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The CHIRP Blog

Erik Roldan writesCHIRP + Coach House Sounds Session With The Hit Back

The Hit Back are a new group in Chicago comprised of Seth Weidman and Jesse Hanabarger. Their piano-based rock recalls a young Ben Gibbard, with more atmospheric instrumentation. Their debut album, “Who Are These Weird Old Kids” came out on April 26th with gorgeous pacaking by Chicago’s Sidedown Audio, and it was partially produced by Swedish producer Lindefelt.

Coach House Sounds will release The Hit Back Session on May 10th, 2011. Stream it at coachhousesounds.com and check out their in-store performance at Saki, 3617 W. Fullerton, on May 14th at 4pm.

What the dumbest thing you’ve ever done in a basement?

One of the dumbest things I ever did in a basement was try to start one of my first bands with some friends in high school. There were five of us, and we called ourselves 5 Card Stud. We built our first and only song on a riff I had come up with. We were pretty proud of ourselves until the end of the summer when we starting hearing the song “Right Now” by SR-71. Turns out we pretty much wrote that song. I can field questions later about the hip hop crew I also had in a different basement.

Can you tell me about one time when you realized this was YOUR city?

Growing up just north of Chicago, in Evanston, I always felt a strong connection with the city. I would even claim it as “my city” when I lived up in Minnesota for a few years in college, but it probably wasn’t true at that point. I’d say that a couple years ago, once me and my sister and my parents all ended up here in different and wonderful neighborhoods of Chicago, that’s when it was truly my city. It’s full of so many people and places that I love, too many to name. It’s hard to imagine living anywhere else.

Describe a scenario where The Hit Back could be someone’s life coach and the top 2 life lessons you’d teach them.

First of all, we would call our life coaching seminar Learn to Hit Back: Jesse and Seth’s Approach to Treating Life’s Obstacles as a Punching Bag. We would probably lecture from a boxing ring in the middle of the room, or at least have a mic hanging from the ceiling.

Then the lesson we would teach is that people should surround themselves with other people that they trust and respect the hell out of. The Hit Back is a good example of that. A lesson about regularly using a sinus rinse or neti pot would probably follow.

Tell me about your CHS session—what did you like about it? Was there anything that surprised you or was spontaneous that came out in the recording?

The Coach House Sounds experience was all positive. Matt and his crew are doing such a great job with this project. Doug, Mike and Neal are all crazy good at what they do.

We ended up recording our session a few days before a show, so it was a nice little rehearsal opportunity for us. We basically just ran through a shortened version of our set, trying out a couple new things for some of the songs.

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Categorized: Interviews

Karin Fjellman writesTonight, cheap drinks and great music at Beauty Bar!

Tonight CHIRP curates an evening of laid-back tunes by Ben Taylor of J.C. Brooks and The Uptown Sound and CHIRP’s own DJ Bylamplight and Dr. Drase at Beauty Bar’s new weekly series, “Parle Mondays.” Parle Mondays is a chance to hang in Beauty Bar with chill soul, old school r&b, funk and related musical styles. Each week will focus on bringing together local contributors from different industries. First Mondays is the Music industry. Invite your friends out to parle over $3 drafts and the finest in vinyl selections.

9pm, FREE
Beauty Bar
1444 W Chicago Ave

Drink Specials:
$3 Drafts & per usual $10 Martini + Manicure

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Categorized: Event Previews

Karin Fjellman writesCelebrate our successful fundraising campaign tonight at Crown Tap Room!

Yes! We hit our goal for our spring fundraising drive yesterday — and it’s all thanks to your amazing support! So tonight, come out and celebrate with us for a night of great local music and merriment. It all goes down at 9:30pm at Crown Tap Room in Logan Square, and features music from Dark Fog, Unmanned Ship, and Black Wyrm Seed! Hope to see you there!

CHIRP benefit at Crown Tap Room
2821 N Milwaukee Ave

Dark Fog
Unmanned Ship
Black Wyrm Seed

9:30pm
21+
$5 suggested donation

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Categorized: Event Previews

Shawn Campbell writesWe did it!

Thank you so much to everyone who contributed during our spring fundraising campaign! You helped us meet — and pass — our $10,000 goal!

We’re so grateful to you for your belief in and support of CHIRP Radio. Since we launched last January (and even before), hundreds of you have stepped up to support live, local radio for Chicago and beyond. CHIRP truly is a labor of love, built and staffed by more than 150 volunteers, and without our listeners and supporters, none of our work would be possible.

Whether it’s a campaign like this, a Record Fair, or another CHIRP effort, it’s amazingly humbling and exciting to see the warmth and enthusiasm our supporters feel for the station. Thank you so much for believing in us, and for making this station possible.

