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.
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Today we pay tribute to a rising contemporary talent who has earned the increased attention she has been getting — Ms. Annie Clark a/k/a St. Vincent. Clark got her start in Polyphonic Spree and then went on to join Sufjan Stevens’ touring band before striking out on her own. Instantly, she garnered comparisons to Kate Bush, and while that’s certainly valid in some respects, with each album she has further honed and developed a distinctive style around her cool vocals, her melodic abilities, the textures of her tunes and her great guitar playing. Her third and most recent album cracked the Billboard Top 20. Meanwhile, she also found time to collaborate with David Byrne on an album. Let’s pay tribute to Ms. Clark by grabbing your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.
Over the course of our Fall Membership Drive, we’re sharing some of the inspiring stories we receive from our volunteers and members. Today, long-time volunteer, Austin Harvey, describes the impact CHIRP DJs have on the Chicago community.
On the surface, it would seem that someone who DJs for CHIRP would do so for rather selfish reasons. You get to hear new music first, discover scads of new bands, foist your own musical tastes on an unsuspecting public, and hang out with the coolest music enthusiasts in the city.
But there’s actually more to it than that. DJs play a crucial role in the impact CHIRP has on the Chicago community as a whole. We’re playing music from local bands and labels around the clock, not just on a sequestered hour late at night. Chicagoans have a way to stay connected to their music and cultural scene, even if they’re on the other side of the planet. Supporters have a station they can call their own, with a stake in their community as well.
Ultimately, my own involvement with CHIRP is something bigger than the sum of any one volunteer’s contributions. It’s everyone trying, through the medium of radio — a medium that we all thought would be dead and gone in the 21st century — to make their community, their city, and their world a better, more interconnected place. It started with a few rogue music fans trying to build the station they wanted to hear. Thankfully, it’s the sort of thing that a few other folks wanted to hear as well.
—Austin B. Harvey
DJ and Volunteer since 2008
Agree that CHIRP is a vital service worth supporting? You can always:
(Do you have corrections or updates for this list? Send us an e-mail.)
Young Buffalo
Abbey Pub: 9pm, 21+
Denney and the Jets, Blue Eyed Jesus
Beat Kitchen: 9pm
Freedom Party Chicago
Beauty Bar: 9pm, 21+
The Scissors, Adora, State and Madison, Glendenning
Bottom Lounge: 7:30pm, Other
Vice and National Musuem of Mexican Art Present Hola Indio Chicago with: Dani Shivers Chrissy Murderbot, British Knights
Double Door: 9:30pm, 21+
The Hoyle Brothers
Empty Bottle: 5:30pm, 21+
Ty Segall, Thee Oh Sees, Bare Mutants
Empty Bottle: 7pm
Steve Vai w/ Beverly McClellan
House of Blues Chicago: 8:30pm
The Devil Makes Three, John Fullbright
Lincoln Hall: 9pm, 18+
Sleigh Bells
Metro: 9pm, 18+
Cherries Records Presents
The Whistler: 9pm, 21+
Over the course of our Fall Membership Drive, we’re sharing some of the inspiring stories we receive from our volunteers and members. Today, DJ Sherbert explains why volunteering for CHIRP is a perfect fit.
I’ve never been much of a volunteer. At home I never volunteered to take out the trash. In school I never raised my hand to do my presentation first. And at magic shows I was never much for volunteering to be sawed in half. It’s not that I’m selfish. On buses I frequently volunteer my seat to an old fart. It’s just that…well…honestly I don’t really know what it is.
So why then do I volunteer for CHIRP? If I’m doing volunteer work, shouldn’t I be giving my time to cure cancer or end world hunger? Probably. Except I’m not that scientifically savvy, and I know I’m always going to be hungry. So those aren’t great fits for me. But music? I love music. I can’t play it, or even dance to it that well, but I love listening to it. And I love constantly discovering new music and music that’s just new to me. CHIRP is all about feeding my love of music. And yours. So maybe you should volunteer your time to CHIRP too. Or if not, your wallet always works as well.
—DJ Sherbert
Volunteer and DJ since 2009
Agree that CHIRP is a vital service worth supporting? You can always:
By Alli Klein (CHIRP Radio DJ every Tuesday 6am-9am)
My leg muscles are still burning from all the jumping around and dancing I did over the weekend. I should have stretched. I would have moshed, but as a bespectacled person I’ve learned that lesson before. Punk rock has been a part of me since age fourteen. I have a Germs tattoo on my right forearm. My friends and I would trade rides to the Tinley Park Bowling Alley, our saving grace of the south-west ‘burbs, to see local punk bands and rid ourselves, or maybe revel in, our teenage angst. I don’t know if I’ve ever grown out of that angst actually, because listening to punk, being immersed in it last Saturday and Sunday in beautiful Humboldt Park, those feelings flooded back. In a good way!