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Erik Roldan writesCHIRP + Coach House Sounds Present: The Eternals

Damon Locks and Wayne Montana (currently) are The Eternals . The band has been fusing rock, dub and Caribbean rhythms into a sound that was once so hard to categorize, they made up their own: “rawar style.” This year, they released Approaching the Energy Field (Addenda Records ), garnering critical praise for evolving with the sound they pioneered in 2000. CHIRP is proud to present their session with Coach House Sounds, streamable and downloadable at coachhousesounds.com on Tuesday July 26th!

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

Assumed that the water wouldn’t get any higher.

2. The Eternals have a long history in Chicago. Can you tell me about one time when you realized this was YOUR city?

Hmm…as a band? I think only recently. Our old band Trenchmouth always felt like outsiders (our label was out of Minneapolis) and The Eternals have felt similarly. After years and years of playing, we feel as though we have successfully graffiti’d the walls of Chicago’s musical landscape.

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

Over the years, I think the band could be described as a life coach to other younger bands like Watchers or Jai Alai Savant. Whether they took heed is another thing all together.

Top life lessons for bands:

The music industry doesn’t care about you. It doesn’t know good music. Pay as little attention to it as possible.

The more universal you attempt to make something, the less personal. The more personal you make something, the more universal it can be.

4. 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?

I generally enjoyed the experience. The guys were very friendly and accommodating (thanks for the cookie and the use of the sunglasses).

During the performing of “Shadow Radio” I was so enthusiastic that I inadvertently knocked my sampler off my keyboard and it fell onto my vocal effects pedal and changed the setting. I really got into that performance.

5. What’s happening? What are your current/upcoming shows or releases?
We have a bunch of shows coming up this summer:

w/ Ted Leo at Fireside July 26th
Milwaukee Art Festival July 30th
Experiment Sound Studio August 27th

We are in the planning stages of doing a show at the MCA. That should be a lot of fun. We are also talking about playing The Hideout Block Party.

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Categorized: Interviews

Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writesThis Week with CHIRP Radio (Week of July 25, 2011)

Tuesday, July 26

CHIRP Radio presents “A Fond Farewell Night,” part of the The Music Box Theatre Summer Music Film Festival, featuring screenings of CIMMfest Shorts, The Last Dispatch, and The Last Waltz!

Music Box Theatre / 3733 North Southport Avenue / Full schedule







 

Friday, July 29

CHIRP Radio welcomes the Handsome Furs to the Bottom Lounge!

Bottom Lounge / 1375 W Lake Street / 9pm / 17+




 

Saturday, July 30

CHIRP Radio is proud to sponsor the 2nd Annual AHHH!!! Pilsen Music Festival!

18th Street and Morgan, outside of Simone’s Bar / Noon-3 AM / $5 Suggested Donation, Free after 8 PM

 

Saturday, July 30

CHIRP Radio presents The Flat Five, featuring Kelly Hogan, Nora O’Connor, Scott Ligon, Casey McDonough & Alex Hall with Chris & Heather’s 16mm Film Jamboree!

Old Town School of Folk Music / 4544 N. Lincoln Avenue / 8pm / All Ages

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Categorized: Event Previews

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Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writesTomorrow Night! Summer Sessions on the Square Featuring The Scotland Yard Gospel Choir

This Saturday (July 23), CHIRP Radio and The Whistler are proud to present the second performance of our Summer Sessions on the Square concert series at the Logan Square monument!

The Scotland Yard Gospel Choir, Girls Rock! Chicago veteran Alex Lund and Matt Ulery’s Loom will be performing al fresco during this FREE event. It’s a perfect way to spend a summer Saturday evening with friends and family. Join us!

The Logan Square Monument (corner of Milwaukee, Kedzie, & Logan Blvds.) / 5:30 PM – 8:30 PM / All Ages / $5 Donation Requested

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Mike Bennett writesFriday iPod/MP3 Shuffle—Happy Birthday George Clinton Edition

James Brown isn’t merely the Godfather of Soul, he is also the man who invented funk. And others built upon that, but no one more than George Clinton. Whether its the rocking funk grooves of early Funkadelic, or the complex multi-movement songs of prime mid-‘70s Parliament, or his underrated solo records for Capitol in the ’80s, Clinton kept finding new ways to funk, guaranteeing that we would always have One Nation Under A Groove. Let’s pay tribute to this essential artist by grabbing the iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle, and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.

