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Wendy Carlos A clockwork Orange / Theme from Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (Music From The Soundtrack) (Warner Bros) Add to Collection
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Southwest soundscapes traverse the Midwest, Califone graced Chicago’s Lincoln Hall stage on Saturday, February 1st during the final show on their “turtle eggs/an optimist” tour, named after the final song on their 2013 release, Stitches. With opening act William Tyler, Tim Rutili and ensemble, plucked from the heartstrings that saddle back into a city the band once called home, opened and closed the evening with collective sound that can only be gleaned from newfound geography.
Tyler opened the evening with solo electric precision, howling, glorious, instrumental light—almost southern and blue grass in nature. Hailing from the Northwest, the first couple songs —“Last Residents of West Fall” and “Can’t Go Home”—are ballads to his hometown in eastern Oregon, Americana at its contemporary finest. A perfect introduction to Califone.
Chicago is a city that loves its food, music, and comedy. What better way to celebrate Valentine’s Day weekend than with all three. So we’re calling all you meat-lovers out there to join us at Chop Shop for some good eats and drinks. Come out this Saturday, February 15th, as Red Meat Market and Chop Shop present “Eat Your Heart Out”. This a night dedicated to love and to fill all of your carnivorous desires.
The butchers include the Chop Shop’s Mike Trotta and Nico Rizzi supporting owner, Mario Minelli, as well as Red Meat Market’s Ben Harrison and Nathan Bosco. Local comedians will take the stage to bring you laughs during the butcher presentation, which will include samples of locally pasteurized pig, lamb, goat, and cow. But don’t forget your dancing shoes, as you get down with some of Chicago’s finest musical acts. Your ears and body will be rejoicing from the sweet sounds of White Mystery, Blasted Diplomats, and SoftSpeaker.
Tickets for “Eat Your Heart Out” are $50, which include 2 complimentary drinks and samples. The event will take place Saturday, February 15th, 2014 at 6pm. Chop Shop is located at 2033 W. North Ave in Chicago. For the love of meat, don’t let the cold keep you in!
For more info and to purchase tickets, visit: www.ChopShopChi.com
(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.)
Brave Baby, The Papers, Woo Park, Lighten Up
Abbey Pub 21+
The Atlantic, Bury Me In Lights, Silverside, The Alchemist
Beat Kitchen 8:30pm
A Tribe Called Red
Bottom Lounge 9pm
Northlane
Bottom Lounge 6pm
The Main Squeeze, Ariada
Double Door 8:30pm, 21+
Andy Simmons and Holly MacGibbon (who prefer to be surname-less) are the faces behind Weeknight, a dark and synth-heavy pop outfit out of New York. Crushing the Bushwick and Williamsburg scenes since 2011, they'll be releasing full-length debut Post-Everything on Artificial Records in March to follow in the footsteps of EP Dark Dark Lights.
First single "Dark Light" showcases Andy and Holly's signature dreamy vocals sung in unison over heavy bass lines. Be sure to tune in to Vocalo.org at 4:00 p.m. the day of the show for an in-studio interview with Weeknight! Also, Chicago new wave-punk rockers Population return to the Empty Bottle, and Caden Moore will help kick off the night with YouTube and vinyl samples in his electronic project Lake Radio.
Music starts at 8:30 p.m. at Empty Bottle (1035 N. Western Avenue, Chicago, IL 60622; 773-276-3600)!
8:30 p.m. / $8 / 21+
Today, we celebrate the birthday of an artist who left us too soon. J. Dilla was a musical prodigy of sorts, into music at a young age, getting his first record at the age of 2 and spinning records in a Detroit park as a child. He really got started with the hip hop group 1st Down and by the mid-90's, he helped form Slum Village. The first Slum Village LP got so much attention, Dilla was in demand, working with Janet Jackson, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul and others. By 2001, J. Dilla put out his first solo work, and cemented his reputation as an innovative DJ. He then worked at a fast pace, until a rare blood disease slowed him down, and he eventually passed away. One morning while DJing at CHIRP, I played 10CC’s “Worst Band in the World” and within a minute, a listener instant messaged me – he didn’t know that the tune wasn’t a J. Dilla creation (he sampled it for “Workinonit”). Any DJ cool enough to sample 10CC deserves a birthday tribute. So please grab your iPod or MP3 player, hit shuffle and share the first 10 songs that come up.