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Jessi D writesCHIRP Radio Shelter In Sound Presents: Smashed Plastic

Like you, the CHIRP Features team is staying home to help flatten the curve! We are shifting our programming to present a new series in our Artist Interview Program.

Shelter In Sound features interviews with artists and local music related tastemakers on what they are doing right now during this global pandemic. Tune in to learn how some of your favorite folx are managing and staying creative while hunkered down.

In this edition, Features Co-Director Jessi D spoke with Andy Weber, one of the founding members of Smashed Plastic. They discuss the founding of his vinyl pressing plant in 2018 and how the pandemic has affected his industry, the trends he's seeing in how music is consumed, and the quirks of the Chicago music scene. This podcast features tracks from local artists ROOKIE, Mute Duo, and Impulsive Hearts, who have all had records pressed at Smashed Plastic.

Produced by Jessi D

CHIRP Radio · Shelter in Sound: Andy Weber of Smashed Plastic Interview

 

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Categorized: Interviews

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Beatnik writesThe Songs That Get You Through: “Where The Streets Have No Name” by U2

These are obviously strange times we are living in, so we asked some of our CHIRP volunteers to tell us about a particular song they like to listen to when things are tough. We're calling it, "The Songs That Get You Through."

Today, we hear from CHIRP partnerships coordinator Bradley Morgan:

I am a dreamer, so I have pretty big dreams about the world and my place in it. I am also an Irish citizen, a heritage with no shortage of big dreamers. So I feel a special kinship with Bono. He wrote “Where the Streets Have No Name” after visiting Ethiopia and it is there he had an epiphany about classism in the Western world. This idea that where you live determines your worth and whether you live or die. In America, block by block, the marginalized are relegated to their corners and the privileged to their own. That is an unjust way to live. "Where The Streets Have No Name" represents an idealized world, one to strive for where class lines cannot be drawn on a map. A world that guarantees equal access to food, housing security, and the right to not be murdered by police. That is the world I want to live in and am striving for. COVID-19 has further highlighted the vast inequities that exist in America. But it also has emboldened the dreamers to step up and tear down the invisible walls that divide us and make the rich richer while the poor get poorer.

“Where The Streets Have No Name” gets me through difficult times because it reinforces the responsibility I have to help make this world more just for all.


 

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Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writesThe History of Chicago Blues (1972)

CHIRP Radio's Citations presents interesting and informative content about Chicago or music (or both) from around the Web.

Blues is a music with a rich cultural history that tells stories of change, migration, suffering, and hope. To not know something about the Blues is to miss a very important part of American music.

This film, produced and directed by Harley Cokliss in 1972 for Irit Film Productions, looks at the Chicago Blues scene in the late '60s and early '70s, when tentions were still running high because of events like the Vietnam War and the chaotic and violent Democratic Party National Convention Chicago hosted. The document features artists such as Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters and Junior Wells.

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Categorized: Citations

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