Thank You Urlacher, Chicago Bear Fans Will Miss You

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BrianUrlacherChicagoQ101_WCKGChicagoBears

Dan Patrick hit it on the head on AM 1530 WCKG when he said the next team should make good old #54 a player coach. The Bears should have, COULD have, offer Urlacher a role in the organization beyond being a punching bag on the field. They did not.

Too bad. #54 should be a lifetime Bear. Learn from this…

Local 101: Interview with Tomlinson Fort of Cobalt & the Hired Guns

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Independent Arts and Music Festival, otherwise known as I AM Fest recently took over the House the Blues to bring a full night of Chicago’s finest. Among the impressive lineup, which included The Studs, The Giving Moon, The Underlined, The Alaya Conscious, A Friend Called Fire, Board of Governors, Leah Druzinsky, Workout Music, and The Energy Commission, were hometown favorites Cobalt & the Hired Guns performing their contagious blend of Americana and punk rock.

I recently had a chance to talk to Cobalt & the Hired Guns guitarist, vocalist, and harmonica player, Tomlinson Fort, about the group, making music, and sweet home Chicago. Check out the full interview and all of the show details you’ll need, below.

Your latest album, Everybody Wins!, was released just over two months ago, how has the response to the new record been in Chicago and on the road?

Playing the songs live, the response has been overwhelmingly positive, which is great. Everything that we’ve heard people say, and all of the press that we’ve gotten has been really positive. I haven’t heard anyone review it and say, “Oh, I wish that they’d done this”, or “this seems like a miss-step”. That’s really encouraging because we tried a lot of new things.

It was very much a growth record for us. We’d never incorporated horns to the extent that we did on this record. There’s a four piece horn section on almost every song on the record. We incorporated a string section and there are way more keyboards then there were before. Having all those options, having all that flexibility, that’s kind of what the idea was with Cobalt & the Hired Guns. It feels like we’re coming into our own in terms of sound and development and possibilities of where to take that.

Can you talk a little bit about how Everybody Wins! came to be and how the writing and recording process goes for you guys?

Jesse, Mike, and myself are all songwriters, and so one of the things that we’ve always tried to do is encourage each other and our growth and support other members of the band when they’re writing new material. A lot of thought and energy went into the making of that record, and it’s a piece of recording that feels as though it recreates the energy and enthusiasm of our live shows. That’s a really important thing for us. I really feel honest delivery of emotional content is at the core of what we do and it’s the most important thing to me as a songwriter.

Originally, we started making the record in our basement and doing it ourselves, and that was a great process and a huge learning process for us. It really helped us learn to make decisions and dream about, “What sounds do I want here, and how do I get that?” Learning to think creatively in the studio was a really important process. Then we started working with Sean O’Keefe, who is really a master of his craft. He’s really terrific and helped push us in a lot of really great ways. He helped with a number of difficult decisions like, “Which way are we going to go with this?” or running into roadblocks like, “How do we get around that?” Sometimes it’s like, “Why don’t you just come back and take another run at it tomorrow?”

Each of us writes songs, and we’ll bring in a song that basically consists of lyrics, chords, and a melody. As we rehearse that song and arrange it, it changes drastically. Often, I come in with songs that are kind of slow and Jessie, who comes from a punk background with his drumming, will just speed that thing right up and it’s better. “You Left Your Sweater…” is maybe the biggest example of that. When I came in it was about as slow as it is at the end of the song. I was playing it like that and Jessie was like, “Dude, this is a happy song that you’re singing like it’s a depressing song. We can’t have that”. That’s true because there’s a lot of love and a lot of happiness and a lot of joy in what we do. There’s a lot of hope. Even in the songs that deal with difficult things or hard things, there’s still hope that’s worth clinging to.

You seem to have a fairly free-form lineup on the stage. Is it just a trio on the record or do musicians sit in and play those additional parts?

There are three core members of Cobalt & the Hired Guns, but part of the reason that we called it Cobalt & the Hired Guns was that we knew we’d be working with a lot of other people and we like having the artistic input of those people. It’s not like they just show up and we give them a chart and say, here’s what you’re going to be playing. We choose those people very selectively because we’re saying to each other, “I think that you, as a player, have not just the skill-set, but the decision-making skills. Your decisions about what to play, where, are right for what we’re doing”.

