverse populations the joy of a concert that says “home.” 

World Music Festival ChicagoFull schedule below. Friday, September 30, through Sunday, October 9, various times and venues, all concerts free, many all ages

Download the print version of this guide as a PDF.

Founded in 1999, the World Music Festival is organized by David Chavez and Carlos Cuauhtémoc Tortolero of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, with Brian Keigher of People of Rhythm partnering with Tortolero on Ragamala, the marathon of Indian classical music that’s opened every fest since 2013. Though we can be grateful the festival is happening at all, the pandemic still got its licks in—DCASE wasn’t able to begin preparations till February, when the city decided that the risk of COVID-related cancellation was low enough. Ordinarily work on the next festival starts as soon as the previous one ends.

Given the length of the visa process for overseas artists, losing four months meant losing many opportunities to book those artists. As a result, more than a third of this year’s acts are from Chicago—a huge increase from 2019, when their share was closer to one in seven. That doesn’t seem so much like a compromise with circumstances, though, when you consider that the local music on the bill includes the gritty East-West fusion of the Arab Blues, the Peruvian-flavored jazz of Juan Pastor Chinchano, the updated Mongolian and Tuvan folk of Tuvergen Band, and the rambunctious, hard-rocking ska en español of Malafacha. 

The lineup of out-of-town artists is even more exciting, in part because DCASE chose to book a larger number of emerging acts instead of splashing out on a headliner big enough for Pritzker Pavilion. Millennium Park shows are great, sure, but so is the chance to see such a dazzling variety of music, all for free, in a little more than a week. La Dame Blanche (Cuba by way of France) pairs her fierce rhymes and dramatic flute with colossal beats from across the African diaspora; Paolo Angeli (Italy) turns his cleverly modified Sardinian guitar into a percussion engine; Gili Yalo (Ethiopia by way of Israel) honors the jazzy, funky grooves that his homeland made immortal in the 60s and 70s; and Kaleta & Super Yamba Band (Benin and Nigeria by way of New York City) fuse Afrobeat and juju for a driving, danceable sound that’s as cheerful as it is aggressive. 

By some metrics, the festival is smaller than in 2019—there were 18 concerts then, not 11, and they were spread out over 17 days rather than ten. But the total number of artists has stayed about the same, at around three dozen—the big change is that this year 16 of those artists appear at two big events, Ragamala and the Global Peace Picnic.

For 2022 DCASE has booked a slightly larger share of the festival’s shows at conventional music venues (as opposed to city buildings or parks), which Tortolero says was intended in part to help those venues survive pandemic losses. The city covers every expense—artist fees, hotels, transportation, staff and production costs, back-line rental, rider fulfillment—so that all revenue the venue makes from bar sales and other sources stays in-house. In return, the city benefits from the venues’ established audiences and marketing operations.

The festival’s use of conventional venues presents an accessibility issue—none of them admits concertgoers of all ages, and they’re mostly on the north side. But they provide better sound than you’d get in any park setting that isn’t Pritzker Pavilion, and they’re less dependent on good weather. 

More important, World Music Festival concerts don’t put up barriers of their own—neither the literal fences that surround a public park when it’s occupied by a for-profit fest nor the metaphorical hurdles created by cover charges and tickets. We’ve all paid for this programming already, and it’s for everyone. 

That might be the best thing about the fest. Decades of right-wing depredations have endangered the idea of a common good, replacing the connecting threads of our society with “Fuck you, I got mine.” But the World Music Festival was created for no other reason than to make us happy and bring us closer together—and it’s expressly designed to do that for as many different people as possible. In that way, it’s a lot like music itself. Philip Montoro

World Music Festival Chicago 2022 is presented by the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. Additional support is provided by the following partners: Chicago Park District, Consulate General of Israel to the Midwest, Italian Cultural Institute of Chicago, Navy Pier, Old Town School of Folk Music, Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, South Asian Classical Music Society-Chicago, and South Asia Institute.

Click on a show to jump to more information.

Friday, September 30

Ragamala: A Celebration of Indian Classical Music

Saturday, October 1

Global Peace Picnic 

La Chica, Beats y Bateria, DJ Fanita Banana

Sunday, October 2

Paolo Angeli, Surabhi Ensemble

Monday, October 3

Gili Yalo, Juan Pastor Chinchano

Tuesday, October 4

Seffarine, the Arab Blues

Wednesday, October 5

Eva Salina, Ana Everling

Thursday, October 6

Al Bilali Soudan, Tuvergen Band

Friday, October 7

Son Rompe Pera, Malafacha, DJ Kinky P

Saturday, October 8

Kaleta & Super Yamba Band, Occidental Brothers Dance Band International, DJ Mwelwa

Sunday, October 9

Cha Wa, Héctor Guerra

Friday, September 30

Ragamala: A Celebration of Indian Classical Music

Presented in collaboration with South Asia Institute, South Asian Classical Music Society-Chicago, and People of Rhythm Productions. This event continues into the morning of Saturday, October 1. Fri 9/30, 6 PM-8 AM, Preston Bradley Hall, Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington, third floor, all ages

This year closes the first decade of Ragamala, the largest overnight Indian classical music concert in the country—it debuted as part of the World Music Festival in 2013. Think of it as a sophisticated and inspiring slumber party, and bring your cozy accoutrements—thermos, pillows, snacks—so you can take in as much of this experience as possible. Ragamala offers a thrilling variety of performers in the genre’s two main styles, Hindustani (northern) and Carnatic (southern). To arrive at a deeper understanding of these traditions and of what to expect at Ragamala, the Reader spoke with two of this year’s most innovative performers, Hindustani sarangi player Suhail Yusuf Khan and Carnatic vocalist Roopa Mahadevan.

