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	<title>Comments on: Michigan Festivals, Fairs &amp; Fun in July</title>
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		<title>By: Gad Holland</title>
		<link>http://absolutemichigan.com/michigan/michigan-festivals-fairs-fun-in-july/#comment-38186</link>
		<dc:creator>Gad Holland</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 18:01:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Grammy Award-winning Robin Eubanks
brings commanding flavor, style to Idlewild

Jim Crow Museum and writers workshops added
Program/poster winner

	Much like the genre it celebrates, the 2008 Idlewild Jazz Festival embraces an array of eras, artists and melodic styles. Slated for Saturday, Aug. 2, in Idlewild, Mich., from 1:30 â€“ 9:30 p.m., this yearâ€™s event remains true to its eclectic tradition, synthesizing established and emerging musicians into an ear-pleasing daylong line up. Festival acts range from big band to fusion, providing enough versatility to suit the breadth of any jazz enthusiastâ€™s eight-track/LP/CD collection.
Leading this yearâ€™s Idlewild Jazz Festival is jazz trombonist Robin Eubanks and Mental Images. Eubanks includes Art Blakey, Elvin Jones, Eddie Palmieri, Sun Ra, Barbra Streisand and The Rolling Stones among his collaborations. He also won Grammys for his performances on Michael Breckerâ€™s â€œWide Anglesâ€ and Dave Hollandâ€™s â€œWhat Goes Around.â€ 
Eubanks boasts a style that embraces swing, funk and Latin and other evidences of his varied musical experiences. He is brother to Kevin Eubanks, music director for The Tonight Show, and will be joined by their other brother, trumpeter Duane. They will perform at 3 p.m.
For festival organizers, the day is about more than notable names and big crowds. The hope is to make the Idlewild Jazz Festival a proving ground for stellar artists poised for breakout success. 
Thus, joining Eubanks will be Michiganâ€™s own Flat River Big Band (1:30 p.m.), the critically-acclaimed piano-led Dan Cray Trio (4:30 p.m.), saxophonist Eric Alexander and In the Pocket (6:00 p.m.), and renowned vocalist Shahida Nurullah (8 p.m.). 
All that great music hearkens to Idlewildâ€™s heyday when everybody who was anybody made an appearance by the lake, and people in the know had front row seats. Still its own paradise, Idlewild serves as more than backdrop to the jazz fest. Consider it the metronome that keeps the music coming. 

The Jim Crow Museum
The Jim Crow Museum on the campus of Ferris State University will be open from 9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 2. The museum houses artifacts and memorabilia depicting racial and stereotypical images.  Humanities Professor Susan Booker Morris will make a formal presentation from 11 a.m. - noon entitled â€œJazz and Race: Social Dissonance and Human Improvisation.â€ Morris earned her PhD at Southern Illinois University and is a philosopher of aesthetics and race and gender theory. Her most recent work on Bamboozled is being published by the West Virginia University Philological Papers. 
The Jim Crow Museum is located in the Starr Classroom Building in room STR 314. Dr. Morris&#039;s presentation will be in STR 322. The most convenient entrance to the museum is through the lobby of G. Mennen Williams Auditorium. The parking lot for the Auditorium and Starr Classroom Building is on the corner of State and Cedar Streets, just north of the main entrance to the Ferris campus in Big Rapids, MI.
For museum information, visit http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/ or call 231.591.5873.

The DuBois-Chesnutt Writing Institute
The DuBois-Chesnutt Writing Institute was named for one-time Idlewild patrons W.E.B. DuBois and Charles W. Chesnutt. Day long workshops at the festival provide aspiring writers and authors an opportunity to explore their craft and exchange ideas in Northern Michiganâ€™s â€œBlack Eden.â€
Michiganâ€™s own Elizabeth Atkins, bestselling author of White Chocolate, Dark Secret and Twilight (penned with Billy Dee Williams), will deliver personal insights as keynote speaker at the event. Author Renee Alexis and poet Karen Williams will join Atkins and others on the program. Alexis will conduct a workshop entitled â€œSome Like It Hot â€“ Penning Classy Sizzle &amp; Spice.â€ Her works include the novels Gotta Have It and Heâ€™s All That, and her short story, Mr. Everything, in Zaneâ€™s Chocolate Flava 2 anthology. Williams, a poet, writer, instructor, and Cave Canem African-American Poetry Fellow, is the 
Idlewild Jazz Festival â€“ Page 2

author of Elegy For a Scarred Shoulder. Her critically-acclaimed poetry provides the foundation for her workshop, â€œRhythm and Words â€“ Poetic Principles That Can Make Your Prose Sing.â€ 
Workshops run from 1 â€“ 7:30 p.m. on Aug. 2 and also cover the topics of writing socially conscious fiction and wading through todayâ€™s Christian fiction market. 
For workshop information, visit www.stefaniworth.com/08workshop or call 248.893.4553.