  1. The Diodes — Tired Of Waking Up Tired (Tired of Waking Up Tired: The Best of The Diodes): This is a Candian new wave classic. Back in the day, some might have called this punk, but its really just a rocking tune with an automatic pop hook. This is the band’s peak, but they have quite a few nifty and clever tunes on their first couple of albums.
  2. Al Green — Take Me To The River (More Greatest Hits): You know a song must be great if it has been covered by both Foghat and Talking Heads. This is an upbeat soul number from the good Reverend Green which mixes biblical metaphor with a story of love gone wrong. The song has about three different hooks and a sublime middle eight. Fantastic.
  3. Paul Kelly & The Messengers — Everything’s Turning To White (So Much Water, So Close To Home): Kelly is a great Australian singer-songwriter who writes great melodies but has a rough hewn rock style that gives them grit. On this song, however, it’s only Kelly’s voice that provides any grit, as it is a pretty economical number that fans of Ron Sexsmith would probably dig.
  4. Lewis Taylor — Hide Your Love Away (The Lost Album): This is not a cover of The Beatles/John Lennon classic from the movie Help. This is another soft-pop gem from cult fave Taylor. This has a gentle Laurel Canyon vibe that fans of the latest John Grant record might dig.
  5. Ron Sexsmith — Nothing Good (Other Songs): The second Sexsmith album is still my favorite as he perfected his pithy approach to writing observational pop songs. It’s no wonder Elvis Costello championed him around this time. Sexsmith has a limited but extremely expressive voice — he always sounds committed to what he is singing, while his melodies are friendly and familiar in the best possible way.
  6. Fools Face — Land Of The Hunted (Tell America): Tell America is one of the 10 best power pop albums ever made, This Springfield, Missouri band featured four songwriters who all had a great command of melody. Not only did they cook up a great batch of new wave kissed pop-rock songs, they sometimes added social commentary that was not typical of bands during the skinny tie era. This is a chugging number with spectacular drumming.
  7. Dolly Varden — All Gonna Change (The Panic Bell): A wonderful Dianne Christiansen song from the most recent album by this Chicago band. A lot of Christiansen’s material is comparable to latter day Rosanne Cash — spare (a theme for today, I guess) compositions with keenly observed lyrics. This is the most produced of all of Dolly Varden’s albums and there are lots of nifty sonic touches to augment this otherwise simple acoustic track.
  8. Nirvana — Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nevermind): The basis for a great Weird Al Yankovic parody. Moreover, a song that changed music significantly, both for good and bad. Alt-rock sent harder rock in new directions,and also, for a few years, opened up the airwaves to a wider variety of rock music. Even today, the effects are felt, as the existence of viable commercial channels for independent music is partially due to Nirvana’s breakthrough.
  9. Linton Kwesi Johnson — Come Wi Goh Dung Den (Dread Beat An’ Blood): The influential reggae dub poet’s debut album sets the formula that always worked for Mr. Johnson: solid reggae grooves and his intense rhythmic recitations of his politically charged lyrics. All that changed over the years was sharper music, stronger vocals and better production. But the music is swell and LKJ’s passion is contagious.
  10. Big Audio Dynamite — James Brown (Megatop Phoenix): After Brown got into an altercation with a cop, a lot of folks were inspired to write a song about it, including Mick Jones. This is a pretty typical BAD number, with a sort of funky groove. But it’s not as good as Pop Will Itself’s “Not Now James, We’re Busy”, the best song on this subject matter.

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Categorized: Friday MP3 Shuffle

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Clarence Ewing: The Million Year Trip writesTonight! Blonde Redhead at the Bottom Lounge

Blonde Redhead returns to the Bottom Lounge as part of their North American Summer Tour and in support of their latest recording, Penny Sparkle. While this album may be easier-listening than their previous releases, it maintains that sense of beautiful pop mysticism they’re known for, and in combination with songs from their earlier works this show will no doubt be one to see. The Sentinals will get the crowd warmed up with their special dose of energetic post-punk and sexy vocals!

Bottom Lounge / 1375 W Lake / 9pm / 17+

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Categorized: Event Previews

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