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Umamicue brings Texas barbecue—via Asia—to the next Monday Night Foodball

Her name is Odesza.

Charles Wong’s bright red, 14-foot, 500-gallon mobile road pit comes from Texas, and so does the barbecue she smokes—at least in terms of method and material.

But the flavors and textures of his brisket banh mi and smoked crab rangoon come from other lands. “I’ve always wanted to marry the Asian flavors I grew up with with smoke,” says Wong, who’s been been smoking new-school barbecue since 2015 under the name Umamicue. “Every cuisine has some kind of barbecue.”

Wong and Odesza have pop-ups and catering events booked every weekend until September, but this Monday, June 27, they have a very particular engagement in Irving Park when they play Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn.

Odesza, in the wild. Credit: Charles Wong

Odesza herself may or may not make an appearance—I’m petitioning for the sweet narcotic haze of smoked meat to haunt the streets and alleys of Irving Park. But those brisket banh mi will be there, and so will the crab rangoon, bulging with white and post oak-smoked molten cream cheese. Wong’s also frying up brisket-stuffed egg rolls, which will also make their way into a Texas-style bowl of buncha, the same symphonically textured and flavored, herbal-cool-hot noodle dish Bourdain and Obama shared in Hanoi—this time given extra-dimensional mojo with smoked lemongrass pork patties. For you plant-fed organisms, smoked Impossible patties and egg rolls, and fish-free nuoc cham are available.

“To me barbecue is about bringing people together,” says Wong. “It’s a universal language. We don’t have to speak the same verbal language—you can just look, see, smell, and be able to tell: ‘Hey, that’s delicious.’” That’s why Wong has enlisted Jennifer Pham of @cocktailswithnuky (and also Celebrate Argyle and Haibayô) to create the night’s cocktail, a Ginger Soda Chanh, with your choice of poison—gin or vodka—and calamansi, muddled ginger and sugar, and mint.

You can procure that from Jon Pokorny at the bar, starting at 5:30 PM. And you can order your Umamicue from Wong right here, right now, via Tock.

There will be some limited availability for walk-ins too, and while I can’t guarantee Odesza will be available for selfies, she will be certainly be smoking for your pleasure in her secret Lincolnwood lair. If she doesn’t make it this time, look for her when Umamicue returns to the Kedzie in September with a cast of collaborators that, if you’re any kind of Foodball fan, you will know and love.

Meantime, check out the full Monday Night Foodball summer schedule, restarting after an Independence Day break:

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Indonesian home cooking with Waroeng and friends

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

8/29: the triumphant return of Funeral Potatoes

9/5: Labor Day break

9/12: TBA

9/19: Global Asian barbecue with Umamicue and friends

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

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Umamicue brings Texas barbecue—via Asia—to the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Get the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron June 22, 2022 at 4:19 pm

To keep up with your demand, we have expanded our print run to 60,000. Many Reader boxes including downtown and transit line locations will be restocked on the Wednesday following each issue date.

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week and distributed for free to the more than 1,100 locations on this map.

The latest issue

The latest print issue of the Reader is the issue of June 9, 2022, the Pride Issue.

You can download the print issue as a free PDF.

The next print issue will be the issue of June 23, 2022, the Summer Theater and Arts Preview issue.

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Please consider donating.

Chicago Reader print issue dates

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week. Issues are dated Thursday. Distribution usually happens Wednesday morning through Thursday night of the issue date. Upcoming print issue dates through December 2022 are:

6/23/20227/7/20227/21/20228/4/20228/18/20229/1/20229/15/20229/29/202210/13/202210/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

Download the full 2022 editorial calendar is here (PDF). See our information page for advertising opportunities.

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Get the Chicago Reader in print every other weekChicago Readeron June 22, 2022 at 4:19 pm Read More »

Umamicue brings Texas barbecue—via Asia—to the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 22, 2022 at 4:13 pm

Her name is Odesza.

Charles Wong’s bright red, 14-foot, 500-gallon mobile road pit comes from Texas, and so does the barbecue she smokes—at least in terms of method and material.

But the flavors and textures of his brisket banh mi and smoked crab rangoon come from other lands. “I’ve always wanted to marry the Asian flavors I grew up with with smoke,” says Wong, who’s been been smoking new-school barbecue since 2015 under the name Umamicue. “Every cuisine has some kind of barbecue.”

Wong and Odesza have pop-ups and catering events booked every weekend until September, but this Monday, June 27, they have a very particular engagement in Irving Park when they play Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn.

Odesza, in the wild. Credit: Charles Wong

Odesza herself may or may not make an appearance—I’m petitioning for the sweet narcotic haze of smoked meat to haunt the streets and alleys of Irving Park. But those brisket banh mi will be there, and so will the crab rangoon, bulging with white and post oak-smoked molten cream cheese. Wong’s also frying up brisket-stuffed egg rolls, which will also make their way into a Texas-style bowl of buncha, the same symphonically textured and flavored, herbal-cool-hot noodle dish Bourdain and Obama shared in Hanoi—this time given extra-dimensional mojo with smoked lemongrass pork patties. For you plant-fed organisms, smoked Impossible patties and egg rolls, and fish-free nuoc cham are available.