Roopa Mahadevan Credit: Courtesy the artist

Hindustani and Carnatic music both consist of vast, elaborate systems of melodic structures (variously called raga, rag, or raag) and rhythmic cycles (tala or taal). “These ragas are your muse,” Mahadevan explains. “What is the essence of the raga? What does it look and feel like?”

The two styles differ somewhat in their approach to interpretation. “Carnatic relies more heavily on songs as the center—any improvisation you’re doing is around a particular song,” Mahadevan says. Hindustani tradition, by contrast, encourages improvisation as the focal point of a performance. “Unlike Western classical music, the interpretation of compositions in Hindustani music has nothing to do with how the composer composed it,” Khan says, “but the way an artist’s individuality allows for expression.”

“Designation of rags according to different times of the day [is part of] the Hindustani music system,” Khan adds, so all-night concerts such as Ragamala “bring out a flavor of rag music otherwise hard to experience.” 

“Concerts are getting shorter, people are marketing via social media, smaller clips,” Mahadevan says. Meanwhile, Ragamala provides a space to slow down and luxuriate in the opulence of Indian classical music. Mahadevan has performed at Ragamala before, and she describes the vibe as a “one-stop shop—people can just show up and there’s something intimate, like you’re in someone’s living room.” 

Mahadevan also treasures what Ragamala offers her as a musician. “It’s a really heartwarming experience to see the number of people sitting there at [3 AM],” she says. “Like, oh yeah, art does really mean something for a lot of people!” Leslie Allison

Clockwise from left: Ojas Adhiya, Rakesh Chaurasia, Purbayan Chatterjee Credit: Courtesy the artists

6–7:15 PM Purbayan Chatterjee, Rakesh Chaurasia, and Ojas Adhiya

Ragamala kicks off with an unstoppable Hindustani trio of Purbayan Chatterjee (sitar), Rakesh Chaurasia (bansuri flute), and Ojas Adhiya (tabla drums). Coming off an August performance together at Carnegie Hall, these artists are deeply attuned to one another. Themes bounce among them with kinetic spontaneity as the bansuri sculpts the air, the tabla molds the earth, and the sitar performs a metallic alchemy between them.

Chatterjee, a Mumbai-based sitarist, has performed on almost every continent, solo and with ensembles Shastriya Syndicate and Stringstruck. His exploratory, incisive playing guides you on an unfolding path through waving fields of microtones and crisply elaborated structures. In September 2022, Purbayan released the album Saath Saath in collaboration with Chaurasia, his friend of two decades.

A live performance of a piece from Purbayan Chatterjee and Rakesh Chaurasia’s new album, Saath Saath

Chaurasia’s bansuri radiates a warm cloud of melody, husky and smooth. He maneuvers the North Indian bamboo flute from a lilting, swooning dance into a meditative hum. He believes that the aesthetic beauty of Hindustani music is inseparable from its healing and spiritual powers. “While performing . . . I feel as if I am praying in a temple,” he said in a 2016 interview for the Darbar Festival. “The notes have to do something within your system so it affects your chakras and your mind frame.” Tabla player Ojas Adhiya engages with his collaborators fully, shifting like a hunter between loose, open focus and lightning-fast forward propulsion. His expressive face silently exchanges detailed musical information with his collaborators as the syncopated pitches of his paired drums ring out from under his agile hands.

This all-star trio will immerse you in the sounds and sensations of twilight, helping you sink into alignment with the present moment—and preparing your state of mind for the night ahead. Leslie Allison

Sruti Sarathy Credit: Sandra Herchen

7:45–9 PM Roopa Mahadevan, Sruti Sarathy, and Rohan Krishnamurthy

Bay Area-based vocalist Roopa Mahadevan is a torchbearer for the evolution of Carnatic singing in the diaspora. Her performance—the only vocal set at Ragamala—is a must-see. Mahadevan presents the lyrical canon with charisma, thoughtfulness, and joy. Her lithe and nuanced melodies and her rich, grounded timbre are evocative on their own, but she adds extra dimensions by “pushing the Carnatic concert format,” as she puts it, to include “what these compositions mean to us, to bring a new lens to the music.” 

Mahadevan performs in art-world and popular-music contexts, leading the crossover jazz and soul ensemble Roopa in Flux as well as a choir called the Navatman Music Collective. She also sings for Bharatanatyam and modern dancers, and this connection shapes her practice: “I love moving,” she says. “So much of Indian music is how you play around with space, how the notes glide and connect; it means a lot to me to be able to gesture and respond to that with my entire body. That’s the aliveness of it—it brings all of you to the performance.”

