We're happy to be nominated in four categories for the Reader's 2024 Best of Chicago poll. Find them all here and cast your ballot by December 31!
We're happy to be nominated in four categories for the Reader's 2024 Best of Chicago poll. Find them all here and cast your ballot by December 31!
Requests? 773-DJ-SONGS or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2022. Our next list is from Substitute DJ Kelsey Stimple.
I had fun listening to a lot of new music this year. Not much else to say--please see below for my twenty favorites! As soon as this posts, I'll probably change my mind about the order again, but I had to pull the trigger at some point.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2022. Our next list is from DJ and Manager of Record Donations Joe Held - Rebellious Jukebox.
2022 was another year full of great new album releases. It was difficult picking just 10 favorites, but here's a list as of Christmas Day. That's why my list of honorable mentions is so long. The lists could vary day-to-day.
NYC
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2022. Our next list is from DJ and Assistant Music Director Matt Barr.
The “best” albums of the year are simply our favorites, completely subjective and instable as our moods shift and twist.
And even then, sometimes it’s hard to distinguish your favorite from you WANT to be your favorite. In 2022, I felt there were dozens of albums that hit about the same for me, and no clear-cut winners.
However, I didn’t want to deliver an un-ranked list, so I went with what I wanted. Big thanks to the CHIRP music department, without which I may not have heard some of these.
The Boos were one of my favorite bands in the ‘90s. After they split in ’99, guitarist and main songwriter Martin Carr maintained a steady solo career. My jaw dropped when I heard the Boo Radleys were releasing a new EP last year, and dropped AGAIN when I heard Carr was not involved.
This full-length from “the other guys” is surprisingly good pop rock. And while it may not truly be the best album of the year, it made me the happiest to listen to. Favorite tracks: “All Along” “Keep on with Falling” “I Say a Lot of Things”
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2022. Our next list is from DJ The Audible Snail.
Entwined with the best of albums is the elation of attending more live shows again. Some of these albums stationed themselves in my heart because I saw the bands live, sometimes in advance of full album releases.
The generative joy of music making, orchestration, and ensemble so readily felt in Chicago music venues, and through our bodies, deepened an appreciation for how very important music is. Let these albums carry our feet, our hearts, our collaborations, our collective wonder and sorrow in the new year. Enjoy!
Banjos come full circle on this album. The Tallest Man on Earth was the last musician I saw live before the quarantine shelter in place order in March 2020, so my music heart is sentimental mush for this album. It opens with Swedish vocals, which is rare for Kristian Matsson, and absolutely gorgeous.
The cover of Nico’s “Fairest of the Seasons” reminds us of the regret and revision we long for in the new year—and it will feel like kinship.
Songs for wonder: “För sent för Edelweiss,” “Metal Firecracker,” “Blood Bank,” “Fairest of the Seasons," and “Pink Rabbits.”
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2022. Our next list is from volunteer Patrick Masterson.
Per tradition, this list features Chicagoland acts only. There are a lot of strange absences on here as I look back at what I did (and didn't) listen to, but the great thing about CHIRP's polyphonic Favorite Albums of the Year series is that we can each listen through my gaps via other volunteers' lists together as we roll into 2023. I hope you look forward to doing so as much as I do.
Meat Wave has been doing this a long time — a decade, in fact, if you're going by the self-titled debut recorded wherever The Kitty Box in Algonquin and Joe's garage were in Chicago at the time.
Though the trio has always been great at the kind of gritty, rhythm-forward post-punk at which they've honed their trade, Malign Hex felt more like a spiritually aligned hex coming out on John Reis' Swami imprint.
The ghosts of Hot Snakes and, to a lesser extent, Drive Like Jehu ("Jim's Teeth" breaks five minutes, the first time the band has done so on record that I can recall) really shine through here, and though the pandemic delayed its release, the wait was worth it.
I knew from the from the first play of "Honest Living" that this one would be up there and am pleasantly unsurprised it landed on top. Great cover, too.