“To me barbecue is about bringing people together,” says Wong. “It’s a universal language. We don’t have to speak the same verbal language—you can just look, see, smell, and be able to tell: ‘Hey, that’s delicious.’” That’s why Wong has enlisted Jennifer Pham of @cocktailswithnuky (and also Celebrate Argyle and Haibayô) to create the night’s cocktail, a Ginger Soda Chanh, with your choice of poison—gin or vodka—and calamansi, muddled ginger and sugar, and mint.

You can procure that from Jon Pokorny at the bar, starting at 5:30 PM. And you can order your Umamicue from Wong right here, right now, via Tock.

There will be some limited availability for walk-ins too, and while I can’t guarantee Odesza will be available for selfies, she will be certainly be smoking for your pleasure in her secret Lincolnwood lair. If she doesn’t make it this time, look for her when Umamicue returns to the Kedzie in September with a cast of collaborators that, if you’re any kind of Foodball fan, you will know and love.

Meantime, check out the full Monday Night Foodball summer schedule, restarting after an Independence Day break:

7/11: Dawn Lewis of D’s Roti & Trini Cuisine

7/18: Mazesoba from Mike “Ramen Lord” Satinover

7/25: Asian stoner snacks from SuperHai

8/1: Keralan food from Thommy Padanilam of Thommy’s Toddy Shop

8/8: Indonesian home cooking with Waroeng and friends

8/15: Dylan Maysick of Diaspora Dinners

8/22: Vargo Brother Ferments

8/29: the triumphant return of Funeral Potatoes

9/5: Labor Day break

9/12: TBA

9/19: Global Asian barbecue with Umamicue and friends

Kedzie Inn
4100 N. Kedzie
(773) 293-6368
kedzieinn.com

Read More

Umamicue brings Texas barbecue—via Asia—to the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon June 22, 2022 at 4:13 pm Read More »

The Chicago Blackhawks should now consider this head coachVincent Pariseon June 22, 2022 at 3:58 pm

The Chicago Blackhawks are in the process of looking for their new full-time head coach. Derek King took over for Jeremy Colliton early in the 2021-22 season and it went okay. King was certainly better than Colliton but the Hawks probably need an overhaul.

A former Blackhawks player is someone for them to consider as Andrew Brunette might be looking for a head coaching job now. He replaced Joel Quenneville as Florida Panthers coach at the beginning of the season after he stepped down.

Brunette was so good with that Panthers team. He was a finalist for the Jack Adam’s Award for his work but they decided not to bring him back as head coach. They announced on Wednesday that they are hiring former Winnipeg Jets coach Paul Maurice to be the guy.

It would be smart for Brunette to move on from that organization so he can try and become a head coach again instead of being an assistant once again. He has proved himself more than some coaches that have been in it for years.

Paul Maurice is going into FLA…replacing Andrew Brunette

— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) June 22, 2022

The Chicago Blackhawks need to consider hiring Andrew Brunette as head coach.

Yes, the Panthers have an elite roster. That is a big reason why Brunette was able to help them win the President’s Trophy this year. However, we have seen talented rosters underachieve in the regular season like that a lot.

He was able to distract them from all the Joel Quenneville stuff too which shows that he has what it takes to do this job. It takes more than just hockey Xs and Os to be an NHL head coach and Brunette showed he can do it.

Coaching the Chicago Blackhawks would be a completely different challenge for Brunette. Instead of Stanley Cup aspirations, they have first overall pick aspirations with this roster. They might get even worse before the 2022 NHL Draft as big trades could be made.

It is a lot worse of a situation than Florida right now but he can help them build it back up. Kyle Davidson would be wise to consider him as the head coach in this role. Brunette would be able to show what he can do with a roster loaded with young and unproven talent.

Brunette played with the Blackhawks for one season to end his career. He put together a really nice career as an NHL depth player which oftentimes translates into a great head coach. He knows what it takes to grind it out and get the most of his talent.

The Blackhawks would be wise to see if he would rather come to be their head coach instead of being Florida’s assistant coach after they demoted him.

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The Chicago Blackhawks should now consider this head coachVincent Pariseon June 22, 2022 at 3:58 pm Read More »

Fredette, Thompson bros. playing in 2022 TBTon June 22, 2022 at 5:03 pm

Former National Player of the Year Jimmer Fredette and potential top-10 NBA draft picks Ausar and Amen Thompson headline the 2022 field for The Basketball Tournament.

The 64-team TBT bracket, which was released Wednesday, features a record 71 players with NBA experience as well as 29 college alumni teams.

For the first time in the event’s history, the TBT will have games played outdoors as one of its regionals is being hosted at historic Rucker Park in New York City. The other seven regional cities include Omaha, Nebraska; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Wichita, Kansas; Syracuse, New York; Charleston, West Virginia; Cincinnati; and Dayton, Ohio.