Rohan Krishnamurthy Credit: Courtesy the artist

Mahadevan and violinist-composer Sruti Sarathy are currently creating new pieces exploring contemporary themes using Carnatic forms. “In some ways, the cultural ethos of the Carnatic music world is at odds with what we care about in the diaspora,” Mahadevan says. “But we don’t want to give up on the beauty of the tradition, the complexity it has to offer. So we asked, ‘Are there ways we can do both?’” Their original album advancing the Carnatic repertoire will be released in 2023. Mahadevan’s Ragamala set, with Sarathy and mridangam player Rohan Krishnamurthy, will draw on the three musicians’ long-standing collaboration.

For Mahadevan, “the singing of these songs is transformative.” Listeners will be transformed as well. Leslie Allison

<img src="https://i0.wp.com/i.ytimg.com/vi/b_2vI1IpIWg/hqdefault.jpg?w=780&ssl=1" alt="Surabhi Ensemble

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Kevin Korchinski makes Blackhawks debut in preseason opener

Connor Murphy gave Kevin Korchinski simple advice Tuesday: Don’t worry about mistakes, rely on your instincts and enjoy the moment.

But Korchinski, smiling and relaxedbefore his first NHL preseason game, didn’t seem to need it much.

Hockey just comes to me,” he said. “It’s what I love to do. So just going out there, I’m going to try and have fun and play my game.”

Even with veterans Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Seth Jones all in the lineup for the Hawks’ preseason opener –a 4-1 lossto the Blues –it was Korchinski, the defenseman drafted seventh overall, who attracted the biggest spotlight.

After all, it’s the top prospects like him who will determine how the rebuild pans out.

“He has been great in practice,” coach Luke Richardson said. “He moves very well. Obviously [he’s] a quick skater, very fluid. We’d like to see him shoot that puck a little more and not look to pass first. That’ll open up things for him later.”

Richardson, standing behind the Hawks’ bench for the first time, paired Korchinski with Murphy, Alex Vlasic with Seth Jones and Ethan Del Mastro with Caleb Jones, giving each prospect a veteran to help them along.

Having the confidence to establish his shot has been a point of emphasis for Korchinski, and he made smart decisions when to shoot and when to pass during his 19:02 of ice time Tuesday.

He will likely land back with the WHL’s Seattle Thunderbirds this season, although a few Hawks regular-season appearances are possible. Nonetheless, every pro experience –like Tuesday –matters.

“[There’s] stuff you can’t get away with at this level that maybe you can in juniors,” he said. “[I’m learning] little tips like that [about] what to do.”

Notes

Mike Hardman has missed the last two days of training camp with a groin injury, but Colton Dach and Paul Ludwinski (concussion protocol) returned to the ice Monday.Kane skated on a line Tuesday with newcomers Max Domi and Andreas Athanasiou,while Toews skated on a line with Tyler Johnson and Taylor Raddysh.So far in camp, Richardson has creatively used video from the Lightning and Avalanche in the Stanley Cup Final in his lessons. Of course, that will change after Tuesday.Read More

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‘What is trending?’: Bears legend Dick Butkus takes over team Twitter accounton September 28, 2022 at 4:30 am

Chicago Bears/Twitter

A familiar face took over the Chicago Bears Twitter account Tuesday night. Pro Football Hall of Famer and former Bears linebacker Dick Butkus went on a tweeting spree that is pure gold.

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The Bears legend made the most of his time with the keys to the team’s account. What started as a simple “hello” tweet turned into polls, videos and “accidental” pictures being posted to the Bears’ 1.9 million followers.

In one of the videos Butkus posted, he talks about his favorite game, which was against the San Francisco 49ers on Dec. 12, 1965. That was the day his teammate and future Hall of Famer Gale Sayers scored an NFL record-tying six touchdowns at a muddy Wrigley Field. He also found head coach Matt Eberflus and snapped a picture with him.

Butkus is no stranger to Twitter. He joined the platform in September 2020 and has over 203K followers. He often tweets his support for the Bears and the Illinois Fighting Illini, his alma mater.

Butkus played for the Bears from 1965 to 1973, finishing his career with 1,020 tackles and 22 interceptions. He was named to the All-NFL first team six times in his career and made eight consecutive Pro Bowl appearances. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility in 1979.

Here are some more highlights from Butkus’ night on Bears Twitter:

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‘What is trending?’: Bears legend Dick Butkus takes over team Twitter accounton September 28, 2022 at 4:30 am Read More »

It has come to this: Reeling White Sox aiming for winning record, second place

MINNEAPOLIS – The dark space below the .500 mark is no place to be.

Not for a team in its championship window. Not for an organization that, six years ago gave in to being “mired in mediocrity” and worse and launched a rebuild that left its fans patiently waiting through seasons of 67-95, 62-100 and 72-89 from 2017-19 before finally making a wild card series in 2020.

The White Sox, after a lackluster 4-0 loss to the Twins Tuesday, extended their free-falling losing streak to seven. The loss, featuring two hits against right-hander Bailey Ober who recorded a career high 10 strikeouts, followed series sweeps by the younger, livelier, hungrier AL Central champion Cleveland Guardians and the last-place Tigers. The Sox are reeling toward a losing season after two on the right side of .500. Tuesday’s loss dropped the Sox to 76-78 and let the third-place Twins (75-79) creep to one game.

