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The CHIRP Blog

Karin Fjellman writesTonight! CHIRP Music Quiz at Township!

Think you’re smarter than the average music nerd? Got tons of useless music knowledge and want something to show for it? Get that thinking cap on, muster up a team and show your skills at the CHIRP Music Quiz TONIGHT! Compete in teams of up to 5 people for prizes from local record stores, restaurants, and much more!

Doors open at 7pm, quiz starts at 7:30pm and is hosted by CHIRP DJ Mary Nisi. Registration is just $2 per person and all proceeds benefit CHIRP. There is no cover for spectators, and you must be 21 or over to enter. Township is located at 2200 N. California Ave.

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Categorized: Event Previews

Mike Bennett writesFriday iPod/MP3 Shuffle—Happy Birthday Paul Cook Edition

When you talk about The Sex Pistols, one gets kind of shunted aside. Johnny Rotten was an archetype. I suppose Sid Vicious was too, though more the archetype of an idiot. Steve Jones played with Iggy Pop and reinvented himself as a radio star in L.A. Meanwhile, drummer Paul Cook gets overlooked. But a band can’t sound as powerful as the Pistols did without a steady presence behind the traps, and Cook certainly was that. Additionally, he is the father of Hollie Cook, the splendid reggae-pop singer. Let’s pay tribute to the forgotten Pistol by getting out your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle, and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.

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Categorized: Friday MP3 Shuffle

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Bobby Evers writesBobby Evers’ Concert Review: Fiona Apple at Chicago Theatre, 7/10/2012

First, let us discuss the Fiona Apple Fan. The FAF was in high school when Tidal came out. Or younger. Criminal was a funny song they snickered through because it was sexual which is hilarious in high school. But the FAF listened to the whole album anyway because it was available and familiar. And they came of age with those songs, the heartbreak of “Never Is A Promise,” the rhythm of “The First Taste.”

So when When The Pawn… came out they bought it on principle. And it was maybe a little weirder than Tidal because Fiona was letting her weird side out to avoid the sophomore slump, which the FAF embraced. And when she eventually turned away from the spotlight and mocked fame, it was the FAF who demanded she return. Who admonished the record company for shelving her all but finished third album. Who demanded blood. It was the FAF who was responsible for her comeback in 2006, both in initiation and followthrough.

And now the FAF is in their late twenties or early thirties. They buy three beers to avoid standing in line during the concert and they will, unprovoked, scream “I LOVE YOU” during the quiet parts of songs played live. They will applaud during the breakdowns of songs where she isn’t singing, just dancing and flailing and gyrating strangely or crouching down the by the bassdrum as the band sort of jams before the song ends. They will give standing ovations at the beginning of the concert. They will sing along. If they cannot get a setlist they will ask to photograph the setlist with their iphones. And the fellow FAF will comply. Because they understand. 

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Categorized: Events Journal

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Mike Bennett writesFriday iPod/MP3 Shuffle—Happy Birthday Roger McGuinn Edition

He was known for the cool Dickens-style shades he wore and his 12-string guitar parts that became part of the distinctive sound of folk-rock legends The Byrds. But Roger McGuinn was more than that. He was a constant in the band as they moved in different directions over the years, even during their short lived country period with Gram Parsons. He went on to make some good solo records, and has continued to play out, often playing traditional folk songs, which he makes available for download. Let’s pay tribute to Roger by grabbing your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.

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Categorized: Friday MP3 Shuffle

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Mike Bennett writesFriday iPod/MP3 Shuffle—Happy Birthday Bill Haley Edition

Today, we pay tribute to a rock ‘n’ roll pioneer. Bill Haley doesn’t quite reside in the lofty heights of Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Bo Diddley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard and Buddy Holly, et. al, and I suppose that makes sense. But that doesn’t mean he wasn’t important in popularizing the genre. Haley’s music was originally rooted in country & western and western swing. Like a lot of artists of the time, he searched high and low for material, and could see how the kids were enjoying faster, blues based material. Haley and his band, redubbed The Comets, basically came at rockabilly from a different direction, finding the intersection between jump blues and western swing. Haley co-wrote “Crazy Man Crazy”, a number 15 hit that was the first rock ‘n’ roll song to make the Top 40. With “Rock Around The Clock”, he found the perfect song, and a studio guitarist, Danny Cedrone, added the magic solo that turned that song into major smash. It spent eight weeks at number one and was the first single sell a million copies both in Germany and Britain. Haley had other hits and provided a somewhat safer face for the music, without being a bland pretender like Pat Boone. Let’s pay tribute to this key rock ‘n’ roll figure by grabbing your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle and sharing the first 10 songs that come up. 

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Categorized: Friday MP3 Shuffle

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