We're happy to be nominated in four categories for the Reader's 2024 Best of Chicago poll. Find them all here and cast your ballot by January 14!
We're happy to be nominated in four categories for the Reader's 2024 Best of Chicago poll. Find them all here and cast your ballot by January 14!
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by Paul LaScolea
Kaseem Ryan, known as Ka (AKA Brownsville Ka), passed away unexpectedly on October 12 at the age of 52. His passing came just weeks after releasing what would become his eleventh and final album, The Thief Next to Jesus.
Some campus life, some study-at-home for Chicago’s most precocious indie band
by Andy Frye
From left: Sofia Richter (lead vocals), Jackie Cywinski (guitar/vocals), Hannah Richter (bass), and Kaitlin Cywinski (drums). Photo by Sloane Johnson (@sloaneshotit)
Young rockers Neptune’s Core have been breaking pretty much all the rules about what is supposed to happen when you’re in high school.
In much of America—even in the 2020s—it’s still all about student activities like band, chess club, sports, and a lot of school spirit, plus hitting the books, getting good grades, and nailing your best SAT and ACT scores.
But for this Chicago-based foursome, it’s been all that and more. More, meaning stuff like playing live at venues Metro, talking at music-related panel discussions like CHIRP Radio’s Independents Day at Schuba’s, or taking a week off of school to play the annual South By Southwest Festival (SXSW) in Austin, Texas.
Now, two of the indie band four members are away at college, shuffling through first-year survey courses and the lifestyle of college freshmen.
by Eddie Sayago
Despite what some might say, physical media is cool and essential. A CD or vinyl is a permanent timestamp on a piece of music that can have a lot of significance to the listener.
We are in an era where in theory we have access to everything, yet it also seems like nothing is here to stay. One day your favorite song or album could be pulled from the streaming services or even your own digital library if purchased from Apple or another vendor. And who knows when or if that remix of your favorite song to dance to from college will return.
For someone who has the space, energy, and money to have and build a physical music collection, it’s a privilege I don’t take for granted. One of my favorite activities to do on the weekend is to visit a record store and browse through the bins and boxes for something from a bygone era.
There are fewer joys than finding a beloved album in good to excellent condition, folk over the cash or card, bring it home and let yourself get lost in the music on your massive speakers or headphones.
Hopefully you can find that next great album at the upcoming CHIRP Record Fair & Other Delights, taking place for the final time on Saturday, November 9. Tickets can be purchased here.