Acting manager Miguel Cairo, who was ejected for arguing balls and strikes in defense of starter Lance Lynn (five innings, four runs, 10 hits) knows where he wants to finish.

“I want to finishover .500; I don’t think we’re a below-.500 team,” Cairo said before the game.

We shall see. Playing for pride?

“You said the word right there,” Cairo said. “You’ve got to have pride when you’re playing the game. They’re professional baseball players, big leaguers. There’s a reason why they’re here, and they’ve got to show that they want to finish strong.”

“For me, definitely [want to avoid an embarrassing] losing record,” AJ Pollock said. “We want to finish in front of [the Twins] for sure. Just finish the last nine games strong. Take it to the finish line no matter what.”

The Sox play three in San Diego after this series, then finish at home with three against the Twins. It could be their eighth losing season in the last 10 for a franchise that enjoyed three postseasons, 2008, 2020 and 2021 since the 2005 World Series. They won once in each series to go with nine losses, falling well short of the parades general manager Rick Hahn talked about during planning stages of the rebuild.

Fans were willing to let bygones be bygones when the Sox, after patchwork upgrades and tinkered rosters just good enough to maybe be in contention around the trade deadline, did what everyone felt was the right thing by tearing things down to the studs. They traded their most valuable assets, Chris Sale, Jose Quintana and Adam Eaton, for a stable of prospects who thrust their otherwise lagging minor league system to the top of the organization charts.

They lost on purpose and the fans didn’t care, eating up every news item they could find on prospects Luis Robert, Yoan Moncada, Lucas Giolito, Michael Kopech, Dylan Cease and Eloy Jimenez. After they graduated to the major league team, the Sox’ organizational rankings fell back to the bottom but the expected payoff at the major league level came to an abrupt halt this season, manager Tony La Russa’s second and very likely his last.

The Sox were eliminated from contention over the weekend, and any push to finish over .500 reminds of 2018, when they desperately tried to fight off the 100-loss monster but got gobbled up losing their last five games, culminating with a sweep in Minnesota.

Lucas Giolito said no matter how it ends record-wise, they need to reacquaint themselves with having fun. That could be difficult with losses mounting.

“Honestly with these last games, just have fun playing and for all of us find what makes competing fun,” Lucas Giolito said. “Be free and loose and get that good feeling, end on a high note and take that to the offseason for whatever individual work we need to do.”

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The Reader’s guide to World Music Festival Chicago 2022Philip Montoro, Leslie Allison, Leor Galil, Aaron Cohen, Jamie Ludwig, Sandra Treviño, Catalina Maria Johnson, Monica Kendrick, Joshua Minsoo Kim, James Porter, Hannah Edgar, Steve Krakow, Bill Meyer, Jacob Arnold, Noah Berlatsky, Kelley Tatro and Mark Guarinoon September 28, 2022 at 1:15 am

The term “world music” has never been adequate to the task we’ve set it—even in its most benign reading, it implies a division between the listener and the rest of the world. And if that listener is in the United States, our country’s global hegemony in popular music colors the term’s meaning too. 

Americans don’t have to listen outside our borders to participate in an influential, relevant, up-to-the-moment musical culture. Much of the rest of the world does—or, more accurately, much of the rest of the world is made to feel as though it does. When it comes to music, we export much more than we import.

Looked at in such a light, “world music” represents an opportunity for Americans to recognize our privilege in this area—and to level the playing field, at least between our own ears. The World Music Festival exists to encourage this sort of curiosity, empathy, and connection. 

After shutting down for the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Music Festival is returning to Chicago in 2022, with 11 concerts at 11 venues between Friday, September 30, and Sunday, October 9. While the aspiring fascists in the Republican Party escalate their campaign to turn nonwhite foreigners into targets for fear, resentment, and hatred, our city welcomes artists from India, Colombia, Cuba, Mali, Mexico, Bolivia, and beyond. No other event gives so many of Chicago’s diverse populations the joy of a concert that says “home.” 

World Music Festival ChicagoFull schedule below. Friday, September 30, through Sunday, October 9, various times and venues, all concerts free, many all ages

Download the print version of this guide as a PDF.

Founded in 1999, the World Music Festival is organized by David Chavez and Carlos Cuauhtémoc Tortolero of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, with Brian Keigher of People of Rhythm partnering with Tortolero on Ragamala, the marathon of Indian classical music that’s opened every fest since 2013. Though we can be grateful the festival is happening at all, the pandemic still got its licks in—DCASE wasn’t able to begin preparations till February, when the city decided that the risk of COVID-related cancellation was low enough. Ordinarily work on the next festival starts as soon as the previous one ends.

Given the length of the visa process for overseas artists, losing four months meant losing many opportunities to book those artists. As a result, more than a third of this year’s acts are from Chicago—a huge increase from 2019, when their share was closer to one in seven. That doesn’t seem so much like a compromise with circumstances, though, when you consider that the local music on the bill includes the gritty East-West fusion of the Arab Blues, the Peruvian-flavored jazz of Juan Pastor Chinchano, the updated Mongolian and Tuvan folk of Tuvergen Band, and the rambunctious, hard-rocking ska en español of Malafacha. 