Program/poster winner
	Artist Lori McElrath-Eslick is the winner of the 2008 program/poster contest.  Her painting of Pink Coat at Idlewild won the Jamie Dworman Award at the National Arts Gallery Club in New York, was accepted to the 11th annual Catherine Lorillard Wolfe Art Show at the National Art Club in New York and won the Regional Arts Award from the Muskegon Museum of Art.  The painting is on exhibit at the Muskegon museum through July 2008.  
	For her winning entry, Ms. McElrath-Eslick will receive four Idlewild Jazz Festival tickets and a signed copy of the compact disc; Robin Eubanks &amp; EB3. 

###
The presentation of Common Threads by Robin Eubanks and Mental Images has been made possible with support from Chamber Music Americaâ€™s New Works: Encore Program, funded through the generosity of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. 

The New Works: Encore Program supports the presentation of jazz compositions that were originally commissioned through Chamber Music America and the Doris Duke Jazz Ensembles Project, made possible with generous funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.

Chamber Music Americaâ€™s jazz programs support the commissioning and performance of new works by composer-led jazz ensembles, provide incentives for subsequent performances of those works, encourage community- based residencies, and foster international exchange.

Chamber Music America, the national service organization for the ensemble music profession, was founded in 1977 to promote artistic excellence and the economic stability of the field, and to ensure that chamber music, in its broadest sense, is a vital part of American life. With a membership of over 8,000, including musicians, ensembles, presenters, artistsâ€™ managers, educators, music businesses, and advocates of ensemble music, CMA welcomes and represents a wide range of musical styles and traditions. In addition to its funding programs, CMA provides its members with consulting services, access to health and instrument insurance, conferences, seminars and several publications including the bi-monthly magazine, Chamber Music, and website www.chamber-music.org.

The Idlewild Jazz Festival is made possible with the support of the Michigan Council for the Arts and Cultural Affairs a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts. 
    