Brian Neibuhr plays trumpet, and he helped write a lot of the horn parts and was very helpful at coming up with stuff. Before we played our Metro show in June, I turned to him and I was like, “Hey, you’ve got to write a horn part for the end of this song because I think we’re going to play it last and we can’t play a song last that doesn’t have the horns – it will be underwhelming. I know that on the record there isn’t a horn part, but you need to write one now”. It’s through process of elimination and there’s a really big process of trying things out and experimenting with things. It’s really when collectively, we all can feel it gel, like when it starts to feel like a Cobalt & the Hired Guns song. That’s the thing that everybody feels, and when they don’t, we’re always revisiting stuff. I think that really helps to keep it interesting and to keep it fresh for us. Even old songs get reworked and it helps keep us enthusiastic.

That was pretty much the recording process, and the preparation for the recording process was just as important. We made our first batch of songs and we did three songs with Sean O’Keefe, and we just realized that it was on a whole nother level. It was another ballpark.  It was going from high school baseball or college baseball to the major leagues. The degree of polish that was on there, and the extent to which it was produced but not over produced. He let us stay true to who we were and maintain our sound, but he really did a good job of pushing that to its maximum potential.


Is there anything happening right now in the Chicago music scene that you’re particularly excited about?

We’re playing at the I AM Fest at the House of Blues this Saturday. That’s going to be really cool. There’s A Friend Called Fire, and Board of Governors, and the lineup is really strong. The people that we’ve been working with are really friendly. Right now, we’ve still got a few discount $17 tickets left, which is great because it’s going to be $22 at the door. It’s ten bands, and it’s a lot of really good bands that were put together very selectively, which is nice. They’re not all the same genre, but I don’t think that that’s really important in a music festival anymore. You look at something like Lollapalooza, Coachella, Pitchfork, any of the big music festivals, and there’s always four or five or more genres that are happening at the same time.

I think that there are very few people who are like, “I only listen to punk/hardcore”. They listen to punk/hardcore, but they’re also into dance/indie/pop. They love the new Lady Gaga record but they also love Sufjan Stevens and Steely Dan is their favorite band of all time. (laughs) I think that that’s cool, that diverse taste, and it’s something that works in favor of Cobalt & the Hired Guns. We’re a band that is diverse, not every song sounds like the last song before it.

What’s up next for Cobalt & the Hired Guns?

Well, it looks likely that we’re going to be playing a show at Hard Rock Cafe this fall, probably in October, and I’m really excited for that. I don’t know if that’s totally confirmed yet, but it should be October 27th, if it comes through. I think that we’re going to be looking to go back out on the road again soon. Try to book some college dates and keep touring. We’ve got this new record that we’re really proud of and I think that the thing for us is to just find people to hear it. Find people to listen and come out to the shows.

I really want to ride this as far as it can go. I really want to build as much momentum as we can and then use it. I really have high hopes and a lot of ambition for where I think we can go with this record and with this thing that we’re trying to do. I want to do it until I’m completely out of energy for it. We just came back from tour and a little piece of my soul dies every time we come off the road. I’m one of those of people that was built for this. I love being on tour. I love sitting in a van for eight hours a day – it’s a weird kind of love. That’s what I want to do. Now that we’re done with the road, I want to focus on more shows and get back on the road.

You can grab a copy of Everybody Wins! online from CDBaby, Bandcamp, and the iTunes music store.

Be sure to get over to the House of Blues (329 N Dearborn) by 3:00 PM on Saturday for the start of the fest. I AM Fest is all ages, and you can save yourself five bucks by picking up tickets online for just $17.00.

Cobalt & the Hired Guns Official | Facebook | Twitter | Bandcamp

Local 101: Stepdad Gets Warped

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It’s 4 p.m. on a Saturday in July. The heat is peaking somewhere upward of ninety degrees and the asphalt backdrop isn’t helping. Still, every stop along the seminal Warped Tour schedule is a chance for up and coming bands like poppy quintet Stepdad to grow their fan bases.

However, Stepdad’s stop in Chicago wasn’t too foreign. Though they now call Grand Rapids, MI home, Stepdad got their start on Chicago’s south side. Now, several years later, they’ve embarked on the yearly Warped Tour, fondly know as “punk rock summer camp” and are happy to see some familiar faces along the way.

