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 the month of December we’ve been posting Best of lists from CHIRP’s volunteers, board members and DJs. Now that the month is over, as is the year, we’ve compiled all of those lists into one, did some maths and ended up with the Top 30 releases of 2009 as determined by CHIRP as a whole. Here’s to more great music in 2010, and to bringing it to you via CHIRPradio, launching Jan. 17th, 2010.
If you missed any of the lists, or just want to see them all again, you can get a full list here.
#1 Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavillion (Domino)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#2 Neko Case – Middle Cyclone (Anti)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#3 Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix (Glassnote)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#4 Pisces – A Lovely Sight (Numero Group)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#5 The Flaming Lips – Embryonic (Warner Bros.)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#6 Yeah Yeah Yeahs – It’s Blitz (Interscope)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#7 The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – The Pains of Being Pure at Heart (Slumberland)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#8 St. Vincent – Actor (4AD)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#9 Andrew Bird – Noble Beast (Fat Possum)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#10 Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca (Domino)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#11 Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest (Warp)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#12 The Antlers – Hospice (French Kiss)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#13 Camera Obscura – My Maudlin Career (4AD)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#14 Madness – The Liberty of Norton Fulgate (Yep Roc)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#15 Thee Oh Sees – Help (In The Red)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#16 The Noisettes – Wild Young Hearts (Mercury)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#17 Fanfaro – Reservoir (Atantic)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#18 The Decemberists – The Hazards of Love (Capitol)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#19 M. Ward – Hold Time (Merge) |
#20 Silversun Pickups – Swoon (Dangerbird)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#21 C. Joynes – Revenants, Prodigies and the Restless Dead (Bo’ Weavil)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#22 The Avett Brothers – I and Love and You (Columbia/American)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#23 Elvis Perkins – Elvis Perkins In Dearland (XL)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#24 Japandroids – Post-Nothing (Polyvinyl)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#25 Mi Ami – Watersports (Quarterstick)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#26 Micachu and the Shapes – Jewellery (Rough Trade)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#27 Woods – Songs of Shame (Woodsist)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#28 The Cave Singers – Welcome Joy (Matador)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#29 Windmill – Epcot Starfields (Friendly Fire Recordings)
Amazon / Insound / iTunes |
#30 National Skyline – Bliss & Death (Self-Released)
Amazon / iTunes |
Throughout the month of December we’ll be posting lists of the best music of the year as determined by the volunteers that make CHIRP what it is. Today’s is from CHIRP DJ, Mike Scales.
Throughout the month of December we’ll be posting lists of the best music of the year as determined by the volunteers that make CHIRP what it is. Today’s is from CHIRP DJ, Austin Harvey.
Reissue of the Year:
The Vaselines – Enter the Vaselines (Sub Pop) Amazon / Insound / iTunes
I will admit that I missed the boat on these guys when I was first getting into Nirvana back in middle school. I’ll turn in my indie-rock cool-kid card and write “‘Son Of A Gun’ might be the best song ever written” 50 times on the chalkboard. This is truly ahead of its time, indie pop clatter that’s at once catchy, messy, and irreverent. Perfect.
Throughout the month of December we’ll be posting lists of the best music of the year as determined by the volunteers that make CHIRP what it is. Today’s is from CHIRP’s March Director and DJ, Tony Breed.
They say the album is dead; people are just interested in singles. I say the album will never die. Sure, most CDs these days are just collections of songs written at the same time — not really “albums” at all — so why not just buy the good songs and leave behind the filler? (This is not news; it’s been the case for decades, but it’s only been recently that you can buy any single songs that interests you.)
But there are still people making real albums: collections of songs around a central theme; songs that proceed in order and sound better as a whole than as individuals; or sometimes albums that tell stories, like an opera or a ballet. No less than four of my top ten albums of the 2009 are true albums: The Decemberists, The Flaming Lips, Madness, and Sufjan Stevens. And the rest? Well they are good too.
Honorable Mention:
John Vanderslice / Romanian Names
It’s always to hard to whittle my list down to 10. Romanian Names is great for all the same reasons the Neko Case’s Middle Cyclone is great (though the vocal styles are very different). I say, go get both of them.
Song of the year:
“Swing” by Zero 7
You know that song you hear on the radio, stop what you’re doing, and just listen? This year it’s “Swing”, by Zero 7, featuring vocals by Jackie Daniels. There are a number of other good songs on the album, though it didn’t really cohere as an album for me. But this song, this one track… I could listen again and again.
Guest of the year:
Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond as the queen on Hazards of Love is so, so good. Note to self: check out My Brightest Diamond. That’s gotta be good stuff.
Belated 2008 album of note:
Grace Jones / Hurricane
Not released in the US, Hurricane (Jone’s first album released in 19 years) didn’t get any attention here at all. By the time I even found out it existed, 2008 was almost over. Comeback albums can be hit-or-miss, and I didn’t muster the enthusiasm to get myself a copy until a few weeks ago. This album is a hit; great stuff, start to finish — everything I would want it to be, and absolutely worthy of your attention.
Photo by: Optical Atlas
Some people foster holiday spirit with migraine-inducing shopping sprees, others will foster that spirit by candlelight with about 20 of their friends cramped together in an apartment to hear a trio of indie minstrels play carols with saws. On December 8 the Rogers Park home of a friend served as one of the Chicago stops for Julian Koster’s cross-country caroling trip. Formerly of Neutral Milk Hotel and currently of the Music Tapes, Koster and friends used some non-traditional instruments to play some traditional holiday carols, including selections from his album The Singing Saw at Christmastime, released last year on Merge Records. In the dim space, kitschy holiday props and Koster’s colorful bits of invented folklore accompanied the ghostly crooning of the singing saws. Everyone left feeling a little warmer, and I don’t think it was just the spiked hot cocoa that did it.
Please forgive the shoddy video quality — candles and Christmas lights make for a wonderful mood but rather unfortunate recording.