The National Museum of Public Housing won’t have housing of its own until sometime next year, when it opens in a three-story brick building at 1322 W. Taylor—the last remnant of Chicago’s oldest federal housing project, the Jane Addams Homes. Till then the NMPH is making do with off-site exhibits like this one, an examination of public housing as the “unsung cradle of American music.” With photos and text, “The Sound, the Soul, the Syncopation” looks at how close-knit subsidized communities in Brooklyn, Houston, Detroit, and other cities have helped produce talents like Barbra Streisand, Kenny Rogers, and Diana Ross. Locals are also featured, from Dinah Washington and Jerry Butler to Lupe Fiasco, who was raised in the west-side Madison Terrace projects.

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Through 3/15: Mon-Thu 8 AM-7 PM, Fri 8 AM-6 PM, Sat 9 AM-6 PM, Sun 10 AM-6 PM, Expo 72, 72 E. Randolph, nphm.org, free.