The Idlewild Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not for profit corporation. The address is 1150 Griswold, Suite 2100, Detroit, Michigan 48226.  The telephone number is (313) 965-0505.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Grammy Award-winning Robin Eubanks<br />
brings commanding flavor, style to Idlewild</p>
<p>Jim Crow Museum and writers workshops added<br />
Program/poster winner</p>
<p>	Much like the genre it celebrates, the 2008 Idlewild Jazz Festival embraces an array of eras, artists and melodic styles. Slated for Saturday, Aug. 2, in Idlewild, Mich., from 1:30 â€“ 9:30 p.m., this yearâ€™s event remains true to its eclectic tradition, synthesizing established and emerging musicians into an ear-pleasing daylong line up. Festival acts range from big band to fusion, providing enough versatility to suit the breadth of any jazz enthusiastâ€™s eight-track/LP/CD collection.<br />
Leading this yearâ€™s Idlewild Jazz Festival is jazz trombonist Robin Eubanks and Mental Images. Eubanks includes Art Blakey, Elvin Jones, Eddie Palmieri, Sun Ra, Barbra Streisand and The Rolling Stones among his collaborations. He also won Grammys for his performances on Michael Breckerâ€™s â€œWide Anglesâ€ and Dave Hollandâ€™s â€œWhat Goes Around.â€<br />
Eubanks boasts a style that embraces swing, funk and Latin and other evidences of his varied musical experiences. He is brother to Kevin Eubanks, music director for The Tonight Show, and will be joined by their other brother, trumpeter Duane. They will perform at 3 p.m.<br />
For festival organizers, the day is about more than notable names and big crowds. The hope is to make the Idlewild Jazz Festival a proving ground for stellar artists poised for breakout success.<br />
Thus, joining Eubanks will be Michiganâ€™s own Flat River Big Band (1:30 p.m.), the critically-acclaimed piano-led Dan Cray Trio (4:30 p.m.), saxophonist Eric Alexander and In the Pocket (6:00 p.m.), and renowned vocalist Shahida Nurullah (8 p.m.).<br />
All that great music hearkens to Idlewildâ€™s heyday when everybody who was anybody made an appearance by the lake, and people in the know had front row seats. Still its own paradise, Idlewild serves as more than backdrop to the jazz fest. Consider it the metronome that keeps the music coming. </p>
<p>The Jim Crow Museum<br />
The Jim Crow Museum on the campus of Ferris State University will be open from 9:30 a.m. &#8211; 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 2. The museum houses artifacts and memorabilia depicting racial and stereotypical images.  Humanities Professor Susan Booker Morris will make a formal presentation from 11 a.m. &#8211; noon entitled â€œJazz and Race: Social Dissonance and Human Improvisation.â€ Morris earned her PhD at Southern Illinois University and is a philosopher of aesthetics and race and gender theory. Her most recent work on Bamboozled is being published by the West Virginia University Philological Papers.<br />
The Jim Crow Museum is located in the Starr Classroom Building in room STR 314. Dr. Morris&#8217;s presentation will be in STR 322. The most convenient entrance to the museum is through the lobby of G. Mennen Williams Auditorium. The parking lot for the Auditorium and Starr Classroom Building is on the corner of State and Cedar Streets, just north of the main entrance to the Ferris campus in Big Rapids, MI.<br />
For museum information, visit <a href="http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/" rel="nofollow">http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/</a> or call 231.591.5873.</p>
<p>The DuBois-Chesnutt Writing Institute<br />
The DuBois-Chesnutt Writing Institute was named for one-time Idlewild patrons W.E.B. DuBois and Charles W. Chesnutt. Day long workshops at the festival provide aspiring writers and authors an opportunity to explore their craft and exchange ideas in Northern Michiganâ€™s â€œBlack Eden.â€<br />
Michiganâ€™s own Elizabeth Atkins, bestselling author of White Chocolate, Dark Secret and Twilight (penned with Billy Dee Williams), will deliver personal insights as keynote speaker at the event. Author Renee Alexis and poet Karen Williams will join Atkins and others on the program. Alexis will conduct a workshop entitled â€œSome Like It Hot â€“ Penning Classy Sizzle &amp; Spice.â€ Her works include the novels Gotta Have It and Heâ€™s All That, and her short story, Mr. Everything, in Zaneâ€™s Chocolate Flava 2 anthology. Williams, a poet, writer, instructor, and Cave Canem African-American Poetry Fellow, is the<br />
Idlewild Jazz Festival â€“ Page 2</p>
<p>author of Elegy For a Scarred Shoulder. Her critically-acclaimed poetry provides the foundation for her workshop, â€œRhythm and Words â€“ Poetic Principles That Can Make Your Prose Sing.â€<br />
Workshops run from 1 â€“ 7:30 p.m. on Aug. 2 and also cover the topics of writing socially conscious fiction and wading through todayâ€™s Christian fiction market.<br />
For workshop information, visit <a href="http://www.stefaniworth.com/08workshop" rel="nofollow">http://www.stefaniworth.com/08workshop</a> or call 248.893.4553.</p>
<p>Program/poster winner<br />
	Artist Lori McElrath-Eslick is the winner of the 2008 program/poster contest.  Her painting of Pink Coat at Idlewild won the Jamie Dworman Award at the National Arts Gallery Club in New York, was accepted to the 11th annual Catherine Lorillard Wolfe Art Show at the National Art Club in New York and won the Regional Arts Award from the Muskegon Museum of Art.  The painting is on exhibit at the Muskegon museum through July 2008.<br />
	For her winning entry, Ms. McElrath-Eslick will receive four Idlewild Jazz Festival tickets and a signed copy of the compact disc; Robin Eubanks &amp; EB3. </p>
<p>###<br />
The presentation of Common Threads by Robin Eubanks and Mental Images has been made possible with support from Chamber Music Americaâ€™s New Works: Encore Program, funded through the generosity of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. </p>
<p>The New Works: Encore Program supports the presentation of jazz compositions that were originally commissioned through Chamber Music America and the Doris Duke Jazz Ensembles Project, made possible with generous funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.</p>
<p>Chamber Music Americaâ€™s jazz programs support the commissioning and performance of new works by composer-led jazz ensembles, provide incentives for subsequent performances of those works, encourage community- based residencies, and foster international exchange.</p>
<p>Chamber Music America, the national service organization for the ensemble music profession, was founded in 1977 to promote artistic excellence and the economic stability of the field, and to ensure that chamber music, in its broadest sense, is a vital part of American life. With a membership of over 8,000, including musicians, ensembles, presenters, artistsâ€™ managers, educators, music businesses, and advocates of ensemble music, CMA welcomes and represents a wide range of musical styles and traditions. In addition to its funding programs, CMA provides its members with consulting services, access to health and instrument insurance, conferences, seminars and several publications including the bi-monthly magazine, Chamber Music, and website <a href="http://www.chamber-music.org" rel="nofollow">http://www.chamber-music.org</a>.</p>
<p>The Idlewild Jazz Festival is made possible with the support of the Michigan Council for the Arts and Cultural Affairs a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts. </p>
<p>The Idlewild Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not for profit corporation. The address is 1150 Griswold, Suite 2100, Detroit, Michigan 48226.  The telephone number is (313) 965-0505.</p>
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