“This year’s field is electrifying,” TBT founder and CEO Jon Mugar said. “Nine years ago, we set out to be the home for high stakes, open-to-all basketball, pitting people against one another from all walks of life. This year’s field demonstrates how far we’ve come. It is exceptionally diverse and talented. I can’t wait to see what team wins six straight games.”

1 Related

The teams will compete for the $1 million, winner-take-all championship prize.

Fredette, the former BYU guard who led the country in scoring in 2011 and won consensus National Player of the Year honors before being selected 10th overall in the NBA draft, is headlining The Money Team.

“I’m going to get out and play again and have fun,” Fredette told ESPN. “My brother [general manager TJ Fredette] is part of getting the team together. It should be a lot of fun to get back out on the court again and play competitive basketball.”

After playing for the Shanghai Sharks in China in 2021, Fredette opted to stay home this winter and spring as he and his wife welcomed their third child. He is joining a team that reached the quarterfinals last season and features the likes of Trevor Booker, Jeremy Evans, Charles Jenkins and Jordon Crawford.

“I feel pretty good,” Fredette said. “I stayed working out the entire time. I’ll always work out, keep working on my game. I’ll be excited to play in front of some fans, playing with some guys I really like.”

Fredette played in the TBT in 2018, leading the tournament in scoring – including a 41-point effort to help Team Fredette advance.

“It’s always great,” he said. “At this point, it’s just about trying to win. Just doing whatever it takes to advance. I was fortunate last time to have a really great tournament, be the leading scorer. That’s cool, but it’s about surviving and advancing. It’s about trying to win these games and move forward. Get toward that one million.”

Fredette’s The Money Team is the 1-seed in the Dayton region. Other 1-seeds include YGC (Rucker Park), Gutter Cats (Omaha), Heartfire (New Mexico), Florida TNT (Xavier), Boeheim’s Army (Syracuse), AfterShocks (Wichita State) and Best Virginia (West Virginia).

The TBT began in 2014, when Notre Dame Fighting Alumni won the first championship. Overseas Elite won the next four titles before their streak ended in 2019 at the hands of Carmen’s Crew, a team of Ohio State alumni. Marquette-centric Golden Eagles Alumni won in 2020, with Syracuse-focused Boeheim’s Army taking the title last season.

Boeheim’s Army will defend its title this summer by adding first-time TBT players Tyler Ennis, Rakeem Christmas and Marek Dolezaj — all Syracuse alums — to a group that already included five-time TBT champion D.J. Kennedy and four-time champion DeAndre Kane.

As ESPN reported earlier this month, projected 2023 lottery picks Amen and Ausar Thompson are headlining Team Overtime, a squad put together by the sports media company Overtime. The Thompson twins suited up for Overtime Elite this past season, as did Jazian Gortman, another projected draft pick who will play for Team Overtime in the TBT. It will mark the first time NBA draft-eligible prospects will participate in the TBT, although the team also features several pro veterans, including former San Diego State star Malcolm Thomas. Overtime is the 6-seed in the Omaha region.

Sideline Cancer, the 2-seed in the Xavier region, is looking for its third consecutive quarterfinal appearance. They bring back scorer Marcus Keene, but also add former South Dakota State star Mike Daum and longtime NBA veteran C.J. Miles.

Other players with NBA experience expected to play in this year’s TBT include Zhaire Smith (Air Raiders), Omari Spellman (Eberlein Drive), Antonio Blakeney (Florida TNT), Semaj Christon (Zip ‘Em Up), Justin Patton (Omaha Blue Crew), Jacob Pullen (Purple & Black), Kosta Koufos (Red Scare), Xavier Munford (The Money Team), Jacob Evans (Nasty Nati), Markel Brown (Stillwater Stars) and others.

The championship team earns $1 million in a winner-take-all title game to be televised on ESPN. This summer’s championship game will be played at Dayton on Aug. 2.

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Fredette, Thompson bros. playing in 2022 TBTon June 22, 2022 at 5:03 pm Read More »

Pravda Records goes the distance

Beginning with Napster and continuing through Spotify, the nemeses of independent record labels have been legion over the past few decades. The deaths of brick-and-mortar retail chains, including Tower and Borders, have made releasing new music even more of an uphill climb.

Yet Pravda Records has weathered it all and continues to thrive. The Chicago label—which toasts its 38th year with a two-day festival, June 24 and 25, at Sketchbook Brewing in Skokie—has survived shifting public tastes, the rise of online piracy, several changes in dominant format, and the collapse of music sales in physical media. 

Pravdafest night one
Featuring Josh Caterer, Steve Dawson, Hushdrops, and Boom Hank. Fri 6/24, 7 PM, Sketchbook Brewing Company, 4901 Main, Skokie, $30-$75, 21+

Even in the years since COVID-19 hit the U.S. in early 2020, the label has prospered, releasing a string of albums from legacy Chicago artists, among them Smoking Popes front man Josh Caterer, rock band the Handcuffs, retro-pop quintet the Flat Five, power-pop band the Hushdrops, singer-songwriter Steve Dawson, and power trio Sunshine Boys. Those records have all been modest hits—Goodman says each sold more than 1,000 copies. The label’s total sales increased about 50 percent.

