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We here at CHIRP just love our membership drives! After all, with every new member comes a new story, telling tales of inspiration, admiration, encouragement, and gratitude. We receive so many kind and thoughtful words of support, that it would be a shame to keep them all to ourselves. We hope you’ll visit us over the next two weeks as we share some of the stories about the impact CHIRP is making on the Chicago community and beyond.
To kick off our Fall Membership Drive, veteran volunteer James Vest shares why he devotes his time to supporting the mission we call CHIRP.
Imagine if every major art gallery in the country was owned and run by a handful of companies. Every city had the same collection of galleries, arranged by the same commoditized genres, exhibiting the same few pieces of art. What if those companies helped pass a law that prohibited smaller, local galleries out of concern that their art might interfere with the larger conglomerates. If this happened, would you do something about it?
Radio was a lot like that when I joined The Chicago Independent Radio Project three years ago. Since then, CHIRP has helped overturn a federal law prohibiting low-power FM radio stations in major metropolitan areas, providing hope that we, and other stations like us, can eventually apply for a low-power FM license. CHIRP has also launched a wildly successful internet station that gave a group of radio and music enthusiasts a voice through a vast collection of music, personalities, and creative talent as diverse as Chicago itself.
I joined CHIRP because I believe radio stations should be involved with and reflect the unique communities they serve. Like a local art gallery, community radio informs, inspires, empowers and challenges the listener’s perspective while expanding our understanding of music and the cultures that produce it. Independent radio stations like CHIRP host a wide variety of music that reflects our cultural backgrounds, regional identity and our country’s collective legacy.
I am proud to be a part of CHIRP, a commercial-free, volunteer-run organization. Through the support of grants, donations and community volunteers like me and hopefully you, what CHIRP has accomplished in the past few years will only be the beginning.
—James Vest
CHIRP Volunteer Since 2009
Agree that CHIRP is a vital service worth supporting? You can always:
Today we pay tribute to someone we lost too soon, Amy Winehouse. While neo-soul had made some impact in America, that was more earthy, ’70s rooted music. Winehouse looked back a bit further to the ’60s for inspiration. Moreover, she combined soul with elements of jazz singing, revealing incredibly sophisticated nuance for someone so young. Her debut album, Frank, was quite good, with hints of how major an artist she would become. One listen to “F—- Me Pumps” reveals a wonderful composer with a great eye for detail in her lyrics. This was followed by the mega-smash Back In Black, the rare popular album that also garnered tons of critical plaudits. There is no doubt that she inspired many other women to try singing classic R & B rooted sounds, leading to talents such as Adele getting a commercial foothold. Sadly, it ended too soon, but Winehouse’s talent will endure. In honor of Amy, please grab your iPod or MP3 player, hit shuffle and share the first 10 songs that come up.
(Do you have corrections or updates for this list? Send us an e-mail.)
Great American Taxi, Old Shoe, Dead Winter Carpenters
Abbey Pub: 9pm, 21+
Pallbearer, Royal Thunder
Beat Kitchen: 9pm
Riot Fest
Congress Theater: 6pm
Ingram Hill, Sam Grow, Jared McCloud
Double Door: 8pm, 21+
This Thursday night, September 13, CHIRP is pleased to partner with the Lincoln Square Potbelly store for a station fundraiser. CHIRP will receive 25% of all sales between the hours of 5-8pm.
To make things even more fun, we’ll feature some great live music from local acts. Here’s the schedule:
5:30-6pm Abbi Rajasekhar
6:45-7:15pm Briar Rabbit
7:30-8pm Poor Elvis
And we’ll raffle off a Lincoln Square prize package with gift certificates from local businesses.
Please join us at Potbelly in Lincoln Square, 4709 N. Lincoln Ave., this Thursday night!
Today we pay tribute to one of the great original rock and rollers, Buddy Holly. This bespectacled Texan proved particularly adept at fusing R & B with pop and country tropes, and he shared with Chuck Berry the ability to write lyrics that teenagers could immediately identify with. Moreover, he matured as a songwriter at a startling rate, showing melodic and arranging chops that still make historians wonder if rock would have gotten to some places sooner had Buddy not died in that tragic plane crash. Holly’s influence loomed large in the early ’60s, as most strongly evidenced in the early work of The Beatles (whose name was a takeoff/homage to the name of Buddy’s band, The Crickets) and The Rolling Stones (the latter who first hit the U.S. charts with a cover of Buddy’s “Not Fade Away”), and, most obviously, the band that named themselves after him, The Hollies. Let’s pay tribute to one of the true innovators in rock by grabbing your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle, and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.