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 December 31!
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 December 31!
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Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from CHIRP DJ Bobby Evers.
I always struggle with narrowing down a ranking of the best albums of the year. There was a lot I didn't get to and a lot that didn't quite make the cut, even though it was perfectly resplendent and full of talented production, songwriting and good vibes. Alas! Here it is.
If you told my high school self that my musical taste would primarily become dominated by POP, he might have have just died of emabrassment right there. But here's the thing: the genre of pop has never been better, and CRJ proves that with her latest b-side entry to her 2022 album, The Loneliest Time. This album had everything, from synth hooks, to heartbreak anthems, to certified bops and bangers galore. Her b-side albums are always somehow better than her a-side albums, and I am here for it.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from Weekly DJ DJ Duggery.
Eyo eyo, sup y'all? Man, what a year. Going into my top 10s, I looked back at what I listed from last year and...yeesh, I haven't listened to half of those in, well, a year. So we tried to hone it down to the ones that I think'll really stick with the lot of us. There were some funky jelly jams this year, let's give 'em a lil' gander. Hope ya enjoy!
I've been saying it for years, the future of electronic music lies in the hearts and souls of latine trans women. Maybe I'm a bit biased as a nonbinary latine person myself, but Chuqumamani-Condori (Elysia Crampton)'s new release has solidified my opinion to a fine diamond. Experimental, future-forward maximalist club deconstructions seep through this record to create a new sound that I can truly say I've never heard before or since. It's challenging for sure, but if you stick with it this album can change your entire perception of what music can sound like. At least, that's what it did for me.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ/Assistant Music Director Eric Wiersema.
At the risk of sounding cliche, 2023 was a great year for music! To be fair though, during my seven-year tenure with CHIRP, I can’t recall a bad year for music. As a DJ and an Assistant Music Director, I consider myself extremely lucky to be exposed to around 20 great new albums per week and always having an endless supply of great music from all genres at my fingertips. However, this blessing can also be a curse during the year-end list season. I often struggle to remember everything I listened to throughout the year and the nonstop influx of new music makes it increasingly difficult for even some of the best albums to have the staying power they deserve. After an extensive review of my vinyl and streaming habits this year, I still managed to come up with quite a few albums that left a lasting impression and will be revisited for years to come. As an accountant by trade, I like lists and rankings, but please take this order with a grain of salt. I probably already changed my mind ten times before this list was published!
The only album on my list whose ranking most definitely won’t change is my AOTY, the fifth and latest release from our hometown heroes, Ratboys. I have been a huge fan of this alt-country/emo outfit ever since I first discovered them six years ago when a band photographer friend brought me to their GN album release show. I was instantly blown away and went straight to the merch table to pick up a vinyl copy immediately after the show. Every subsequent album has been better than the previous and The Window is no exception. It is insanely catchy, heartfelt, and frontwoman Julia Steiner’s twangy vocals perfectly compliment their incomparable blend of folk, country, and emo. Favorite Tracks: “Morning Zoo”, “Crossed That Line”, “It’s Alive!” “The Window”
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ Steven Grady.
The legendary Metallica rises to the occasion with its full-length album, whose release coincided perfectly with the onset of an ambitious eighteen-month global tour. The band's sound, songwriting, and execution are refreshing and invigorating from start to finish. The longplayer's title, 72 Seasons, according to lead singer/guitar player James Hetfield, reflects a conflict in identity in what we are told who we are as children vs. our adult response to this perception as a reenactment or reaction to our childhood experiences. The record boasts a running time of 1 hour, 17 minutes, exuding the endurance and confidence of a band that, though entering their collective 60s in age, refuses to phone it in or take short cuts. The final track, Inamorata, clocking in at over 11 minutes, is their longest song ever. Even the most veteran listener takes for granted that Metallica has been consistently prolific for over forty years. The verdict after listening to 72 Seasons? They're not done yet...not even close.
Throughout December, CHIRP Radio presents its volunteers’ top albums of 2023. Our next list is from DJ Willie McDonagh.
Blood flows in tales from the ballad tradition, and Dublin-based folk group Lankum makes sure you know that it’s not metaphorical. Virtuosic vocal performances from band member Radie Peat draw out real pain and heartbreak, and the band’s experiments with vocal harmony, drones, and tape loops are a resounding success. This album is glacial, in that its massive bulk inches forward with deceptive might, it lets out creaks and pops from deep within, and if you were to take a core sample, you’d find the incredibly old roots of the Irish folk tradition. You might encounter purity tests in traditional music, interrogating your validity as a keeper of a sacred thing. But as Lankum itself has cited, harmony singing is not a “traditional” part of Irish music, and instruments like guitar and tin whistle don’t go nearly as far back as “pure” singing. The saxophone was quite popular in the genre in the early 20th century! All this to say, the tradition progresses, like it or not. And people like Lankum. Their reverence for the past does not ignore our 21st century ears. I knew it would be my album of the year from the moment I heard the first single, and sure enough, nothing surpassed it. In fact, the only reason I’m ordering this list is so I can put False Lankum at the top. The band’s last album, The Livelong Day, wrenched me out of a long torpor by exposing me to its particular magic, and False Lankum is even better. If mystery excites you, try this and see.