Pravdafest night two
Featuring the Slugs, the Service, the Diplomats of Solid Sound, and the Handcuffs. Sat 6/25, 7 PM, Sketchbook Brewing Company, 4901 Main, Skokie, $30-$75, 21+

This flurry of activity puts Pravda at the opposite end of the spectrum from most pandemic-stricken businesses, which have either shuttered or dialed back their output to a glacial pace.

Josh Caterer’s version of “Need You Around” from the 2021 Pravda release The Hideout Sessions

Kenn Goodman, 59, Pravda’s president and cofounder, saw opportunity in people staying home. “The desire for music grew a lot,” he says. “Not everyone wanted to watch TV 16 hours a day.” Nevertheless, he says, the sales boom Pravda enjoyed came as “a complete surprise.”

Fans who’ve followed Pravda over the years could probably see it coming, though. Goodman and cofounder Rick Mosher started the label in their Northern Illinois University dorm room in 1984, the height of the college-radio era. In their early years, they found touchstones in Twin/Tone and SST Records, and for a while Pravda bands such as Green, the Farmers, and the Slugs could count themselves part of the flourishing DIY punk and indie-rock movement. But starting in the 1990s, Pravda became home to a wider range of music: R&B veteran Andre Williams, Seattle art-pop band the Young Fresh Fellows, Feelies front man Glenn Mercer. Remaining genre agnostic helped Pravda outlast trends—though it’s topped by Alligator and Delmark, it’s one of the longest-running independent record labels in Chicago. 

“There were maybe cooler labels in town, but it was always about the quality of the work. That seems to have just outlasted everything,” says Dag Juhlin, currently of Sunshine Boys and formerly of the Slugs (among other bands on Pravda’s roster). Goodman, whose father was a Chicago schoolteacher and whose mother is a homemaker and Holocaust survivor, has a “great Chicago work ethic” that has helped him “keep his head in the game and not chase trends,” Juhlin says. “In his own quiet way, he’s super savvy and has a good ear for artists. It’s his blood that’s in this business.”

Pravda has endured with its underdog approach by keeping overhead low, never banking on a single artist or sound, and diversifying its income streams: retail sales, publishing, downloads, licensing, streaming, merch. Its staff at its biggest totaled about 30 people, during the period when Goodman operated a storefront that sold Pravda products along with new releases from other labels. The store opened inside Metro in 1986, an era “ripe for people who wanted to be creative,” says Metro owner Joe Shanahan. 

A Pravda Records sticker spotted in the wild at the Montrose Saloon Credit: Philip Montoro for Chicago Reader

“Pravda was the hub for all of that,” says Shanahan. “I learned so much from [Goodman and Mosher] in understanding what was out there. The music they put out was way under the radar. MTV didn’t even matter. They were putting out indie records for an indie crowd. It was a glorious time. And they were literally sitting in the middle of it all.”

Eventually Pravda moved to a storefront on Southport, steps from the Music Box. Then in 1992 Goodman sold the retail business, bought out Mosher, and consolidated his staff. Today, Pravda has three full-time employees who work out of an office on the northwest side. The label outsources publicity, social media, and radio promotion to third-party vendors to control costs. 

Each year Pravda handles an average of eight releases. Just as in the early days the record store helped fund the label, today Pravda is underwritten by the hard work Goodman does to license its music to television and film productions all over the world. This has generated revenue steadily thanks to a diverse assortment of placements: Netflix’s Grace and Frankie, KFC commercials, Beverly Hills, 90210, and more. 

Goodman got interested in licensing in the early 1990s, and he says it’s helped Pravda brave the turbulence in the industry as it shifted formats, from vinyl to CDs to downloads to streaming. “There’s always going to be events in the music business that threaten your existence,” he says. “How we always dealt with it was to embrace it.” 

What’s also helped Pravda stay the course has been consistent access to established artists whose former labels had either closed or been swallowed up in mergers and acquisitions. In 2016 the Flat Five’s debut was a hit for Bloodshot Records. Then the label ceased releasing new music, and signs pointed toward an eventual sale. The band’s second record ended up on Pravda in 2020. 

Steve Dawson, who performs at Pravdafest on Friday, released this song as part of a 2021 Pravda album.

What Goodman offers is a 50-50 profit split, committed long-term marketing support, and global distribution of physical media. What he gets in return are artists with dedicated fan bases and no problem filling clubs, as opposed to those trying to build audiences from scratch. 

“Launching a new band is such an enormous task now. Just because a young band has a good demo—we have to look at the big picture,” Goodman says. “Sometimes that’s not a good business plan for us. We’ve done it.” 

Another advantage of working with veteran artists is that they tend not to take for granted the work labels do. “A lot of people say, ‘We don’t need record labels anymore,’ but I think they do,” Goodman explains. “A lot of bands don’t want to sit around and run a business. They want to make music. To do that you need a label and partnership with people you have a good relationship with.”

