Young Chicago Authors (YCA), producers of the world's largest youth poetry festival, Louder Than A Bomb (LTAB), will present a day-long series of special events to celebrate its 15th anniversary Sunday, March 1. Featuring co-hosts Alec Baldwin, Alfre Woodard and hip-hop composer Ali Shaheed Muhammad (aka Ali from A Tribe Called Quest), the benefit starts with an intimate Sunday brunch at the Soho House, 125 N. Green St. from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. with a screening of segments of the Louder Than A Bomb documentary and live spoken word poetry performances in the 30-seat Soho House screening room. From 6-7 p.m., 40 guests will be welcomed by the co-hosts at an onstage, pre-show reception to celebrate YCA's 15th anniversary at the Black Ensemble Theater, 4450 N. Clark. Directly following the reception, the day's festivities will culminate with an evening performance, "Re-Imagining Chicago" at 7:30 p.m. emceed by Louder Than a Bomb's co-founder Kevin Coval, featuring performances by current program participants and alumni, as well as participation from the co-hosts.
The 2015 Louder Than A Bomb festival encompasses more than 90 performances at 10 venues, featuring the talents of 1,200 students from over 120 schools, across 100 different Chicagoland zip codes. The festival attracts high school aged youth from a diverse cross-section of socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds that come together in celebration of the five-week poetry festival. For a complete schedule of events, visit:youngchicagoauthors.org/blog/ltab/ltab-events
"This is the fifteenth year of the Louder Than A Bomb: Chicago Youth Poetry Festival. In that time, LTAB has grown in Chicago into one of the largest youth cultural gatherings in the world," says Poet, LTAB founder and YCA artistic director Kevin Coval. "Collectively, we are changing the culture of the community. If we change the culture, we change the politics and, ultimately, the policies. There is power here: a growing mass, an army, a counter-culture to norms that dehumanize people of color, the working class, and the critically underserved. The poets at LTAB in Chicago and the nationwide movement they represent are changing things for the better. Together we will make a more equitable country for all."Videos