Twenty-five years ago, Lane Alexander and his partner Kelly Michaels started a small dance festival called the Chicago Human Rhythm Project ( CHRP ). With Michaels' background in modern dance and Alexander's in tap, the summer one-off in 1990 celebrating American tap dance raised money for Chicago-based organizations fighting HIV/AIDS, which would eventually claim Michaels' life. CHRP has now grown into a robust non-profit dance organization, boasting semi-annual festivals, educational programs throughout the community and abroad, and an international foot drumming festival called Global Rhythms.
With no signs of slowing down, Alexander continues to push the envelope of possibilities for a relatively small organization, and has developed it into one of the world's leading presenters of tap and percussive dance forms. With so many initiatives, plus a resident tap ensemble called BAM! and managing a full line-up of classes at the American Rhythm Center, CHRP's home at the Fine Arts Building, the company's website is almost as overwhelming as Lane Alexander's to-do list ( presumably ). Yet he continues to have new ideas, the latest being the first-ever Chicago Rhythm Festival ( CRF ).
In an interview with Windy City Times, Alexander was quick to point out that CHRP's mission is about much more than tap dance; he has studied the effects of wide-spread homogenization of dance with Western concert dance forms prioritized by funding organizations, news media, and presenters. Moreover, Alexander's credo places rhythmic dance at the center of our social and cultural identities. Native dance forms can differentiate peoples, or unite them. Indeed, tap dancing is a fusion of West African and Irish foot drumming that has grown through the centuries to represent something truly American. "The dance ecosystem has been built to serve ballet and contemporary dance. … We serve a niche that is not served by the dance industrial complex. About $175 million is invested in modern dance through universities. The National Endowment for the Arts gave $9.2 million to dance last year; $4.6 million went to modern; $4.4 million went to ballet. That leaves $200,000 for everybody else."
Lack of opportunity from foundations, federal and local funding organizations and academic institutions has, to a large extent, provided the catalyst for the many initiatives CHRP undertakes. CHRP tries to unite big-budget programs and fringe projects by participating in the concert dance paradigm, and also through engagement with and in a diverse range of communities.
"We don't aspire to be like ballet and contemporary dance in many respects. We don't want to be Cordon Bleuwe want to be soul food, white pudding, beans and rice ... and if we like, we'll serve it on a blanket with children and elders as a part of the feast," said Alexander. "We can conform to the 'temple' model, but it is not our paradigm or our first aspiration. Our traditions are different. It's called the Human Rhythm project, not 'The Chicago Tap Company,' because there's a social and political component to our mission.
"Almost all of human culture has some very deep ancient rhythmic tradition, and the goal is to bring people around that affinity, get people to lower whatever it is that divides us, find a point of similarity, and build on that. We use rhythm as that affinity point to build bridges between communities and artists."
The "Rhythm Fest" is built on this idea that dance doesn't have to be divisive by joining together five local dance companies to bring dance into the neighborhoods in a series of free performances called STOMPING GROUNDS. BAM! is joined by Ensemble Español Spanish Dance Theatre, Mexican Dance Ensemble, Muntu Dance Theatre of Chicago, and Trinity Irish Dance Company, who will each host free performances at a complimentary with three other participating companies performing for a potluck of amazing percussive and rhythmic dance performance ranging from flamenco to traditional African dance. Alexander sees the event continuing, growing each year toward a large cultural festival that features visual and culinary arts, in addition to dance.
The inaugural CRF kicks off Tuesday, April 14, with a panel discussion presented by Audience Architects and featuring all five artistic directors from STOMPING GROUNDS companies. STOMPING GROUNDS performances take place on April 18 at the Irish American Heritage Center, 4626 N. Knox Ave.; April 24 at the National Museum of Mexican Art, 1852 W. 19th St.; April 30 at Northeastern Illinois University, 5500 N. St. Louis Ave.; and May 8 at the DuSable Museum of African American History, 740 E. 56th Pl. All performances are at 7:30pm, and free to the public. The Chicago Rhythm Fest culminates with a performance from all five companies together onstage at the Auditorium Theatre of Roosevelt University, 50 E. Congress Pkwy., on May 13 at 7:30pm. The performance is the fourth and final installment of the Auditorium's "Made in Chicago" series celebrating local dance and the theatre's 125th anniversary. Tickets for the final event are $27-67, available at AuditoriumTheatre.org, 800-982-ARTS and the Auditorium Theatre box office.