Shanahan says what makes Goodman “unique in the record business” is the “trust he built with bands and touring musicians,” in part because he’s a musician himself. As a keyboardist, Goodman has been a member of several Pravda acts, including R&B collective the Imperial Sound, long-running rock trio the New Duncan Imperials, and the Service, one of the label’s earliest garage bands. Mosher has been his bandmate in all three.

During the first summer of COVID-19, the New Duncan Imperials released this cover of the Supremes.

“The fact that he’s run a business for nearly 40 years while never having worked another job in the music industry—while also working as a musician? You have to be a pretty balanced person to make it a sustainable situation for yourself and for other people,” says Melissa Thornley, Goodman’s romantic partner and Pravda’s marketing director.

Susan Voelz, a singer-songwriter and violinist who performs with Poi Dog Pondering, released her first solo album, 13 Ribs, through Pravda in 1993. She says the label’s support “was pivotal” to moving forward with her own music. “It validated me. It made me believe in myself to keep evolving, keep writing,” she says. “They let me do exactly what I wanted to do. I would give them a finished record. And I could go anywhere I wanted with it musically.” She’s returning to the label now, with two new albums on the horizon.

Goodman started piano lessons at age five; by age 12, he was a working musician in a teenage band he booked at social events around Skokie. Not long afterward he got a fake press credential that let doormen all over the city know that he was a reporter for Rolling Stone magazine (“I had just gotten my braces off,” he says). Soon Goodman was slipping into punk shows all over the city; at the same time, he was playing professionally on the region’s lounge, resort, and supper-club circuit as part of Keith Miller Featuring TCB, a popular Elvis Presley revue. He was 16. 

Goodman’s chutzpah aligned with the creative ethos fueling independent music culture in the mid-1980s. He began Pravda (Russian for “truth”) as an entirely DIY project while still in college. The record that earned the label its first national exposure was the 1991 compilation 20 Explosive Dynamic Super Smash Hit Explosions!, a snarky homage to K-Tel collections that showcased covers of mossy 70s hits from up-and-coming Chicago bands: Material Issue, the Slugs, and Smashing Pumpkins, among others. Two more volumes followed.

Goodman realized he could play a wider role outside Chicago, helping revive the careers of musicians who’d fallen away from the spotlight. The first artist he worked with was also the greatest: Andre Williams, an R&B performer who had a string of chart smashes in the 1950s and wrote hits for the likes of Stevie Wonder and Ike & Tina Turner. 

By the time Goodmen met him in 1998, Williams was fighting drug addiction and living without a stable home. Goodman and Thornley helped him get clean, resuscitated his career, and put together a band that he used to tour the world. Maybe most important, they acted as his friends, doing simple but important tasks like driving him to doctor’s appointments. 

Pravda artists the Diplomats of Solid Sound released this live-in-the-studio video in April of this year.

Williams died in 2019. Goodman has helped several other artists in similar ways, including Syl Johnson, Renaldo Domino, Tiny Tim, Archie Bell, and Hasil Adkins. He assembled each one a band and gave them a touring life, licensing income, and the chance to record new music for new audiences.

For Goodman, the effort was worth it for the stories. He met Tiny Tim at a gas station in Ames, Iowa, when Goodman was on tour with the New Duncan Imperials and Tim was playing comedy clubs with Jerry Mathers of Leave It to Beaver fame. Goodman stayed in touch and eventually brought Tim to Chicago in 1993 to record a live album at what’s now Martyrs’. The New Duncan Imperials backed him on tour, which removed Tim from the comedy circuit and put him in music venues, where Goodman felt he belonged. 

One memory that sticks in Goodman’s head is the time he invited Tim to his parents’ place for dinner. “He was hitting on my mom while my dad took photos,” he says. “They remembered him from Johnny Carson and couldn’t believe he was in their home.”

“I’ve always been drawn to outsider musicians,” says Pravda cofounder Kenn Goodman. Credit: Nyia Sissac for Chicago Reader

“Tiny Tim was so interesting to me. We’d have long discussions in the car about the history of show business,” says Goodman. “He was also into religion and philosophy. He was a serious musician and serious music expert. He knew so many songs from the 1910s and 1920s and was educated in the history of vaudeville. He was much more than ‘Tiptoe Through the Tulips.’” Tours, however, could be a struggle. “He would give us a list of songs to learn, and then we’d get to the gig and he’d say, ‘We’re not going to do that, tonight we’re doing all the hits of 1910,’” Goodman recalls. “Which was fine. But we didn’t know any of them.”

“I’ve always been drawn to outsider musicians,” he says. “A lot of people I worked with had long, amazing showbiz histories and life stories. To me, they were fascinating, and deep down, were very beautiful people to work with and just be around.”

In Pravda’s next phase, Goodman expects to release a solo album from Nora O’Connor, formerly of the Blacks and currently in the Flat Five. He also may break from his current business model to release new music by one or two younger bands he’s talking to. But the weekend of Pravdafest, he intends to spend his evenings listening to the label’s artists—and because the Service are making an appearance, he’ll be playing onstage as one of them.

“I’m proud of the catalog and I’m proud of what we’re doing now,” he says. “We’ve had a really good ride.”

