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Brad Morgan writesTwo Americas: Reflections on Life and The Joshua Tree at 30

by Bradley Morgan

Last Saturday, I ventured out to Soldier Field to see U2 play their masterpiece record The Joshua Tree in its entirety.  I had been looking forward to this show for months.  I even invited my dad and he drove over six hours to experience his first U2 concert.

Of course, I had seen Ireland’s favorite sons play a few times already including a greatest hits show and a concert promoting their latest studio album.  However, this tour was different.  The Joshua Tree Tour 2017 was designed with duality in mind; to commemorate the past but to also understand its relevance in the present.  While this show signified a nostalgic trip for some, the tour set out to make a statement about the complexities of humanity and society. In preparation for the performance, I had to go back and find out not only what The Joshua Tree meant to me as art but also what U2 represented that made them so relatable to me over the years.

My path toward U2 fandom began at age twelve back in the fall of 2000 while I was living in Alaska.  Anchorage didn’t really have any record stores or cool hot spots where hipsters could browse indie music stacks and discover the next big underground thing.  Not only that, but streaming media online was not as sophisticated and easy to use as it is today, plus my dad wouldn’t let me download music.  So, the only musical outlets available to me were whatever played on commercial radio and the limited selections of a local Wal-Mart or FYE.

That fall, U2 released their single “Beautiful Day” and it was life-changing.  The sound was big and anthemic; qualities that inspired a budding teenager who had a lot to say and demanded that he be heard.  The optimism and humanity within that song truly spoke to me.

Prior to that, U2 was a band that I had only heard of before.  I had seen copies of War and The Unforgettable Fire in my mother’s CD collection, but I never listened to them before because what teenager wants to listen to their parents’ music collection?  I wanted something new and relevant to me right then and there, despite the irony that this exciting new addition to my life was being delivered by an already established and accomplished band.

The music itself wasn’t the only thing that made me connect with the band.  This band had something else going for them, too.  They were Irish.  That instantly made them more relatable and meaningful to me.  As the son of an English immigrant with Irish grandparents, that made U2 so much more special.  A bond was established through a shared ancestry that I wouldn’t quite understand until much later.

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Categorized: Events Journal, Rediscovering Our Record Collections

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Kevin Fullam writesThe Fourth Wall: I Am Not Your Negro

[Welcome to The Fourth Wall, CHIRP's weekly e-conversation on cinema. This week, the discussion is about the James Baldwin documentary I Am Not Your Negro. This edition is written by CHIRP Radio volunteers Kevin Fullam and Clarence Ewing.]

Kevin: Clarence, while digesting the myriad of themes in I Am Not Your Negro, I got the feeling that director Raoul Peck had enough material here for three documentaries, not just one? The film pinballs between the life of writer James Baldwin (whose unfinished manuscript Remember This House formed the backbone of the movie) and his recollections of assassinated civil-rights leaders Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Jr. In addition, we're also treated to a powerful, disturbing visual collage ranging from Hollywood films to newsreel protest footage -- one which shows us just exactly what white Americans thought of their black countrymen during the early/mid-20th century. 

It's that collage which stuck with me the most. How far have we come as far as racial reconciliation? Peck's juxtaposition of police-brutality videos of yesteryear with today's social unrest seems to suggest that we haven't traveled very far at all. While whites no longer line up with signs (and worse) to oppose the integration of schools and communities like they did in decades past, are we not still a largely segregated society, albeit informally? 

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Categorized: The Fourth Wall

Susan writesCHIRP Radio’s First Time Series Is Coming to Printers Row Lit Fest This Saturday

This will not be the first time that Freda Love Smith, Britt Julious, and Joe Meno, have shared personal stories with a CHIRP Radio First Time audience. These three have been dubbed Storytelling All Stars by the creators of the series. The producers are “super excited” about bringing them to the Printers Row audience.

The First Time dovetails personal storytelling with music played by The First Time Four band. The music is selected by the storytellers and is directly related to the story being told. The First Time Four band is a small versatile group comprising singer Steve Frisbie, drummer-singer Gerald Dowd, performer Liam Davis and keyboardist Scott Stevenson.

The First Time’s All Star line up of storytellers, with emcee Jenn Sodini, and The First Time Four band will appear June 10th, 4:15 – 5:00 p.m. at the Printers Row Lit Fest in the Jones College Prep. South Auditorium, 700 S. State Street. Free tickets are available here.

For more about The First Time see the First Time Web site. On July 12th The First Time will return to its regular home at Martyrs.

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Categorized: CHIRP Radio News and Info.

Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writes@CHIRPRADIO (Week of June 5)

Upcoming Events

  • Tuesday, June 6: CHIRP Radio welcomes Urban Cone to Schubas
  • Saturday, June 10: CHIRP Radio’s First Time series presents an ALL-STAR edition at the 33rd annual Printers Row Lit Fair in the South Loop
  • Sunday, June 11: CHIRP Radio and Kickstand Productions present Nothing at Beat Kitchen

New Media

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Categorized: CHIRP Radio News and Info.

Kevin Fullam writesThe Fourth Wall: Nightcrawler

Welcome to The Fourth Wall, CHIRP's weekly e-conversation on cinema. This week's subject is The Jake Jake Gyllenhaal thriller Nightcrawler

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

Clarence: 

"If it bleeds, it leads."

If you watch movies and/or TV long enough, that statement will be made by someone to either condemn or praise the television news industry. Depending on who's speaking, it’s either a bite-size indictment of a business that thrives on greed and suffering, or a clear-eyed, realistic assessment of market forces and consumer demand.

I kept thinking about that phrase as I watched Nightcrawler, the story of Lou Bloom and his rise to the top of his chosen profession. Bloom isn’t what you’d call a social person, but he has drive, ambition, and knowledge (the latter of which is mostly gleaned from the internet). After coming across a horrible accident scene one evening, where freelance camera crews swoop in to sell gruesome shots to the highest bidder, Bloom finds his True Calling. With a little help from his near-homeless assistant Rick (Riz Ahmed) and struggling morning news producer Nina Romina (Rene Russo), he’s going to make something of himself… no matter what it takes.

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Categorized: The Fourth Wall

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