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Today, we celebrate one of the true founding fathers of rock ‘n’ roll, a man who created many of the musical and lyrical archetypes that defined the sound for decades. No artist had a larger role in establishing rock ‘n’ roll as the music of youth culture, which not only changed music, but all entertainment in general. Chuck Berry’s songs are still covered to this day, as classics like “Johnny B. Goode”, “Sweet Little Sixteen”, “Roll Over Beethoven” and “Back in the U.S.A.” still endure. And when not singing about “School Days” or the “Havana Moon”, he wrote one of rock’s first important songs about race, the classic “Brown Eyed Handsome Man”. There’s simply not enough you can say about a man whose influence still reverberates, both directly and indirectly, to this day. So in honor Mr. Berry’s birthday, please grab your iPod or MP3 player, hit shuffle, and share the first 10 songs that come up.
(Weekly Voyages is CHIRP Radio's listing of concerts in Chicago at select venues. Information about tickets can be obtained from the venues' Web sites. (Do you have corrections or updates for this list? Send us an e-mail.)
Justin Willman
Abbey Pub 8pm 21+
Flow Tone, Magisty, Mr. F
Abbey Pub 10pm, 21+
Alpine, Basic Vacation
Beat Kitchen 7pm
The Swellers, On My Honor, Late in the Playoffs, Lights Over Bridgeport
Beat Kitchen 10:20pm
Tribal Seeds, Passafire, Ballyhoo!, Fortunate Youth
Bottom Lounge 7pm
After deciding to forgo a traditional education at their mother's insistence, sisters Bianca "Coco" and Sierra "Rosie" Casady dropped out of high school and got their education in the form of doing art in the real world. They spent summers with their father on Native American reservations partaking in vision quests, and lived in New York, Hawaii, California, New Mexico, and Arizona. They formed Coco Rosie in 2003 after reuniting in Paris after a ten-year separation.
Now, after four albums, a stage production of Peter Pan, opera performances, visual art shows, and a couple of film scores, CocoRosie has released their fifth album, Tales of a GrassWidow, with firm creative control and a collaboration with composer Valgeir Sigurðsson (Björk). GrassWidow is bold, cohesive, and sentimental, with more traditional song and lyric composition, it's a bit of a step back from the freak-folk we've been so accustomed to from the sisters.
Make sure to check out opener LA-based rapper since the age of 9, Busdriver.
Doors @ 8 / Show @ 9 / 18+
cocorosiemusic.com / metrochicago.com
CHIRP welcomes Fuck Buttons (which, as I have come to find out, you cannot say on the radio) to Subterranean on Monday, October 14. The Bristol-based electronic duo made up of Andrew Hung and Benjamin John Power have been creating grandiose and fierce synth-driven music since 2004's Street Horrrsing.
Coming off the high of featuring two songs ("Surf Solar" and "Olympians") during the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in London, Fuck Buttons is currently touring to support their third and newest release, Slow Focus, which is admittedly much darker and more expansive than previous albums. Drawing inspiration from “the period of time that your eyes take after waking up to readjust to your surroundings and you realize that you’re somewhere that maybe you don’t recognize or it’s an unwelcoming place,” Fuck Buttons' sound has taken a turn towards unease and dissonance with the occasional and very necessary soaring synth.
Be sure to get there early to catch multi-instrumentalist electronic artist Lichens, aka Robert Lowe.
Doors @ 8:30 / Show @ 9 / 17+
fuckbuttons.com / subt.net
He is the primary half of the most successful duo in rock music history. Well into his fifties, he’s still the suave, handsome, cool frontman with the soulful voice. Daryl Hall and John Oates got started as folk duo who incorporated soul music and became progressively more pop. They hit it big with Daryl’s “Sarah Smile” and followed up by re-releasing the early tune “She’s Gone”, and they soon became chart fixtures. They recharged in the ‘80s, adding new wavey influences and became more popular than ever. Eventually, the hits quit coming, but Hall and Oates have never gone away, still playing out and still recording, and garnering more respect than ever as people can now truly appreciate their catalog. In the meantime, Daryl hosts a swell TV show, Live from Daryl’s House, where every week he hosts a band or singer and they play and kibbitz. Let’s give Daryl Hall a birthday salute by grabbing your iPod or MP3 player, hitting shuffle and sharing the first 10 songs that come up.