Chicago Reader: Artist and poet Marvin Tate tees up a busily multidisciplinary July

Chicago Reader

by J.R. Nelson and Leor Galil

July 12, 2022

Even in a city full of talented artists with their fingers in a half dozen projects at once, Marvin Tate stands out as a Renaissance man. The west-side native is extraordinarily industrious as a singer-songwriter, poet, visual artist, playwright, and activist, with a richly diverse body of work, and he’s been a local legend for decades. This month, Tate seems to have kicked his activity into an even higher gear! 

On Friday, July 15, Tate’s new visual-art exhibit, The Musicality of Poetry, opens at Experimental Sound Studio’s Audible Gallery. It’ll be on view by appointment till October 2, and it includes a collaborative sound installation with saxophonist Hunter Diamond and cellist olula negre. On Saturday, July 23, he’ll perform a literary tribute to recently departed cultural critic and musician Greg Tate as part of HotHouse’s 35th anniversary festival. And on Saturday, July 30, Tate will debut a four-hour peripatetic performance in collaboration with Theatre Y. Laughing Song: A Walking Dream begins and ends at the YMEN Center (1241 S. Pulaski), but in between it will traverse North Lawndale, along the way involving comedy, happenings, humor rituals, poetry, dance, and a meal. According to Theatre Y, Tate will mix stories from his own childhood with the “dreamlike presence” of the world’s first Black recording artist, George W. Johnson, as “he leads us through his home streets in search of true laughter.” Johnson cut a famous novelty number called “The Laughing Song” in the 1890s, but ended up in an unmarked grave. Tickets for the production, which runs Saturdays and Sundays through August 28, are available at theatre-y.com

https://chicagoreader.com/music/artist-and-poet-marvin-tate-tees-up-a-busily-multidisciplinary-july/