The lineup of out-of-town artists is even more exciting, in part because DCASE chose to book a larger number of emerging acts instead of splashing out on a headliner big enough for Pritzker Pavilion. Millennium Park shows are great, sure, but so is the chance to see such a dazzling variety of music, all for free, in a little more than a week. La Dame Blanche (Cuba by way of France) pairs her fierce rhymes and dramatic flute with colossal beats from across the African diaspora; Paolo Angeli (Italy) turns his cleverly modified Sardinian guitar into a percussion engine; Gili Yalo (Ethiopia by way of Israel) honors the jazzy, funky grooves that his homeland made immortal in the 60s and 70s; and Kaleta & Super Yamba Band (Benin and Nigeria by way of New York City) fuse Afrobeat and juju for a driving, danceable sound that’s as cheerful as it is aggressive. 

By some metrics, the festival is smaller than in 2019—there were 18 concerts then, not 11, and they were spread out over 17 days rather than ten. But the total number of artists has stayed about the same, at around three dozen—the big change is that this year 16 of those artists appear at two big events, Ragamala and the Global Peace Picnic.

For 2022 DCASE has booked a slightly larger share of the festival’s shows at conventional music venues (as opposed to city buildings or parks), which Tortolero says was intended in part to help those venues survive pandemic losses. The city covers every expense—artist fees, hotels, transportation, staff and production costs, back-line rental, rider fulfillment—so that all revenue the venue makes from bar sales and other sources stays in-house. In return, the city benefits from the venues’ established audiences and marketing operations.

The festival’s use of conventional venues presents an accessibility issue—none of them admits concertgoers of all ages, and they’re mostly on the north side. But they provide better sound than you’d get in any park setting that isn’t Pritzker Pavilion, and they’re less dependent on good weather. 

More important, World Music Festival concerts don’t put up barriers of their own—neither the literal fences that surround a public park when it’s occupied by a for-profit fest nor the metaphorical hurdles created by cover charges and tickets. We’ve all paid for this programming already, and it’s for everyone. 

That might be the best thing about the fest. Decades of right-wing depredations have endangered the idea of a common good, replacing the connecting threads of our society with “Fuck you, I got mine.” But the World Music Festival was created for no other reason than to make us happy and bring us closer together—and it’s expressly designed to do that for as many different people as possible. In that way, it’s a lot like music itself. Philip Montoro

World Music Festival Chicago 2022 is presented by the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. Additional support is provided by the following partners: Chicago Park District, Consulate General of Israel to the Midwest, Italian Cultural Institute of Chicago, Navy Pier, Old Town School of Folk Music, Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, South Asian Classical Music Society-Chicago, and South Asia Institute.

Click on a show to jump to more information.

Friday, September 30

Ragamala: A Celebration of Indian Classical Music

Saturday, October 1

Global Peace Picnic 

La Chica, Beats y Bateria, DJ Fanita Banana

Sunday, October 2

Paolo Angeli, Surabhi Ensemble

Monday, October 3

Gili Yalo, Juan Pastor Chinchano

Tuesday, October 4

Seffarine, the Arab Blues

Wednesday, October 5

Eva Salina, Ana Everling

Thursday, October 6

Al Bilali Soudan, Tuvergen Band

Friday, October 7

Son Rompe Pera, Malafacha, DJ Kinky P

Saturday, October 8

Kaleta & Super Yamba Band, Occidental Brothers Dance Band International, DJ Mwelwa

Sunday, October 9

Cha Wa, Héctor Guerra

Friday, September 30

Ragamala: A Celebration of Indian Classical Music

Presented in collaboration with South Asia Institute, South Asian Classical Music Society-Chicago, and People of Rhythm Productions. This event continues into the morning of Saturday, October 1. Fri 9/30, 6 PM-8 AM, Preston Bradley Hall, Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington, third floor, all ages

This year closes the first decade of Ragamala, the largest overnight Indian classical music concert in the country—it debuted as part of the World Music Festival in 2013. Think of it as a sophisticated and inspiring slumber party, and bring your cozy accoutrements—thermos, pillows, snacks—so you can take in as much of this experience as possible. Ragamala offers a thrilling variety of performers in the genre’s two main styles, Hindustani (northern) and Carnatic (southern). To arrive at a deeper understanding of these traditions and of what to expect at Ragamala, the Reader spoke with two of this year’s most innovative performers, Hindustani sarangi player Suhail Yusuf Khan and Carnatic vocalist Roopa Mahadevan.

Roopa Mahadevan Credit: Courtesy the artist

Hindustani and Carnatic music both consist of vast, elaborate systems of melodic structures (variously called raga, rag, or raag) and rhythmic cycles (tala or taal). “These ragas are your muse,” Mahadevan explains. “What is the essence of the raga? What does it look and feel like?”

The two styles differ somewhat in their approach to interpretation. “Carnatic relies more heavily on songs as the center—any improvisation you’re doing is around a particular song,” Mahadevan says. Hindustani tradition, by contrast, encourages improvisation as the focal point of a performance. “Unlike Western classical music, the interpretation of compositions in Hindustani music has nothing to do with how the composer composed it,” Khan says, “but the way an artist’s individuality allows for expression.”