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Categorized: CHIRP Radio News and Info.

Mike Bennett writesFriday iPod/MP3 Shuffle—Happy Birthday Tommy James Edition

Tommy James may not have exactly been a bubblegum singer, but he paved the way for the style with his early simple hits, like “Hanky Panky” and “Mony Mony”. As his career went on, he showed more sophistication, coming up with classic Top 40 hits such as “Crystal Blue Persuasion”, “Dragging The Line” and his triumph as a songwriter, the psychedelic pop gem “Crimson and Clover”. Tommy has recently penned an acclaimed memoir, still plays out on occasion and has made millions of people happy. In his honor, get your iPod or MP3 player, hit shuffle, and share the first ten songs that come up.

  1. Buddy Holly — It’s So Easy (The Buddy Holly Collection): Buddy sure made it seem so easy to write instantly hooky rock songs. I first heard this song in a hit cover by Linda Ronstadt, and Linda knew not to mess around with the arrangement, just let Buddy’s songwriting do the trick. This has a really playful vocal from Buddy and is a great mix of pop with rock ‘n’ roll underpinnings.
  2. Bread — Everything I Own (Anthology): Speaking of hooks, very few early ’70s songs are as memorable as this classic from the pen of David Gates. During the ’70s, critics acknowledged the craft, but savaged the sap. Nearly 40 years down the line, it sweetness and sincerity overcomes any cheese factor on this terrific song.
  3. Roberto Jordan — Juntos Felices (40 Temas Originales): This Mexican singer made a good living covering Anglo hits of all types. These recordings are a bit low budget and feature some of the most unintentionally haunting backing vocals ever. This is Jordan’s take on The Turtles’ “Happy Together”, which takes on a bit of a melancholy gloss with the production. It’s as if the backing thinks the singer is full of crap.
  4. Nothing Painted Blue — Drinking Game (Placeholders); A great tune from what might be this California band’s best album. Franklin Bruno was a limited vocalist with quite the vocabulary (no wonder he wrote a book on Elvis Costello’s Armed Forces album). Bruno was an adept composer, with solid melodies and creative song structures. This song has a whiff of Costello, but also some ’70s R & B elements, and a memorable chorus.
  5. Yello — Ballet Mecanique (Claro Que Si): So much of Yello’s music, before they totally fell into dance floor fodder, sounded like it was made for film soundtracks. The structures were dramatic, and the keyboards were layered to allow for sonic space and room for Dieter Meier’s dramatic vocals. On their first three albums, every song had at least one or two ridiculously catchy parts. This song has a memorable guitar repeating guitar figure that comes in midway through that sounds like Snakefinger playing reggae.
  6. Japan — Ghosts (Left Of The Dial: Dispatches From the ’80s Underground): This band, featuring David Sylvian and Mick Karn, did an artier post-punk variation on the moodier side of Roxy Music, down to the vibrato in Sylvian’s voice. This is another cinematic band that really uses sonic space well, to the extent that I wonder if members of Talk Talk were Japan fans. A very creative composition that really resonates.
  7. Michael Nesmith — Joanne (Older Stuff (The Best Of The Early Years): This was a minor Top 40 for Papa Nez, and it is one of his best country compositions, sharing a certain melodic quality with other Wool Hat classics, like “Different Drum” and “Some of Shelly’s Blues”. Here, Nesmith shows off his vocal range, with many lines in the verses requiring him to yodel into Slim Whitman territory. Early ’70s Nesmith is so frickin’ good.
  8. Papas Fritas – Flash Lightning (Pop Has Freed Us): This Massachusetts indie band was so charming, playing catch songs with a variety of ’60s and ’70s pop influences. On this career spanning compilation, they threw in some cool covers, like this suprisingly effective take on a tune from Tom Verlaine’s first solo album. While much of Papa Fritas’ music was cute and cuddly, they could rock, and the guitar work on this song shows they could match Verlaine’s intensity.
  9. Pulp — TV Movie (This Is Hardcore): After the gigantic success of A Different Class, Pulp delved deeper into their music, with longer compositions of greater intensity. Thus, the album wasn’t as immediate as its predecessor, but all of the great qualities of the band, especially the personality and lyrics of Jarvis Cocker, are still there, albeit in more challenging form. This album has held up very well over time, and could arguably be called a classic.
  10. The Cardigans — My Favourite Game (Gran Turismo): An edgy rock tune from the fourth album by this Swedish band. Even when they were playing in more of a ’60s soft pop style, it was evident that The Cardigans were a rock band, and they let that side show more on Gran Turismo. Unfortunately, this didn’t catch on, which is a shame, because the songs are well crafted and Nina Persson sounded as compelling as ever.

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Categorized: Friday MP3 Shuffle

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