If you didn't vote early, vote today! Find your polling place here. And if you're not registered, you can do it on site with two forms of ID including one showing your current address.
If you didn't vote early, vote today! Find your polling place here. And if you're not registered, you can do it on site with two forms of ID including one showing your current address.
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CHIRP Radio’s Abbey Fox was nice enough to share her experiences at South by Southwest 2012 with us. Part 1 of her journal is here. We continue her story on Thursday night of the festival…
CHIRP Radio’s Abbey Fox visited this year’s South by Southwest Music Festival and documented her experiences. Part 1 of her journal is below. Tune in tomorrow for Part 2.
On Sunday, March 25, CHIRP radio welcomes Kimya Dawson with special guest Your Heart Breaks at the Old Town School of Folk Music, located in Lincoln Square.
Most widely known for her contributions to the JUNO soundtrack with her former band The Moldy Peaches, Ms Dawson’s anti-folk lyrics are often the forefront of her songs. Often weird, usually strange, but always coming straight from the heart, Dawson is apologetically authentic with her guitar in tow. The show starts at 7pm in the beautiful (and acoustically sound) Gary and Laura Maurer Concert Hall at 4544 N. Lincoln Ave.
As I’m typing this, Damon Albarn may have conceived yet another new recording project. Albarn has come a long way from the days when Blur’s debut album seemed to be a last gasp of Madchester style dance music, becoming the most artistic of the Britpop brigade of the ’90s. Although Blur eventually came to a halt, Albarn’s growth has continued, whether he’s compiling a world music collection, putting together another Gorillaz release, or working on his latest project, Rocket Juice and the Moon, with Tony Allen (Fela Kuti’s former drummer, and Flea, he manages to expand his horizons while coming up with great, accessible songs. In that spirit of eclecticism, grab your iPod or MP3 player, hit shuffle and share the first 10 songs to come up.
In our next installment of What CHIRP Radio Means to Me, one of our sustaining members talks about what is missing in traditional radio these days and how CHIRP helps to fill that need.
10 years ago I traded in FM for an IPOD and 5 years ago fell in love with Pandora. I’ve Groovesharked, Spotified, and then this past summer was turned on to Turntable.fm. I don’t think I’ve hooked up an antenna on a stereo I’ve bought in that time. Over the years I would still turn on the radio (typically in a rental car), and keep hitting scan until I got past the Top 40 (and usually end up on NPR).
A cool girl turned me on to CHIRP at a coffee shop this past summer, and I’ve listened to it ever since. There’s something missing in music these days that CHIRP brings back, which is the human touch of radio with the benefits of technology. You constantly learn about new music wherever you are along with the people who make it (which is important these days). The best part is you hear about it from real people that think about music day in and day out, and they do it for free, because they love music just like you do. I donate to CHIRP because it, the people who run it, and the music they play are all badass.
—Jarrett OBrien
Badass sustaining member since 2011
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