“Designation of rags according to different times of the day [is part of] the Hindustani music system,” Khan adds, so all-night concerts such as Ragamala “bring out a flavor of rag music otherwise hard to experience.” 

“Concerts are getting shorter, people are marketing via social media, smaller clips,” Mahadevan says. Meanwhile, Ragamala provides a space to slow down and luxuriate in the opulence of Indian classical music. Mahadevan has performed at Ragamala before, and she describes the vibe as a “one-stop shop—people can just show up and there’s something intimate, like you’re in someone’s living room.” 

Mahadevan also treasures what Ragamala offers her as a musician. “It’s a really heartwarming experience to see the number of people sitting there at [3 AM],” she says. “Like, oh yeah, art does really mean something for a lot of people!” Leslie Allison

Clockwise from left: Ojas Adhiya, Rakesh Chaurasia, Purbayan Chatterjee Credit: Courtesy the artists

6–7:15 PM Purbayan Chatterjee, Rakesh Chaurasia, and Ojas Adhiya

Ragamala kicks off with an unstoppable Hindustani trio of Purbayan Chatterjee (sitar), Rakesh Chaurasia (bansuri flute), and Ojas Adhiya (tabla drums). Coming off an August performance together at Carnegie Hall, these artists are deeply attuned to one another. Themes bounce among them with kinetic spontaneity as the bansuri sculpts the air, the tabla molds the earth, and the sitar performs a metallic alchemy between them.

Chatterjee, a Mumbai-based sitarist, has performed on almost every continent, solo and with ensembles Shastriya Syndicate and Stringstruck. His exploratory, incisive playing guides you on an unfolding path through waving fields of microtones and crisply elaborated structures. In September 2022, Purbayan released the album Saath Saath in collaboration with Chaurasia, his friend of two decades.

A live performance of a piece from Purbayan Chatterjee and Rakesh Chaurasia’s new album, Saath Saath

Chaurasia’s bansuri radiates a warm cloud of melody, husky and smooth. He maneuvers the North Indian bamboo flute from a lilting, swooning dance into a meditative hum. He believes that the aesthetic beauty of Hindustani music is inseparable from its healing and spiritual powers. “While performing . . . I feel as if I am praying in a temple,” he said in a 2016 interview for the Darbar Festival. “The notes have to do something within your system so it affects your chakras and your mind frame.” Tabla player Ojas Adhiya engages with his collaborators fully, shifting like a hunter between loose, open focus and lightning-fast forward propulsion. His expressive face silently exchanges detailed musical information with his collaborators as the syncopated pitches of his paired drums ring out from under his agile hands.

This all-star trio will immerse you in the sounds and sensations of twilight, helping you sink into alignment with the present moment—and preparing your state of mind for the night ahead. Leslie Allison

Sruti Sarathy Credit: Sandra Herchen

7:45–9 PM Roopa Mahadevan, Sruti Sarathy, and Rohan Krishnamurthy

Bay Area-based vocalist Roopa Mahadevan is a torchbearer for the evolution of Carnatic singing in the diaspora. Her performance—the only vocal set at Ragamala—is a must-see. Mahadevan presents the lyrical canon with charisma, thoughtfulness, and joy. Her lithe and nuanced melodies and her rich, grounded timbre are evocative on their own, but she adds extra dimensions by “pushing the Carnatic concert format,” as she puts it, to include “what these compositions mean to us, to bring a new lens to the music.” 

Mahadevan performs in art-world and popular-music contexts, leading the crossover jazz and soul ensemble Roopa in Flux as well as a choir called the Navatman Music Collective. She also sings for Bharatanatyam and modern dancers, and this connection shapes her practice: “I love moving,” she says. “So much of Indian music is how you play around with space, how the notes glide and connect; it means a lot to me to be able to gesture and respond to that with my entire body. That’s the aliveness of it—it brings all of you to the performance.”

Rohan Krishnamurthy Credit: Courtesy the artist

Mahadevan and violinist-composer Sruti Sarathy are currently creating new pieces exploring contemporary themes using Carnatic forms. “In some ways, the cultural ethos of the Carnatic music world is at odds with what we care about in the diaspora,” Mahadevan says. “But we don’t want to give up on the beauty of the tradition, the complexity it has to offer. So we asked, ‘Are there ways we can do both?’” Their original album advancing the Carnatic repertoire will be released in 2023. Mahadevan’s Ragamala set, with Sarathy and mridangam player Rohan Krishnamurthy, will draw on the three musicians’ long-standing collaboration.

For Mahadevan, “the singing of these songs is transformative.” Listeners will be transformed as well. Leslie Allison

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The Reader’s guide to World Music Festival Chicago 2022Philip Montoro, Leslie Allison, Leor Galil, Aaron Cohen, Jamie Ludwig, Sandra Treviño, Catalina Maria Johnson, Monica Kendrick, Joshua Minsoo Kim, James Porter, Hannah Edgar, Steve Krakow, Bill Meyer, Jacob Arnold, Noah Berlatsky, Kelley Tatro and Mark Guarinoon September 28, 2022 at 1:15 am Read More »

Cubs’ Willson Contreras on free agency priorities: I want to be wanted

Cubs catcher Willson Contreras has thought a lot about his priorities in free agency. As he likes to say, he’s only human.

