Chicago - A message from the station manager

A Compilation By Brian Page
I dig honky tonk songs about that place between diminished and extinguished capacity. I chose these because in general they’re less well-known, the music’s good, and they were made in my favorite period of 1960 to the late 1970s. And I have them on listenable 45s.
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1. Booze And Wine
By: Ben “Queenie” Stewart and the Tune-Drifters
Note: On the Scarlo label from Elmhurst, Illinois.
2. One Too Many
By: Clay Allen
Note: “Guess I’d better drive, ’cause I’m too drunk to walk”
3. Dim Lights, Thick Smoke
By: Leon Rausch
Note: An update of the perennial Rose Lee & Joe Maphis song

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Posted on May 12, 2009

Bloodshot Briefing: Jon Langford’s Chicago

By Matt Harness
Several bands in the Bloodshot Records family call Chicago home. Don’t you think you ought to know them? Of course you should.
So this week in Bloodshot Briefing we were lucky to lasso the legendary Jon Langford, a true Renaissance man, long enough to ask him some questions for Get To Know Your Chicago Bloodshot Musician. Off we go.
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Name: Jon Langford
Hometown: Chicago via Newport, Wales
Band(s): The Mekons, Waco Brothers, Pine Valley Cosmonauts
Instrument: Guitar, vocals
Neighborhood: Sauganash
Bar: Ginger’s Ale House to watch Leeds United.
Record Store: Planet of Sound and Raffi’s Record Riot. “Don’t ever shop at the big retailers. They exclude bands like mine, so I won’t support them.”

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Posted on May 8, 2009

An iTunes Top 25

By Steve Rhodes
This really doesn’t look right, but according to my iTunes, these are the most 25 played songs/stations in my library.
1. WELY: The End of The Road Radio.
2. WRONGRADIO.com.
3. Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy/Elton John.
4. Rocky Mountain High/John Denver.
5. True Confessions/Blue Oyster Cult.

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Posted on May 4, 2009

Bloodshot Briefing: May Flowers

By Matt Harness
A sampling of Bloodshot bands performing in Chicago in May.
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Artist: Ha Ha Tonka and Ben Weaver
Date: Saturday, May 2
Venue: Subterranean
Sample:

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Posted on April 30, 2009

Discovering The Del-Lords

By Don Jacobson
The Del-Lords are a band that I probably should have known something about, given my geekish obsession/compulsion with anything smacking of ’80s cowpunk. And yet . . . the coming re-issue of their first three albums (released between 1984 and 1988) caught me by surprise. I thought I had heard the name, but it turns out I was confusing them with another influential ’80s band, the Del Fuegos. So I looked up the Del-Lords and I’m glad I did, because I discovered they occupy a key place in the holy roots rock/punk rock union from which much of our beloved modern alt-country/Americana comes from.

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Posted on April 25, 2009

Bloodshot Briefing: Ha Ha Tonka’s Lucas Long

By Matt Harness
By my count, 15 bands on Bloodshot Records call Chicago home. Don’t you think you ought to know them? Of course you should.
So this week in Bloodshot Briefing we’re introducing a recurring feature, Get To Know Your Chicago Bloodshot Musician. Off we go.

Name: Lucas Long
Band: Ha Ha Tonka
Instrument: Bass, vocals
Neighborhood: Couch surfs between Andersonville and Edgewater
Bars: Simon’s for the jukebox, the Sovereign for the cheap beer.
Coffee Shop: Pause.
Record Store: Hasn’t bought a CD in two years; gets his music online.

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Posted on April 24, 2009

Comcast’s New Music Choices

By The Beachwood Comcast Music Choice Affairs Desk
Comcast has remade its Music Choice lineup including the addition of several new genres/channels. Let’s take a look.
Channel: Hit List
Description: Today’s hottest mainstream and rhythmic pop hits and crossover smashes straight off the charts!
Now Playing: Angels On The Moon/Thriving Ivory
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Channel: Hip-Hop and R&B
Description: Today’s hottest Hip Hop and R&B music, exclusives mixes and remixes.
Now Playing: Mad/Ne-Yo
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Channel: MC MixTape
Description: A non-stop mix and blend of popular music and beats designed to keep the party going.
Now Playing: Pop Life Vol. 2/DJ Lonnie B.

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Posted on April 22, 2009

Bloodshot Briefing: Scotland Yard Gospel Choir

By Matt Harness
My first memories of listening to Scotland Yard Gospel Choir are fuzzy, but I’m pretty sure I was at Subterranean a few years back for another band when these lads and lassies opened the doors to their world. With guitars, trumpets and violins, the orchestral sound was as soothing as it was shirt-shaking.
Elia Einhorn, who co-founded the band in 2001 with another college music major, took some time between mastering SYGC’s latest effort (due out in the fall and tentatively called . . . And The Horse You Rode In On to let Beachwood Music peel back the curtains.

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Posted on April 16, 2009

RockNotes: Irma Thomas, Neko Case & Napalm Death

By Steve Rhodes
1. I find the New Yorker’s weekly listings of bands playing shows in New York to be a pretty consistent source of interesting rock info. Here are two items in the current mag that caught my eye:
“Irma Thomas wasn’t the first artist to record ‘Time Is On My Side.’ The trombonist Kai Windig recorded Jerry Ragovoy’s tune in 1963. Thomas covered it less than a year later, and that’s the version the Rolling Stones heard and then turned into their first Top Ten single in the States.”
I did not know that.

2. “The British metal gods Napalm Death return to New York armed with ‘Time Waits for No Slave,’ a stunning new installment in their exhilarating musical ouevre. Founded in 1982 in Birmingham, England (Black Sabbath’s home town), these metal pioneers started their career in the anarchist-punk movement before inventing grindcore, a metal subgenre that merged elements of hardcore and metal.”
Oh hell, I’m gonna reprint the rest of it. Let ’em sue me, it’d be worth it.
“Napalm Death’s innovative style, political lyrics, and exquisite musicianship have garnered them wide appeal, with fans ranging from the local avant-gardist John Zorn to the late British d.j. John Peel. The new album features their trademark style of short, furious songs, impossibly fast drum patterns, and growling, melodyless vocals in all its glory.”

3. And . . . here’s an excerpt from Chicago expatriate Neko Case’s April 11 show at the Berklee Performance Center, which was followed by two nights at the Nokia Theatre Times Square.

And so as not to leave you hanging like that, here’s a cut from her new record, Middle Cyclone.

From Avril Lavigne and Kid Rock to the Replacements and Radiohead, we’ve got the best RockNotes around. Comments and contributions welcome.

Posted on April 15, 2009

Badfinger: Ass

By Don Jacobson
What a bittersweet thing is the 1973 Badfinger album Ass. As a Bin Dive entry, it is eminently qualified because it completely flew under the public’s radar (it was released simultaneously with their first Warner Brothers album Badfinger, which flopped, too). It also fits the bill because it is an unjustly overlooked artistic success – it featured the penultimate popsters branching out into early ’70s-style hard-boogie psych-rock and showed what could have been from a band that was right on the edge of a bitterly hard fall.

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Posted on April 9, 2009

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