We're seeking new members for our 2025 Board of Directors, as well as our founding Associate Board for young professionals 35 and under. Details and application at each of the links above.
We're seeking new members for our 2025 Board of Directors, as well as our founding Associate Board for young professionals 35 and under. Details and application at each of the links above.
Requests? 773-DJ-SONGS or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Photo Source: DaBelly Magazine
Today we celebrate the birthday of Bruce Watson, lead guitarist and longtime member of the band Big Country. While they never dominated the US charts, they had a few international hits while building a solid following in the UK and Europe with a rustic yet punkish Rock sound. It was also a very Scottish sound, courtesy of Watson’s guitar which sounded like a bagpipe fused with a mandolin. The piercing hooks helped define songs like “Fields of Fire (400 Miles),” “Wonderland,” and one of the all-time ‘80s-est of ‘80s tracks “In A Big Country.”
The band released eight studio albums before the death of lead singer Stuart Adamson, who succumbed to alcoholism. Despite the tragedy and a few lineup changes, Bruce and the band remains together and continues to perform and tour. Let’s honor Watson and Big Country’s ability to keep on keepin’ on: Take your MP3 player, press the "shuffle" button, and share the first 10 songs that play:
With all the crap going on in the world every day, I found a small consolation of hope to restore my faith in my fellow man from the worldwide reaction to the death of David Bowie earlier this year. It’s always painful to lose someone who’s so prolific and creative, but the thousands of tributes and memorials that made their way across the media-sphere demonstrated, however briefly, the power of music and art to bring us together in ways other forces simply don’t have the power to do.
One of the more powerful creative tributes took place a few months before Bowie’s passing. Chicago band Disappears, as part of last year’s Bowie exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art, performed Bowie’s album Low, an album originally released in 1977 as part of his Berlin Trilogy. I can't think of many other bands more suited to interpreting the Thin White Duke's journey into the avant garde.
Songs from Disappears’ Low: Live in Chicago are currently being heard in rotation and by request on CHIRP Radio.
Amelia Hruby interviews Angela James at the CHIRP studio where they talk about James' upcoming record, Time Will Tell