“I want to be somewhere that I’m wanted,” he said Tuesday, “and to feel like they’re going to appreciate what I can do on the field and off the field. A place that appreciates what I bring to the clubhouse and what I can do.”

Returning from the 10-day injured list (sprained left ankle) in time for the Cubs’ final homestand was important to Contreras. He achieved that Tuesday, when the team reinstated him and penciled him in as the designated hitter for the series opener against the Phillies at Wrigley Field.

He’s said goodbye to Cubs fans before, in the last homestand before the trade deadline, when he was expected to be dealt for prospects. That, of course, didn’t happen. But as his final season of club control has wound down, it’s seemed more and more likely that this week’s homestand will be a real goodbye.

Contreras, engulfed in a swarm of reporters before the game Tuesday, left open the possibility of a return.

“We don’t know if this is a real goodbye, or just a moment – for a few months,” he said. “But I’m just looking forward to going out there, having fun with my teammates. And that’s what I can do at this point.”

Contreras also said that if the Cubs presented him with a qualifying offer, he and his representation would “have to consider it.”

The Cubs are expected to present a qualifying offer because if Contreras turns it down and signs with another team, they receive draft pick compensation. But Contreras isn’t expected to consider it for long.

The qualifying offer is a one-year deal determined by the mean salary of MLB’s 125 highest-paid players. Last year it was $18.4 million.

The stability of a multi-year deal would have its own value, especially for a 30-year-old catcher.

Even before the season, Contreras – now a three-time All-Star – said testing his free agent market would be “a dream come true” if a contract extension never came to fruition.

“I know what I want, for sure,” he said Tuesday. “But at the same time, I don’t control the market. So, the market will speak for itself, and we will adjust to it.”

Contreras has been upfront this season about his evaluation of the Cubs’ chances of competing, suggesting the front office will have to be active to open the championship window.

“It’s still the same,” Contreras said Tuesday. “I know we have future. I know we have a really good farm system. But instead of getting close to winning, we still are going to have a lot of work to do. I’m being honest. I know we have a lot of pitching staff in the farm system. And still, this thing’s going to need some balance like we had in 2016.

“We had older veterans, we had a lot of young talent. So, that balance creates a good chemistry. That balance creates guys that can guide the younger talents or can be their support. And that’s something that they probably are looking forward to for the next year or even – I don’t know how long it’s going to take.”

Contreras has been that kind of veteran this season. Rookies including Christopher Morel and Nelson Vel?zquez have gushed about Contreras’ influence on them. But this last week of the season is likely goodbye. For real this time.

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Cubs reinstate Willson Contreras and Seiya Suzuki, DFA Michael Hermosillo, option Jared Young

When Seiya Suzuki got off the plane in Chicago on Monday, he headed to Wrigley Field to hit. Suzuki had just returned from Japan, where he and his wife, Airi Hatakeyama, celebrated the birth of their first child.

“So, that tells you everything about his work ethic and who he is,” said Ross, who recounted Suzuki’s travel schedule the next day. “He’s a really hard worker and loves his craft. Congratulations to him and Airi-san.”

On Tuesday, the Cubs reinstated Suzuki from the restricted list — in a clerical move, they’d transferred him from the paternity list to the restricted list when he reached the three-day maximum.

They also activated catcher Willson Contreras from the injured list, optioned infielder/outfielder Jared Young to Triple-A Iowa and designated outfielder Michael Hermosillo for assignment.

Contreras, who was on the IL for over two weeks with a sprained left ankle, served as the designated hitter Tuesday against the Phillies, batting third in order.

Suzuki was not in the starting lineup. The Cubs still wanted to examine his hand before the game. Two weeks ago, he was hit in the hand by a pitch in the series finale against the Mets. The next game, he entered in the ninth inning as a defensive replacement. He went on the paternity list the next day.

Suzuki was on a hot streak at the time, batting .314 since mid-August, with three home runs in the month of September.

“You saw when he got locked in, the timing looked better, he was all connected in the box mechanically,” Ross said. “And you saw more aggressive swings, right-center left-center power. That’s the guy that he knows he is and we believe he is. So, just being that player consistently is what I know he works hard on.”

Madrigal out for season

Ross made it official on Tuesday.

“He’s done,” he said of second baseman Nick Madrigal’s snakebitten season.

Madrigal has been on the 10-day injured list for two and a half weeks with a strained right groin. Injuries have plagued his season. He’s also served IL stints for a strained left groin and a strained low back. His season ends after 59 appearances.

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NFL Overreaction Tuesday: Jaguars are a playoff team, Colts have the blueprint to beat the Chiefs, The end of Tompa Bay?

Not an Overreaction: Jacksonville is a playoff team.

If the NFL season ended today, the Jacksonville Jaguars would be the AFC South division champions and would be given a playoff birth for the first time since 2017. The reenergized Jags have looked better through three games with Doug Peterson, than any game with Urban Meyer. This season they have already tied the total wins Meyer had in his short tenure as Jacksonville’s head coach and look to add to their total every week.