Local 101 caught up with the band on their (air conditioned) bus following their performance on July 7 to chat about their past, present and future….and also to eat some cookies. Listen to the full interview below.

Stepdad’s debut full length album Wildlife Pop is out now. Check out their track entitled “Jungles” below.

EP Review: Real Friends “Everyone That Dragged You Here”

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Real Friends are a pop punk band from the suburbs of our beautiful city. This year they released their EP “Everyone That Dragged You Here”. Shortly after the release Real Friends exploded and solidified themselves as the top pop punk band in Illinois. Everyone That Dragged You Here is filled with honesty, frustration, and passion.  Oh and boney Knees can’t forget that. One thing that Real Friends does perfect on this EP is have music that is intelligent and thought provoking and that can also be screamed at a show.  I’m still trying to wrap my head around the lyrics in  Floorboards:
“I don’t want to be jealous of the trees next to my neighbor’s garage anymore”

I love that the lyrics make me stop and think. Floorboards is track one on the EP and it’s a great first track.  Every song is distinct and memorable.  That’s what makes this EP so good. The last song on the EP is Home For Fall a song about a friend going away and it has some of the best lyrics I’ve heard

“Maybe you’ll be here next year to waste the fall away, watching the leaves blow across my driveway
We could listen to American Football and talk about high school
Just like we did the years before”

Any band with an American Football reference is okay in my book.  Since Real Friends will most likely go the way of Fall Out Boy and be assumed to be a Chicago band I don’t think we should argue about it. On behalf of Chicago Real Friends you have made us all proud.
Every scene has their band in New Jersey you have the Crucial Dudes,Philadelphia has The Wonder Years, and Now Illinois has Real Friends.

 
Real Friends discuss what the songs on Everyone That Dragged You Here are about. It’s definitely an interesting read-Song Meanings
Stream Everyone That Dragged You Here-http://realfriends.bandcamp.com/album/everyone-that-dragged-you-here
Facebook-https://www.facebook.com/realfriendsband
You can also vote for Real Friends to be a constant on the Q101 Stream-VOTE HERE!

Local 101: Bullied in Chicago

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Somewhere along the way, punk rock lost face. Somewhere in between The Clash and Green Day, Minor Threat and The Get Up Kids, NOFX and Rise Against, Henry Rollins, Tom Delonge and Pete Wentz, the genre lost it’s definitive sound. But that isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

“Punk” has become a multi-faceted term and sometimes when you combine the many hats that it wears you wind up with one hell of a headpiece. Chicago sports a long history of essential punk bands and our contemporary wave of locals continues to keep our city’s scene on par.

Bully in the Hallway might not produce the most traditional of punk music, but the influences that those traditions have on this Chicago five-piece is undeniable. True to the genre’s evolution, Bully combines a multitude of sounds that gives them both a sophisticated and fun-loving sound.

Local 101 caught up with Bully in the Hallway at a recent show at the Fireside Bowl. We chatted about their varied list of influences, trip to South By Southwest festival earlier this year and rocking in Chicago. View the entire interview in the video below.

 

Listen to and download Bully in the Hallway’s Crooks and their Castles


#WWECOVERBANDS: Pro Wrestler + Rock band name = hilarious

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Marty Derosa of Comedians You Show Know

@MartyDerosa slams with #WWECoverbands

As an aspiring comedian and  ’smart’ wrestling fan whose constantly tuned into the ever-flowing internet chatter of other like-minded fans, it was a real treat to see the ‘WWE Universe’ get blasted by a super-nova of the ridiculously funny hash-tag trend #wwecovrbands on Twitter this week.  Started by Twitter user @Bar_Nez and Chicago comedian @MartyDerosa this past Wednesday,  the joke started with one tweet between the two wrestling fans, steamrolled out of Chicago, and onto becoming a world-wide trending topic by the end of the day. WWE superstars like @CMPunk, @IamJericho (Chris Jericho), and @ZackRyder joined in on the rock ‘n wrassl’n humor as well.  I found myself writing and reading other tweets about this joke for well over 2 hours while at work on Wednesday.  It may not have been a productive day at the office, but it was certainly a day where I laughed hardest ever at any job I have ever had.

