Technically, yes, you have until 11:59pm tomorrow evening when the ball drops to become one of the shiny, happy, proud 2011 members of the best radio station in Chicago. But we’re pretty sure you’ll be so busy checking out a show, enjoying the company of your loved ones, or watching the Navy Pier fireworks blaze that we thought we should send you a reminder today.
CHIRP has had an amazing ride in 2011. Through the highs (two best radio station nods!) and lows (a devastating flood in July) we’ve persisted with one major goal in mind: to provide you with the best local independent radio station there is. At the end of this rollercoaster that we call 2011, we ask you to take a minute to think about what CHIRP means to you.
Did you discover a new band or learn about a local organization? Did you listen to an interview with your favorite artist or see an amazing show? Did you purchase some unforgettable albums or attend a cool community event?
If you answered yes to any of these questions, you’re the perfect candidate to become a member of this station. So before you crack open another bottle of champagne, put on your dancing shoes, and get those lips puckered up, head on over to chirpradio.org/donatenow, and show your support today.
Please don’t delay. This is absolutely, positively your last chance to become a 2011 member of the Best Overall Radio Station in Chicago*!
Wishing you a safe, happy, and healthy 2012 from your friends at CHIRP!
*As voted in the Chicago Reader’s Best of 2011Poll
Throughout December CHIRP Radio presents its members’ top albums of 2011. Our final list is from CHIRP Radio President and Founder Shawn Campbell.
(Click here to get the complete list of CHIRP Radio members’ picks.)
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Seapony – Go With Me (Hardly Art)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Who needs groundbreaking when you have a record this lovely and breezy? As a sucker for a great pop song, I fell under the spell of Seapony the first time I heard them, and probably listened to this album more than any other in 2011.
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Wax Idols – No Future (HoZac)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Wax Idols meld multiple decades of sound into their hyper-catchy garage rock. There’s a bit of 60s girl group, some 70s postpunk, 80s tough grrrl rock, all blending together nicely in a record that reveals a little more with each listen.
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Beastie Boys – Hot Sauce Committee Part 2 (Capitol)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
This old school blast from the Beastie Boys made me tremendously happy. Clever enough to be satisfying, dumb enough to be fun.
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Disappears – Guider (kranky)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
There’s always been something enticingly ominous about Disappears, and Guider delivered more of that dark, driving energy. In fact, it almost feels like the second half of a double album with last year’s Lux – there’s not a lot of evolution, but there’s an equally strong set of songs.
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Gold-Bears – Are You Falling in Love? (Slumberland)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
While I liked this year’s Pains of Being Pure at Heart record, Gold-Bears grabbed the fuzzy C86 spot in my heart that The Pains’ self-titled album held in 2009. Catchy songs buzz and soar, teenage heartache abounds, and there’s just a little more oomph behind it all.
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The Joy Formidable – The Big Roar (Atlantic/Canvasback)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Giant, swirling walls of guitar and a tremendous sense of intensity, that great build-up and release, made The Big Roar perhaps the best shoegaze album since the heyday of My Bloody Valentine and Slowdive.
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Wild Flag – Wild Flag (Merge)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
I loved the fact that one of the most anticipated records this year was from a group of women in their 30s and 40s – and that, at the end of the day, all the excitement was completely merited with a strong set of rock songs and a really great energy.
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Tashaki Miyaki – 12” EP (Self-Released)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Fuzzy, druggy pop songs, heavy on the reverb, half girl group, have Velvet Underground – a formula I’m virtually powerless against when the songs are good. And these are good. Bonus points for the cover of Buddy Holly’s “Heartbeat.”
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Mickey – Rock ‘n’ Roll Dreamer (HoZac)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
What’s not to love about scuzzy glam garage from Chicago? Replace a few ‘s’s with ‘z’s, a few ‘y’s with ‘ee’s, in titles like Bright Lights Big City, Kids in Love, and Baby We’re Gold, and this album could sit proudly next to the likes of Sweet and Slade.
