If you didn't vote early, vote today! Find your polling place here. And if you're not registered, you can do it on site with two forms of ID including one showing your current address.
If you didn't vote early, vote today! Find your polling place here. And if you're not registered, you can do it on site with two forms of ID including one showing your current address.
Requests? 773-DJ-SONGS or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
The Juliana Hatfield Three has reunited 22 years after their debut, Become What You Are (1993, Mammoth Records), to release their very long awaited and highly anticipated sophomore offering, Whatever, My Love (2015, American Laundromat Records). Hatfield, formerly of the Blake Babies, drummer Todd Phillips, and bassist Dean Fisher will be playing songs from both albums at Lincoln Hall (2424 N Lincoln Ave) on Saturday, March 7th.
Hailing from the Boston area, Hatfield has had a steady output of solo albums since the initial break up of the Blake Babies in 1991. Her sound has varied throughout the years from forceful rockers to melodic, acoustic and haunting lullabies with the constant being Hatfield’s almost child-like voice. But it was the release of Become What You Are that brought her greatest critical and commercial success. Songs such as “My Sister” and “Spin The Bottle” received heavy airplay on the then fledgling alternative music radio airwaves. The album is considered by many to be one of the defining soundtracks of the '90s, musically aggressive enough to elbow in along the reigning grunge sound that dominated the era with enough soft edges to hold wider appeal.
For more information on the new album go the singer’s website, www.julianahatfield.com.
Meteorological spring began four days ago, but in Chicago, winter stubbornly remains. While we wait for the last holdouts of frost and snow to retreat, let's check out five songs from one of the sunniest subgenres of the past 40 years. Predominantly found in Los Angeles and select points north during the early 1980s, the Paisley Underground found bands revisiting the acid-streaked sounds of the late '60s with the brashness and insistence of the snottiest '70s punks. The result is a sound well-suited for this restless time of year, and the sunny days that will, eventually, follow.
Learn about bike maintenance and enjoy some awesome live sets by OBNOX and Chicago soul ELCRO LEWIS GROUP, as well as DJ sets from CHIRP DJs, East of Edens Soul Express, and DJ Scrabblor! Proceeds from the event will benefit West Town Bikes, a bike shop and education space focusing on under-served populations and youth in the city of Chicago.
Presented by West Town Bikes, New Belgium Brewing & The Empty Bottle, the night starts out at 8pm with basic bike maintenance and winter bike revival and once the class is over, the music takes over!
This event is on March 6th and is 21 and over. Purchase tickets in advance for $10 or at the door.
On Saturday nights in 1982, WCIU Channel 26 in Chicago broadcast The Chicago Party, a variety show that featured fantastic dance music performed by local artists. Although the show only lasted a few months, recordings of the broadcast and the music are an invaluable look into how the South Side got down in the years immediately following the death of Disco, where the beat of Soul and RnB was being driven off the Pop charts but still going strong in the clubs:
CHIRP Radio & Kickstand Productions are excited to host Wolf Alice at Subterranean on March 5th!
The London based quartet is currently touring the US in support of their debut full-length, My Love is Cool, due June 23rd. Wolf Alice’s gritty folk-rock aesthetic is reminiscent of '90s grunge with Ellie Rowsell vocals drawing comparisons to Veruca salt, Elastica, and Hole. The debuted lead single “Giant Peach” demonstrates the infectious beats and vocal builds that is Wolf Alice’s signature.
Purchase tickets in advance for $12 or $14 at the door, doors open at 7:30, show starts at 8:30.