Here is the origianl Tweet that started the whole thing…

@Bar_Nez @martyderosa @WWE Jinder Mahal & Oates #wwecoverbands

The joke formula is pretty simple. You take a pro wrestling star’s stage name and combine it with the name of a popular (or once popular) musical act.  It sounds silly because it is, but the results are entertaining even if you can’t come up with a clever phonetic spin on the formula.  Here is a collection of the some of the funniest #WWEcoverband tweets posted this week. You can share your own #WWEcoverband joke with me @KevKellam. 

 

@WWEMagazine : Husker Duke the Dumpster Droese

@Mikki_Sixx Akeem the African Dream Theater

@Mikki_Sixx Billy Guns ‘N’ Roses

@Joekillgallon The Velvet Undertaker

@RyanBudds Greg the Hammer My Bloody Valentine

@joemcadams They Might Be Andre the Giants

@CMPunk  George Straight Edge Society

@MartyDerosa Crosby, Stills, Kevin Nash & Eric Young.

@GlitterCheese Daniel Bryan McKnight

@BdRick DJ Jazzy Jeff Hardy

I could go on and on for days.  There is literally thousands of the smile-enducing gems like these on this page on twitter.com. Check out Marty Derosa continue to make Pro Wrestling funny with NWA World Champion @ColtCabana with their weekly web series,  “Creative Has Nothing For You” where they spoof the behind-the-scenes life of  wrestlers at the bottom of the card.  The comic/wrestler duo also produce the must-see $5 Wrestling DVD series for Highspots.com, which had a sold-out crowd for a live show in Miami during Wrestlemania weekend earlier this month.

 

C2E2 Post-Report

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A weekend of human density, popular culture, digital, print, and toy entertainment came to a close on Sunday April 15th with the McCormick Place north building lights dimming at 5pm to signal it’s time to get out, but the love and excitement of what was in this massive building continues every day in the fans, and companies that buy and create the entertainment that has become mainstream like a blur.

Q101′s presence & table shocked, and excited a lot of people at the convention. The fans and support poured in non-stop through the entire weekend, with supporters normal, and super-hero alike. We traversed the show floor and beyond, reaching every man, woman, child, and cape we saw to remind them that Q101 is as strong as ever.

The Incredible Hulk, as you can see here, couldn’t contain his excitement when he saw the Q101 table.

The Q101 puppet kept showing up in the darndest places! Like here

And here

And here.

The response, support, and feeling of camaraderie during the convention was amazing, and we thank all the fans that came out to see us, and also enjoyed the convention!

Q101 also got into the John Barrowman (Doctor Who, Torchwood) Q & A, and he delighted the crowd, leaving everyone in stitches with his frank and honest answers, stories, and singing.

And no Q101 appearance would be complete without our mascot, the endearing Mr. Bananas who came to say hi to the kids!

Q101 was the perfect description of divide & conquer, we had the convention covered on all fronts, with more than enough to go around! Q101 is popular culture, Q101 is Chicago’s Alternative, WE ARE Q101!!

 All photos care of Nina Andorf

ninaa37@gmail.com

 

 

Q101 + C2E2 = Win.

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Yes, you’re reading this right. Q101 will be at C2E2, this weekend April 13th – 15th at the McCormick Place North building in downtown Chicago! We will have our own corner of the world, in Artist’s Alley, booth #O11. We will be wandering the convention floor, selling shirts, handing out goodies, spreading the goodwill and cheer of Chicago’s Alternative! Q101 will be there the ENTIRE duration of the convention. There will be magic! Excitement! Tomfoolery! And maybe this guy:

Did you miss out on our text contest this week to win weekend passes? Never fear friends, be sure to wear your Q101 shirt when you’re in line Friday morning. You may be able to save your money *wink, wink*.

We will have raffles, smiling people, a photographer, and a presence like no other, by the one and only Q101!

 

Q101 Parties @ The Liars’ Club Thursday 4/12

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Q101 will be at The Liars’ Club, 1665 West Fullerton in Chicago on Thursday night, 4/12 for a bad-ass local show, featuring Chiefs Of The North, Boots With Spurs, and Stoop Goodnoise, a band previously featured at a Local 101 show! Be sure to come out to the show, have a few drinks, enjoy the performances, talk to us, pick up a t-shirt, get some stickers, and maybe some prizes! This will be a good time for all!

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