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Stone Darling – All I Wanna Do 7” (Self-Released)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
I don’t particularly like including a single on my best-of list, but this song haunted me for the second half of the year. Gorgeous harmonies, lush and lovely, and no, not a lost Mazzy Star track.
Honorable Mentions
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Beach Fossils / What a Pleasure EP / Captured Tracks
A Classic Education / Call It Blazing / Lefse
Swiftumz / Don’t Trip / Holy Mountain
Charles Bradley / No Time for Dreaming / Daptone
Evans the Death / Threads 7” / Fortuna Pop!
Throughout December CHIRP Radio presents its members’ top albums of 2011. The next list is from Tony Breed.
(Click here to get the complete list of CHIRP Radio members’ picks.)
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tUnE-yArDs – W H O K I L L (4AD)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
It’s rare to find an album that really grabs you and smacks you around this way. There’s something about these afropop-inspired polyrhythms combined with Merrill Garbus’s balls-out singing style that just gets under my skin.
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PJ Harvey – Let England Shake (Vagrant)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
PJ Harvey has been making music for years and is still totally on top of her game. This album is really top-notch.
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Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues (Sub Pop)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Yes, Fleet Foxes. Folky harmonies, sweet melodies, beards. I’m not made of wood, people.
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Grace Jones – Hurricane (Play It Again Sam)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Thanks to a long-delayed US release, I get to put this album on this year’s top ten despite having had a copy myself for two years. I can tell you it stands the test of time; I still listen to it often.
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Dengue Fever – Cannibal Courtship (Fantasy)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Dengue Fever has been doing more or less the same thing for a while (and doing it well). With Cannibal Courtship, they finally break the mold, with excellent results.
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John Vanderslice – White Wilderness (Dead Oceans)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
I love John Vanderslice, but for me his albums have always hovered at about 11 on my end-of-year list. But on White Wilderness, he teams up with the Magic*Magic Orchestra and really kicks his game up a notch.
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Daniel Knox – Evryman for Himself (Chicago Independent)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Basically, sardonic piano cabaret music. I love this guy. (If the description “sardonic piano cabaret music” doesn’t pique your interest then I don’t know what to say to you.)
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Jens Lekman – An Argument with Myself (Secretly Canadian)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Oh Jens. Everything you do is so enjoyable.
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The Mast – Wild Poppies (Channel A)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Like Dead Can Dance with Guitars, and fantastic drumming that propels it along.
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Radiohead – The King of Limbs (Tiker Tape Ltd.)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
I would think that by now Radiohead would have worn out their ability to make this kind of music so well—you know, said everything they can say? Anyway, they haven’t.
Honorable Mentions
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Beastie Boys – Hot Sauce Committee Part Two
Kate Bush – 50 Words for Snow
Wild Flag – Wild Flag
The Feelies – Here Before
Songs of the Year
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Dessa – Alibi
Battles feat. Gary Numan – My Machines
Malachai – My Ambulance
Wild Flag – Romance
Throughout December CHIRP Radio presents its members’ top albums of 2011. The next list is from David Staples.
(Click here to get the complete list of CHIRP Radio members’ picks.)
