AltWeeklies Wire

Scratch and Stitchnew

The well-tailored line between hip-hop artists and the streetwear companies hustling to promote them.
Chicago Reader  |  Leor Galil  |  05-14-2012  |  Music

Our guide to the Pitchfork Music Festivalnew

In the past few years Pitchfork has started booking a stage at Primavera Sound in Spain and collaborated with All Tomorrow's Parties for a festival in the UK, and this fall it launches a festival in Paris. But Chicago is still the influential online music magazine's home base, and the 2011 Pitchfork Music Festival is the seventh large-scale event it's hosted here.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer, Peter Margasak, Kevin Warwick, Bill Meyer and Leor Galil and Mara Shalhoup  |  07-14-2011  |  Music

Inside the Ministry Movie Meleenew

Why wasn't Al Jourgensen at last week's premiere of Fix: The Ministry Movie? Buckle up -- it's complicated.
Chicago Reader  |  Ed M. Koziarski  |  04-18-2011  |  Music

Jerry Butler: Soul Survivornew

Jerry "Iceman" Butler was an A-list soul singer, playing with Curtis Mayfield and Otis Redding. Today, he mulls taxes and health care as the longest-serving member of the Cook County Board of Commissioners.
Chicago Reader  |  Ted Cox  |  04-12-2011  |  Music

For Gucci Mane, the Quantity is the Qualitynew

He's not the best MC and he's not the worst, but Gucci Mane is crazy enough to put out four albums' worth of free material in seven days and that's good enough for me.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  11-09-2009  |  Music

We Found the First Jackson Five Recording, and It's Earlier Than Anyone Thoughtnew

This was supposed to be the story of the Jackson Five's first single, cut in Chicago in 1967. But while writing it, we picked up the trail of a tape nobody knew existed: the earliest known studio recording of Michael Jackson and his brothers.
Chicago Reader  |  Jake Austen  |  09-14-2009  |  Music

In Search of the iTunes Killernew

There's something about Apple -- probably its nearly monopolistic control of certain markets or its disproportionate influence on the zeitgeist -- that brings out the bloodlust in new-media commentators and gadget bloggers.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  08-03-2009  |  Music

Advertisers Go from Licensing Songs to Releasing Themnew

The synergy of marketing and indie music has evolved so swiftly that selling a tune for use in a commercial or video game seems almost quaint. Marketers aren't just horning in on the territory of record labels' promo departments -- they're starting to act like labels.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  04-13-2009  |  Music

Together, Live Nation and Ticketmaster Could Exert a Dangerous Amount of Powernew

When news of the proposed Live Nation and Ticketmaster merger flashed across the internet, it was accompanied by the same mix of panic and dread you'd expect in response to an announcement that great white sharks were carrying the Ebola virus and could now fly.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  02-23-2009  |  Music

David Lineal Reaches Out to Illinois' Beleaguered Governor in Songnew

The frontman of the local pysch-pop band Bird Names recorded For the Love of Rod, a bizarre song cycle celebrating the governor, in 2005. He gave CD-Rs to a few friends, but the music never saw a proper release. Within hours of Blagojevich's arrest, though, he'd posted it as a free download on the Bird Names site.
Chicago Reader  |  Liam Warfield  |  12-22-2008  |  Music

Whither the Album?new

Chuck Klosterman says Chinese Democracy is the format's last hurrah. Kanye proves him wrong.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  12-08-2008  |  Music

New Federal IP Act Will Criminalize Culturenew

The Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property Act of 2008 promises to do for music what Homeland Security did for air travel.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  10-27-2008  |  Music

How the Web is Changing Black Youth Culture, and Vice Versanew

Wayne Marshall, a writer, DJ, ethnomusicologist, and probably the only person on staff at Brandeis University who's been written up by the Fader talks Web 2.0 and black youth culture.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  10-20-2008  |  Music

Soul Train's Chicago Rootsnew

The show that put black music on TVs across America got its start in Chicago -- and even after it moved to LA, Chicago kept its own version running daily for nearly a decade.
Chicago Reader  |  Jake Austen  |  10-06-2008  |  Music

Scott and Cara Flaster Release Punishing Music in Beautiful Packagesnew

Seventh Rule has become some­thing of a sanctuary for Chicago bands whose music falls outside the sometimes rigid genre boundaries of main­stream metal, from Indian’s thunderous psychedelic doom to Plague Bringer’s industrial-tinged, drum machine-powered grind.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  10-06-2008  |  Music

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