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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Chicago artist Mikhael Hell will perform at CHIRP Night at the Whistler on Tuesday, December 5th. We caught up with Mikhael recently to ask a few questions…
So...What’s going on? Tell us about your current releases and/or upcoming shows (such as CHIRP Night at the Whistler!).
I’ve played in indie and punk bands in Chicago and beyond for forever (bass in Mystery Actions and Jen & the Dots, drums in The Cloud Corporation, I was even the singer in an all-girl Misfits cover band!!!), but I just started playing out solo as Mikhael Hell this year.
My curse is that I love getting wild and rocking out on stage, but every time I sit down to write music, only super sad, darkly gut-wrenching pretty songs come out! So the stuff I was writing was never a good match for the bands I was playing in.
When Mystery Actions wound down last year and I wasn’t in any bands for the first time in a long time, I was like, you know what? F*ck it. I’m finally gonna do my sad, weird-ass pop songs about lesbian drug dealers, vengeful Greek gods, suicides, and serial killers. It’s not at all what people are going to be expecting from me, but it’s what I got.
As far as shows, as you know my next show will be CHIRP Night at the Whistler, Tuesday December 5 After that, I really want to focus on recording and getting the songs I’m playing in a barebones fashion right now really arranged and produced just the way I want them.
How do you go about turning your thoughts, ideas, and feelings into sounds?
Chord progressions and song ideas just come to me while messing around on the guitar. Lyrics are harder. They usually come to me in dribs and drabs, which I have to capture on my Notes app and then weave together. I’ll get a flash of, like, one line, and have to frantically type it into my phone while in traffic (don’t suggest Siri, that witch does not understand a word I say!).
Welcome to The Fourth Wall, CHIRP's e-conversation on cinema. This week's subject is the 2006 film Casino Royale.
This edition is written by CHIRP Radio volunteers Kevin Fullam and Clarence Ewing.
Clarence:
“Bond. James Bond.”
Anyone who knows anything about film history will recognize that famous introduction. Even those who have never seen a frame of the 25 feature films on which this character is based.
I was one of them. Until a few months ago, I had never seen an entire James Bond movie in one sitting. I was familiar with many of the scenes, the one-liners, the cultural discussion of the character and the actors who played him. But not the movies themselves..
Recently, though, I’ve binge-watched all five of the Bond films featuring its most recent lead actor, Daniel Craig. I remember when he made his first Bond appearance in Casino Royale in 2006 there was controversy around how a blond-haired, blue-eyed actor, even a talented one, could pull off such an iconic role. Skeptics needn't have worried; He did, and continued to for another 15 years.
Casino Royale is a bit of a strange entry in the Bond series. The first movie to carry that title (released in 1967) isn’t considered official canon for several reasons and was panned by critics when it first released, but it was based on the Ian Flemming novel of the same name, in which the character James Bond first appears.