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The War on Drugs – Slave Ambient (Secretly Canadian)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Springsteen, Dylan, Petty are the common comparisons.. but with a hypnotic bend. Roadtrip music that makes you drive faster.. be safe, use cruise control instead. (Fav song.. Come to the City)
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Wye Oak – Civilian (Merge)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Dynamic…Loud when it needs to be, Hushy when it feels right to be hushy… and Jenn Wasner’s smoky voice! It’s all so haunting and mesmerizing. (Fav song.. Holy Holy)
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I Break Horses – Hearts (Bella Union)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Vocal effects and pedal tapping… hypnotic shoegaze rotates around from time to time even now… (Fav song.. Hearts)
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Panda Bear – Tomboy (Paw Tracks)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Like a psychedelic Brian Wilson. Best enjoyed alone with headphones and ice cream. (Fav song.. Alsatian Darn)
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Low – C’Mon (Sub Pop)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Their 9th album and I’m still enthralled. Minimalist royalty in the music world. Also one of the least depressing of their body of work. (Fav song.. Witches)
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Lumerians – Transmallinia (Knitting Factory)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Garage psyche from the Bay Area that sounds like it could have come from the 60’s. Heavy and droney with African percussion, this album would go great with oil-wheel projector visual effects.. and a mean case of the munchies.. (Fav song.. Melting Space)
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Tennis – Cape Dory (Fat Possum)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Released way back in January, it shoulda been the soundtrack to summer. Created by a husband/wife team from Colorado about the romance of boats, sailing, beaches, sand… Gorgeous album indeed! (Fav Song.. Baltimore)
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National Skyline – Primitive Parade (Hype Music)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Synth rich, ethereal, warm, emotional guitar driven electronica created by Jeff Dimpsey (ex Hum). It’s a fine follow-up to 2009’s Bliss & Death (I’m not counting the film soundtrack material in between). My single favorite song of the year is Dream Like Me, and it’s on this album. (of course, favorite songs change places with each other like popcorn in a popper, but as of this writing….)
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Cross Record – Magnetic Current (Another New Calligraphy)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
A lo-fi collection of delicate, beautiful and haunting songs. This album stopped me in my tracks. Pull the covers up and stay inside today. Hope ya like clarinets. (Fav song.. Black Cat)
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White Hills – H-p1 (Thrill Jockey)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Loud, loud, loud psychedelic free-form space-rock that drones you into hypnosis, but in a scary way. It’s as unnerving as it is addictive as it is intense. I would walk about with this on my iPod and occasionally find myself looking over my shoulder, worried about what’s behind me. I suppose I wouldn’t have been surprised to see a twelve foot praying mantis looming over me, holding a boom box over its head like John Cusack. Ok, surprised isn’t the right word. (Fav song.. Paradise)
Honorable Mentions
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Yuck – Yuck (Fat Possum)
Implodes – Black Earth (Kranky)
Wooden Shjips – West (Thrill Jockey)
Kurt Vile – Smoke Ring For My Halo (Matador)
Throughout December CHIRP Radio presents its members’ top albums of 2011. The next list is from Austin Bainard Harvey.
(Click here to get the complete list of CHIRP Radio members’ picks.)
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Cults – Cults (In the Name of)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
The girl-group splendor of 1960’s pop has seen its share of revival attempts, but what Cults managed with their much-anticipated debut album is more than tribute. These are pop songs not of any particular era, but simply a load of melodic hooks that shimmer enough to soundtrack a snowfall, but too exciting not to be summer jams. Ultimately, Cults may be a one-trick pony, but once stuck, this trick is impossible to remove from your head.
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Razika – Program 91 (Smalltown Supersound)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Four 19-year-old Norwegian ladies who’ve known each other for over a decade record a full album on weekend breaks from school. Before you think the result will be akin to The Shaggs, you’ll hear a joyous, ska-influenced post-punk that plays up the band’s youth without sounding immature, snotty, or cloyingly saccharine. If 2011 was “The Year Of Boring”, this was the exception to prove the rule.
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Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Unknown Mortal Orchestra (Fat Possum)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
It takes guts to make a debut album this indecipherable. Garage production without the garage rock, this Kiwi-American trio have put together a quick half-hour of spare, danceable tunes penned by Flying Nun vet Ruban Nielson. UMO have hooks galore, but are just as content to ride the main riff of a track through the fade-out.
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Radiohead – The King of Limbs (Tiker Tape Ltd.)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
For all intents and purposes, Radiohead made an album of dance music in 2011. The result is simply their best record since Kid A. Sonically dense and yet immediately listenable, and at times even fun, the Oxford quintet once again expand their palate with a new set of classics.
