Become a Member

Now Playing

Current DJ: Michael Griffith

BassKase Lonesome Cowboy Older No Wiser from For a Few Dubs More (Soundpoint) Add to Collection

Listen Live

Requests? 773-DJ-SONGS or .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

The CHIRP Blog

SKaiser writes@CHIRPRadio (Week of November 20)

EVENTS

CHIRP & The Wicker Park Bucktown Chamber of Commerce Present Chillfest on Saturday, November 25th!! Check out details (including a sample lineup) here!

NEW MEDIA

TOP OF THE CHIRP CHARTS

1. Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings – Soul of a Woman (Daptone)

2. King Krule – The Ooz (True Panther/XL)

3. Curtis Harding – Face Your Fear (Anti-)

For a full listing of the CHIRP charts and find new local music, click here!

Share November 21, 2017 https://chrp.at/4i-W Share on Facebook Tweet This!

Categorized: Events Journal

Kevin Fullam writesThe Fourth Wall: Thirteen

Welcome to The Fourth Wall, CHIRP's weekly e-conversation on cinema. This week's subject is the 2003 film Thirteen.

This edition is written by CHIRP Radio volunteers Kevin Fullam and Clarence Ewing.

Kevin:

Clarence, we were just talking about the challenge of writing for young folks during our discussion of The Florida Project, Penning lines for the teenage set seen in Thirteen might actually be tougher than constructing dialogue for first-graders? It's relatively easy for an adult to serve as a fly on the wall around tykes, but older kids are a far more guarded group. 

Cameron Crowe famously went undercover at a California high school in order to mine the material for his landmark book (and later film), Fast Times at Ridgemont High, but here director Catherine Hardwicke goes one better; her co-screenwriter is actress Nikki Reed (age 14 during filming), who mined her own life for this quasi-autobiographical tale. 

And what a life that is -- The Wonder Years, this ain't. Reed's Alpha Female, Evie, serves as the gateway for Tracy Freeland (Evan Rachel Wood), who decides to leave behind her nerdy circle of friends and make a concerted effort to move rapidly up her school's social ladder... though this comes with a hefty price. Before long, the two are ditching school, huffing, slugging each other (and self-harming when they're not), and engaging in sexual behavior far more mature than one would wish for a middle-schooler.

All the while, Tracy's relationship with her mom Melanie (Holly Hunter, in an Academy Award-nominated performance) steadily erodes. Melanie, a divorced, harried hairdresser, is bewildered by the hostile stranger that her daughter's become. As a recovering alcoholic who receives scant support from her ex-husband, Melanie is ill-equipped to keep on top of Tracy's life and reign in her wild behavior.

Keep Reading…

Share November 17, 2017 https://chrp.at/4h-l Share on Facebook Tweet This!

Categorized: The Fourth Wall

Topics:

Sophie Holtzmann writesAlbum Review: “Cut” by No Men

If you have not heard of the Chicago band No Men, truly I weep for you. This band relocated from Texas and has done a lot in the years since they’ve been on the scene.

This three-piece act is angry, femme-fronted, vocal supporters of LGBTQ, and are just fantastic artists with a unique sound. Preferably you’ll pause reading this, and listen up on their discography so that you can fully appreciate the importance of their new release, Cut, with Let’s Pretend Records.

This newest release is right on trajectory for our hopes and expectations. Consistent with the sound we know and love, Cut is characterized by a driving percussive pace and diverse melodies. It’s a two track cut and both songs hit that happy balance between aggression, tongue-in-cheek, and empowerment.

Keep Reading…

Share November 15, 2017 https://chrp.at/4gh8 Share on Facebook Tweet This!

Categorized: Album Reviews

Topics:

Josh Friedberg: Music Historian's Corner writesMichael Jackson Review Extravaganza, Part 2 of 2: Bad, Dangerous, and HIStory

by Josh Friedberg

[Read Part One]

After releasing the best-selling album ever, Thriller, in 1982, the expectations for Michael Jackson’s success were understandably high. So by lots of different measures, 1987’s Bad was inevitably a disappointment, but it also showed Jackson’s growth as a songwriter and an artist.

On Thriller, Jackson wrote four songs out of nine, whereas on Bad, he wrote nine songs out of eleven. And despite the clunky and very dated production, Jackson’s voice, though more strained than on Thriller, performs well throughout, especially on ballads like “Man in the Mirror” and “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You,” a duet with Siedah Garrett. He sounds rougher from the get-go, bragging about his edginess on the opening title track and sounding hellbent on obtaining his object of desire on “The Way You Make Me Feel,” a standout hit from the album.

Keep Reading…

Share November 14, 2017 https://chrp.at/4gcS Share on Facebook Tweet This!

Categorized: Album Reviews

Topics:

  1. ««
  2. 168
  3. 169
  4. 170
  5. 171
  6. 172
  7. »»