Within the AFC South, every team but the Jags seems to be rebuilding or on the edge of a rebuild. The Titans drafted Malik Willis to move on from Ryan Tannehill, the Texans are trying to recover from Deshaun Watson’s embarrassing exit, and the Colts beat the Chiefs by a last-minute touchdown a week after being shut out by Jacksonville. In years past we have seen several NFL teams below .500 make the playoffs and in the struggling division, don’t be surprised if Jacksonville sneaks in.

Overreaction: The Colts have the NFL’s new blueprint for beating the Chiefs

In a shocking last-minute drive, the Indianapolis Colts upset the 2-0 Kansas City Chiefs 20-17 leaving some to wonder if there is a new blueprint to beat KC. The 2021 NFL season blueprint was drafted by the Baltimore Ravens, who laid out a two-high safety look that game Patrick Mahomes fits. Teams throughout the season implemented this strategy to contain the explosive offense and take away Mahomes’ biggest strength (his arm).

With this new Chief’s offense that focuses on spreading the ball around instead of throwing it deep to former Chief, Tyreek Hill, Sunday’s contest against the Colt had a different focus. Special team’s miscues for the Chiefs had them leaving points on the board with missed kicks with backup kicker Matt Amendola. A bad fake field goal and two bad put returns left the Chiefs constantly looking to climb out of their own grave.

The Colts beat the Chiefs the last time they faced off in 2019 in a similar fashion. If you want to call the Colts game a blueprint to beating the Chiefs all you need to do is: KC has special teams issues, get unsportsmanlike conduct penalties on the Chiefs to further the drive, contain Patrick Mahomes, tackle well in space, force turnovers, pressure the quarterback, stop the run game, and outscore Kansas City.

Not an Overreaction: “Tompa” Bay may be done in NFL after this season.

How many years does the media say “this is Brady’s last year” only for him to win it all and leave everyone baffled he’s this good at his age? It may not be father time that is catching up to Tom Brady, but bad luck. His once-stacked, All-Pro NFL offensive line has all but filled the IR. NFL Pro Bowl Wide receivers Julio Jones and Chris Godwin have already shown on the Injury report this season. As well as, running backs Kenjon Barner and Giovani Bernard on IR.

The Buccaneers will have to lean on their defense to carry them this season if they are to have any hope for the postseason. The defense took care of the Saints in week two and held their own against Aaron Rodgers and the Packer. They will have a tall order against Kansas City and a true test to see if the defense can lead this team.

Brady is the NFL’s GOAT, but if he wants to keep playing and the Bucs want him to keep playing for them. It is paramount they make sure he’s protected, or Brady may look to try his hand in the booth next year and a hurricane may not be the only storm the Buccaneers weather this season.

Overreaction: The Dolphins are the best team in the NFL

After besting a depleted Buffalo Bills team 21-19. The Bills were missing six defensive starters and lost starting cornerback Christian Benford and, three offensive linemen before the game finished. The Bills still managed more yards than Dolphins, but inevitably came up short trying to get into field goal range.

The two-headed monster at wide receiver for the Dolphins (Hill, Waddle) had a quiet afternoon. Waddle finished with 102 yards on four catches, but Hill only managed two catches for 33 yards.

The Miami Dolphins join the Philadelphia Eagles as the only two undefeated teams in the NFL. Having beaten the division rival New England Patriot, a dramatic comeback against Ravens, and with this latest win against the Bills, they have a solid resume. That being said, they still have a rushing attack that ranks among the worst in the NFL and a defense that is ranked in the middle of the pack.

Time will tell if the Dolphins can win it all as they stand at +2,000 to win the Super Bowl. The Dolphins will face the reigning AFC Champion Cincinnati Bengals Thursday night when they debut their new all-white uniforms.

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Breaking: Tony La Russa will not return to manage the White Sox in 2023

Tony La Russa’s two-year tenure as manager of the Chicago White Sox is coming to an end and Sox fans couldn’t be happier.

Tony La Russa experienced a heart issue earlier this season that caused enough of an issue that he had a pacemaker inserted into his heart.  With the ongoing heart problem and the overall inability to motivate his team, La Russa will not be back as manager of the Chicago White Sox.

I am told this is indeed true. La Russa will not return to manage the White Sox in 2023, due to ongoing health concerns. Unlikely to be involved in any capacity. https://t.co/6YOOwgdKNL

Tony La Russa will also not be involved in any further front office capacity with the White Sox, ending a bizarre second tenure on the Southside in disappointing fashion.  Tony La Russa was supposed to have the White Sox winning the AL Central in dominating fashion and they were a pre-season favorite to win the World Series.

Instead, the White Sox failed to win the division, make the playoffs or come close to matching expectations.  The White Sox were chronic underachievers all year long, which may have also played a role in La Russa’s dismissal.

Whether Tony La Russa’s dismissal is ultimately because of the fact La Russa led a historically underachieving team or because of his health concerns may never really be known. But a new manager in the dugout will be a welcome sight to many after a fantastically huge blown opportunity in 2022.

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