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Amelia writesIt’s CHIRP Night at the Whistler With Pool Holograph and Courtship on Febr. 22!

Local bands Pool Holograph and Courtship are playing CHIRP Night at The Whistler this Wednesday, February 22nd!

Pool Holograph was started as a bedroom project by Wyatt Grant and now includes bassist Zach and brothers Paul and Jake (who are also in local band Varsity). Their 2016 EP Town Quarry features the single "Lone Star" which builds on the band's rock sound with light alt-country vibes. Town Quarry is the first album they worked on as a four-piece, and you can learn more about the making of that EP and their musical inspirations in their recent CHIRP Podcast interview.

Courtship is a psychedelic indie-rock group from Avondale fronted by Tyler Olsen. They'll open the night with laid-back vibes that you can hear in advance on their single "Nothing."

CHIRP Night at the Whistler is every third Wednesday of the month, so be sure to add it to your calendar and come hang with CHIRP-approved bands and DJs!

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Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writes@CHIRPRADIO (Week of February 20)

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Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writesFriday MP3 Shuffle: Happy Birthday Billie Joe Armstrong Edition

Today on the MP3 Shuffle we say Happy Birthday to Billie Joe Armstrong, lead singer, guitar player and songwriter for California pop-punk band Green Day.

Formed in 1986, the band broke through to the big time in February 1994 with the massively successful album Dookie, a record that took full advantage of the new world Nirvana made safe for groups armed with loud guitars and 3-chord DIY attitudes. “Longview” and “When I Come Around” were essential ‘90s-era song staples, just as much at home on Top-40 radio as blasting through the earphones of skateboarders and sensitive loners.

Historically, if a pop-punk band sticks around long enough it will end up working mainly on one side of the street: Your No Doubt’s and Blink-182’s will go full-on commerical pop while your Buzcocks and Dead Milkmen continue to keep it real on the left end of the radio dial. Over the years, Green Day seems to have managed to have it both ways while inviting constant scrutiny as to whether they are/were a “real” punk outfit. These questions persist despite the fact that, for example, they were one of the few A-list rock bands of the 2000 decade to get explicitly political with their work and not apologize for doing it (2004’s rock opera American Idiot).

For now, judgements about Green Day’s place in rock history will have to wait, because the band is still going strong in its fourth decade. Help celebrate Billie Joe’s birthday by taking your MP3 player, pressing the “shuffle” button, and sharing the first 10 songs that you hear:

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Josh Friedberg: Music Historian's Corner writesRediscovering Our Record Collections: Joan Osborne’s “Relish”

by Joshua Friedberg

Any discussion of Joan Osborne’s career begins—and often ends—with her one hit, the controversial “One of Us,” a song that was everywhere c. 1995. The problem is that as great as that single is, it doesn’t show off her soulful voice. I’ve seen reviews of her music that express surprise that she can sing at all, but her multiplatinum disc, Relish, includes plenty of surprises for the average listener who purchased it for that one hit.

When I first got into this album around seventh grade, I was listening to a lot of canonical classic rock, and I seriously thought that Relish was one of the greatest albums ever made. I was shocked when I didn’t see it on “best albums of the 1990s” lists. Of course, today, having heard more music from the ‘90s, I can see the relative folly of my youthful judgment, but going back to this album, I’m surprised at how well most of it holds up.

Granted, this is a more retro-sounding album than more acclaimed albums of 1994-95, such as PJ Harvey’s To Bring You My Love and Hole’s Live Through This. But the electric piano straight from ‘70s soul, the swampy harmonica groove of “Dracula Moon,” and the eerie slowness of her cover of Bob Dylan’s “Man in the Long Black Coat” are appealing to me, regardless of whether or not they would be to most rock critics oriented towards innovation.

The album sounds more akin to the swaggering rock ‘n’ soul of the Black Crowes than to most of the Lilith Fair crew of singer-songwriters that Osborne toured with in 1997: there’s a real groove in tracks like the rocking “Right Hand Man” and the T. Rex-sampling “Ladder” that you don’t associate with the music of (admittedly talented) artists like Sarah McLachlan and Tori Amos.

So, this album holds up as a retro (some might say “timeless”) collection of songs. Other highlights include “St. Teresa,” “Pensacola,” and “One of Us,” of course. Just a warning, though: much of the album doesn’t sound at all like that one hit.

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SKaiser writes@CHIRPRADIO (Week of February 13)

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