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The Joy Formidable – The Big Roar (Atlantic/Canvasback)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
This Welsh trio survive mediocre production and an overly-compressed mix to put together one of the year’s more emotionally intense records. Hard rock with an ear for melody and a riff, the songwriting chops are there, while Ritzy Bryan’s double-wallop of arena-ready guitar crunch and soaring vocals make me believe they’re going to be around for the long haul.
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Village – Local Moves (Self-Released)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
I have to admit that I’d much rather listen to classic rock than chillwave, or rehashed 80’s soft-rock; and local guys Village do more than their part to sate the need. Part alt-country, and part barroom stomp, it’s a record that never tries too hard and never misses the mark. If you need a fix of the basics, this is where to go.
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The Psychic Paramount – II (No Quarter)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
An instrumental rock record that emerges from the fog, destroys everything in sight, takes no prisoners, and walks away victoriously. Pulsing, loud, unapologetic, and brash, parts of this album reminded me of Steve Reich’s “Pulses” fed through a heavier sort of Krautrock. It’s a beast of a record, and you’ll feel better for having survived it.
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Wild Flag – Wild Flag (Merge)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Sure, it’s 2/3rds of Sleater-Kinney, and has parts of Helium and The Minders, but never mind that. These ladies made perhaps the most fun record of the year by becoming greater than the sum of their parts, or their history. They also made a six-and-a-half-minute jam on being a racehorse into perhaps the year’s best straight-up rock song.
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Veronica Falls – Veronica Falls (Slumberland)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
British indie from the mid-80’s is probably due for a revival of its own. With a cadre of influences that don’t include The Smiths in the first breath, this London quartet crafts cutesy indie pop with lots of dark undertones, but enough melody and sass to keep you from forgetting that Belle & Sebastian didn’t make an album this year.
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Anna Calvi – Anna Calvi (Domino)
BUY: Insound / iTunes
Ms. Calvi’s songs range from quiet, desperate, and cavernous, to urgent, plaintive, and encouraging. Her songwriting chops are exceeded by her guitar wizardry and killer pipes. Melodramatic without going over-the-top, the London wunderkind’s continually impresses with repeated listens.
Honorable Mentions
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11. Cave — Neverendless (Drag City)
Chicago’s motorik masters have released their best yet. Don’t sleep on ‘em before they blow up.
12. Office Of Future Plans — Office Of Future Plans (Dischord) J. Robbins of Jawbox fame snags a cellist in his new band. The result is grown-up DC emo with hooks galore.
13. Austra — Feel It Break (Paper Bag)
If The Knife were a little less creepy a little more dancey, they’d be dead ringers for this Toronto trio. Dark, cold, and wonderful.
14. Wilco — The Whole Love (dBpm)
Wilco’s best album in a decade sees the band taking risks for the first time in nearly as long. They sound more comfortable now than they ever have.
15. Girl In A Coma — Exits & All The Rest (Blackheart)
The San Antonio trio’s third album draws from punk, grunge, and guitar pop to give us the album of 90’s revivalism we’d all hoped for.
16. PJ Harvey — Let England Shake (Vagrant)
Polly Jean (no relation) explores her native country’s journey through wars and finds a new voice for herself, plus a shiny new Mercury Prize.
17. Fucked Up — David Comes To Life (Matador)
The hardcore sextet from Toronto create a four-act rock opera with tons of characters and even more bite. A monumentally tough, albeit rewarding listen.
18. Kate Bush — 50 Words For Snow (ANTI-)
Bush’s 2nd album of the year is a wintry-themed record with guest spots from Elton John and her own son. Piano-driven prog-adult contemporary that even indie kids can get behind.
19. The Caretaker — An Empty Bliss Beyond This World (History Always Favours The Winners)
James Leyland Kirby explores amnesia by remixing old 78’s and keeping the surface noise. Haunting, beautiful, and heartbreaking.
20. Destroyer — Kaputt (Merge)
Here because no other album captured the year’s indie trends (soft rock, saxophone, overly clean guitars and production), and still made them sound decent.