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Pravda Records goes the distance Read More »

Pravda Records goes the distanceMark Guarinoon June 22, 2022 at 2:57 pm

Beginning with Napster and continuing through Spotify, the nemeses of independent record labels have been legion over the past few decades. The deaths of brick-and-mortar retail chains, including Tower and Borders, have made releasing new music even more of an uphill climb.

Yet Pravda Records has weathered it all and continues to thrive. The Chicago label—which toasts its 38th year with a two-day festival, June 24 and 25, at Sketchbook Brewing in Skokie—has survived shifting public tastes, the rise of online piracy, several changes in dominant format, and the collapse of music sales in physical media. 

Pravdafest night one
Featuring Josh Caterer, Steve Dawson, Hushdrops, and Boom Hank. Fri 6/24, 7 PM, Sketchbook Brewing Company, 4901 Main, Skokie, $30-$75, 21+

Even in the years since COVID-19 hit the U.S. in early 2020, the label has prospered, releasing a string of albums from legacy Chicago artists, among them Smoking Popes front man Josh Caterer, rock band the Handcuffs, retro-pop quintet the Flat Five, power-pop band the Hushdrops, singer-songwriter Steve Dawson, and power trio Sunshine Boys. Those records have all been modest hits—Goodman says each sold more than 1,000 copies. The label’s total sales increased about 50 percent.

Pravdafest night two
Featuring the Slugs, the Service, the Diplomats of Solid Sound, and the Handcuffs. Sat 6/25, 7 PM, Sketchbook Brewing Company, 4901 Main, Skokie, $30-$75, 21+

This flurry of activity puts Pravda at the opposite end of the spectrum from most pandemic-stricken businesses, which have either shuttered or dialed back their output to a glacial pace.

Josh Caterer’s version of “Need You Around” from the 2021 Pravda release The Hideout Sessions

Kenn Goodman, 59, Pravda’s president and cofounder, saw opportunity in people staying home. “The desire for music grew a lot,” he says. “Not everyone wanted to watch TV 16 hours a day.” Nevertheless, he says, the sales boom Pravda enjoyed came as “a complete surprise.”

Fans who’ve followed Pravda over the years could probably see it coming, though. Goodman and cofounder Rick Mosher started the label in their Northern Illinois University dorm room in 1984, the height of the college-radio era. In their early years, they found touchstones in Twin/Tone and SST Records, and for a while Pravda bands such as Green, the Farmers, and the Slugs could count themselves part of the flourishing DIY punk and indie-rock movement. But starting in the 1990s, Pravda became home to a wider range of music: R&B veteran Andre Williams, Seattle art-pop band the Young Fresh Fellows, Feelies front man Glenn Mercer. Remaining genre agnostic helped Pravda outlast trends—though it’s topped by Alligator and Delmark, it’s one of the longest-running independent record labels in Chicago. 

“There were maybe cooler labels in town, but it was always about the quality of the work. That seems to have just outlasted everything,” says Dag Juhlin, currently of Sunshine Boys and formerly of the Slugs (among other bands on Pravda’s roster). Goodman, whose father was a Chicago schoolteacher and whose mother is a homemaker and Holocaust survivor, has a “great Chicago work ethic” that has helped him “keep his head in the game and not chase trends,” Juhlin says. “In his own quiet way, he’s super savvy and has a good ear for artists. It’s his blood that’s in this business.”

Pravda has endured with its underdog approach by keeping overhead low, never banking on a single artist or sound, and diversifying its income streams: retail sales, publishing, downloads, licensing, streaming, merch. Its staff at its biggest totaled about 30 people, during the period when Goodman operated a storefront that sold Pravda products along with new releases from other labels. The store opened inside Metro in 1986, an era “ripe for people who wanted to be creative,” says Metro owner Joe Shanahan. 

A Pravda Records sticker spotted in the wild at the Montrose Saloon Credit: Philip Montoro for Chicago Reader

“Pravda was the hub for all of that,” says Shanahan. “I learned so much from [Goodman and Mosher] in understanding what was out there. The music they put out was way under the radar. MTV didn’t even matter. They were putting out indie records for an indie crowd. It was a glorious time. And they were literally sitting in the middle of it all.”

Eventually Pravda moved to a storefront on Southport, steps from the Music Box. Then in 1992 Goodman sold the retail business, bought out Mosher, and consolidated his staff. Today, Pravda has three full-time employees who work out of an office on the northwest side. The label outsources publicity, social media, and radio promotion to third-party vendors to control costs. 

Each year Pravda handles an average of eight releases. Just as in the early days the record store helped fund the label, today Pravda is underwritten by the hard work Goodman does to license its music to television and film productions all over the world. This has generated revenue steadily thanks to a diverse assortment of placements: Netflix’s Grace and Frankie, KFC commercials, Beverly Hills, 90210, and more. 

Goodman got interested in licensing in the early 1990s, and he says it’s helped Pravda brave the turbulence in the industry as it shifted formats, from vinyl to CDs to downloads to streaming. “There’s always going to be events in the music business that threaten your existence,” he says. “How we always dealt with it was to embrace it.” 

What’s also helped Pravda stay the course has been consistent access to established artists whose former labels had either closed or been swallowed up in mergers and acquisitions. In 2016 the Flat Five’s debut was a hit for Bloodshot Records. Then the label ceased releasing new music, and signs pointed toward an eventual sale. The band’s second record ended up on Pravda in 2020. 

Steve Dawson, who performs at Pravdafest on Friday, released this song as part of a 2021 Pravda album.

What Goodman offers is a 50-50 profit split, committed long-term marketing support, and global distribution of physical media. What he gets in return are artists with dedicated fan bases and no problem filling clubs, as opposed to those trying to build audiences from scratch. 

“Launching a new band is such an enormous task now. Just because a young band has a good demo—we have to look at the big picture,” Goodman says. “Sometimes that’s not a good business plan for us. We’ve done it.” 

Another advantage of working with veteran artists is that they tend not to take for granted the work labels do. “A lot of people say, ‘We don’t need record labels anymore,’ but I think they do,” Goodman explains. “A lot of bands don’t want to sit around and run a business. They want to make music. To do that you need a label and partnership with people you have a good relationship with.”

Shanahan says what makes Goodman “unique in the record business” is the “trust he built with bands and touring musicians,” in part because he’s a musician himself. As a keyboardist, Goodman has been a member of several Pravda acts, including R&B collective the Imperial Sound, long-running rock trio the New Duncan Imperials, and the Service, one of the label’s earliest garage bands. Mosher has been his bandmate in all three.

During the first summer of COVID-19, the New Duncan Imperials released this cover of the Supremes.

“The fact that he’s run a business for nearly 40 years while never having worked another job in the music industry—while also working as a musician? You have to be a pretty balanced person to make it a sustainable situation for yourself and for other people,” says Melissa Thornley, Goodman’s romantic partner and Pravda’s marketing director.

Susan Voelz, a singer-songwriter and violinist who performs with Poi Dog Pondering, released her first solo album, 13 Ribs, through Pravda in 1993. She says the label’s support “was pivotal” to moving forward with her own music. “It validated me. It made me believe in myself to keep evolving, keep writing,” she says. “They let me do exactly what I wanted to do. I would give them a finished record. And I could go anywhere I wanted with it musically.” She’s returning to the label now, with two new albums on the horizon.

Goodman started piano lessons at age five; by age 12, he was a working musician in a teenage band he booked at social events around Skokie. Not long afterward he got a fake press credential that let doormen all over the city know that he was a reporter for Rolling Stone magazine (“I had just gotten my braces off,” he says). Soon Goodman was slipping into punk shows all over the city; at the same time, he was playing professionally on the region’s lounge, resort, and supper-club circuit as part of Keith Miller Featuring TCB, a popular Elvis Presley revue. He was 16. 

Goodman’s chutzpah aligned with the creative ethos fueling independent music culture in the mid-1980s. He began Pravda (Russian for “truth”) as an entirely DIY project while still in college. The record that earned the label its first national exposure was the 1991 compilation 20 Explosive Dynamic Super Smash Hit Explosions!, a snarky homage to K-Tel collections that showcased covers of mossy 70s hits from up-and-coming Chicago bands: Material Issue, the Slugs, and Smashing Pumpkins, among others. Two more volumes followed.

Goodman realized he could play a wider role outside Chicago, helping revive the careers of musicians who’d fallen away from the spotlight. The first artist he worked with was also the greatest: Andre Williams, an R&B performer who had a string of chart smashes in the 1950s and wrote hits for the likes of Stevie Wonder and Ike & Tina Turner. 

By the time Goodmen met him in 1998, Williams was fighting drug addiction and living without a stable home. Goodman and Thornley helped him get clean, resuscitated his career, and put together a band that he used to tour the world. Maybe most important, they acted as his friends, doing simple but important tasks like driving him to doctor’s appointments. 

Pravda artists the Diplomats of Solid Sound released this live-in-the-studio video in April of this year.

Williams died in 2019. Goodman has helped several other artists in similar ways, including Syl Johnson, Renaldo Domino, Tiny Tim, Archie Bell, and Hasil Adkins. He assembled each one a band and gave them a touring life, licensing income, and the chance to record new music for new audiences.

For Goodman, the effort was worth it for the stories. He met Tiny Tim at a gas station in Ames, Iowa, when Goodman was on tour with the New Duncan Imperials and Tim was playing comedy clubs with Jerry Mathers of Leave It to Beaver fame. Goodman stayed in touch and eventually brought Tim to Chicago in 1993 to record a live album at what’s now Martyrs’. The New Duncan Imperials backed him on tour, which removed Tim from the comedy circuit and put him in music venues, where Goodman felt he belonged. 

One memory that sticks in Goodman’s head is the time he invited Tim to his parents’ place for dinner. “He was hitting on my mom while my dad took photos,” he says. “They remembered him from Johnny Carson and couldn’t believe he was in their home.”

“I’ve always been drawn to outsider musicians,” says Pravda cofounder Kenn Goodman. Credit: Nyia Sissac for Chicago Reader

“Tiny Tim was so interesting to me. We’d have long discussions in the car about the history of show business,” says Goodman. “He was also into religion and philosophy. He was a serious musician and serious music expert. He knew so many songs from the 1910s and 1920s and was educated in the history of vaudeville. He was much more than ‘Tiptoe Through the Tulips.’” Tours, however, could be a struggle. “He would give us a list of songs to learn, and then we’d get to the gig and he’d say, ‘We’re not going to do that, tonight we’re doing all the hits of 1910,’” Goodman recalls. “Which was fine. But we didn’t know any of them.”

“I’ve always been drawn to outsider musicians,” he says. “A lot of people I worked with had long, amazing showbiz histories and life stories. To me, they were fascinating, and deep down, were very beautiful people to work with and just be around.”

In Pravda’s next phase, Goodman expects to release a solo album from Nora O’Connor, formerly of the Blacks and currently in the Flat Five. He also may break from his current business model to release new music by one or two younger bands he’s talking to. But the weekend of Pravdafest, he intends to spend his evenings listening to the label’s artists—and because the Service are making an appearance, he’ll be playing onstage as one of them.

“I’m proud of the catalog and I’m proud of what we’re doing now,” he says. “We’ve had a really good ride.”

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Pravda Records goes the distanceMark Guarinoon June 22, 2022 at 2:57 pm Read More »

NBA free agency: Latest deals, news and buzzon June 22, 2022 at 4:35 pm

NBA free agency doesn’t begin until June 30 at 6 p.m. ET, but the news is already rolling in from around the Association.

Much of the early buzz is coming out of New York, where Kyrie Irving‘s contract status has pundits and fans speculating about the future of the Brooklyn Nets‘ star point guard. (Irving has a $36.5 million player option for the 2022-23 season.)

Elsewhere in the NBA, other superstars with player options for next season include James Harden ($47.4 million), Bradley Beal ($36.4 million) and Russell Westbrook ($47.1 million).

And which free agents will change teams this summer? Some of the biggest names include Zach LaVine, Jalen Brunson and Deandre Ayton, all of whom could provide a major boost to a new franchise if they choose a change of scenery.

A host of young stars are also eligible for rookie contract extensions. While the Memphis Grizzlies and Ja Morant are all but certain to agree on a max deal, what does the future hold for the New Orleans Pelicans and Zion Williamson, who has played in just 85 games throughout his first three seasons because of injury and missed all of 2021-22 with a broken foot?

Keep it here all offseason long for the latest buzz, news and reports surrounding NBA free agency.

MORE: 10 big questions |Offseason guides |Key dates

June 21 updates

5:01 p.m. ET: The Houston RocketsJohn Wall has exercised his $47.4 million player option for the 2022-23 season, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. The Rockets will continue to seek a trade for the 31-year-old guard, but the two sides are expected to work on a contract buyout if a swap can’t be found, sources told Wojnarowski. Wall averaged 20.6 points and 6.9 assists in 40 games for the Rockets in 2020-21 before being shut down.

12:55 p.m. ET: LA Clippers forward Nicolas Batum will decline his $3.3 million player option and become a free agent, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. There is expected to be mutual interest in reaching a new deal in July, sources said. Batum started 54 of the 59 games he played, averaging 8.3 points and 4.3 rebounds in his second season with the Clippers.

June 19 update

11:43 a.m. ET: Denver Nuggets forward Jeff Green has exercised his $4.5 million player option for the 2022-23 season, sources told ESPN’s Tim Bontemps. Green had until Monday to decide whether to opt into the deal, according to ESPN’s Bobby Marks. Green, who will turn 36 in August, averaged 10.3 points in 75 games (63 starts) for Denver last season, his 11th team during his 14-year NBA career.

June 18 update

8:30 p.m. ET: Golden State Warriors swingman Andrew Wiggins, who is heading into the final season of the $147 million rookie extension he signed with the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2017, told reporters on Saturday that he “would love to stay” in Golden State.

Third-year guard Jordan Poole, who is entering the last year of his rookie contract, has until Oct. 17 to negotiate a new deal with the reigning NBA champs.

Gary Payton II, Andre Iguodala, Kevon Looney, Otto Porter Jr., Nemanja Bjelica, Damion Lee and Chris Chiozza will all be unrestricted free agents, as well. Juan Toscano-Anderson and Quinndary Weatherspoon will be restricted free agents.

June 15 update

9:39 p.m. ET: The Dallas Mavericks acquired center Christian Wood from the Rockets in exchange for the No. 26 pick in the 2022 NBA draft and Boban Marjanovic, Marquese Chriss, Trey Burke and Sterling Brown — four players with expiring contracts. Wood is set to make $14.3 million for the 2022-23 season, the final year of his contract. Wood averaged 19.1 points and 9.9 rebounds during his two seasons in Houston.

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NBA free agency: Latest deals, news and buzzon June 22, 2022 at 4:35 pm Read More »

Shrinkflation & more: why consumers are paying more for less

Shrinkflation & more: why consumers are paying more for less

Have you ever noticed that the picture on the outside of the box often looks nothing like the product on the inside?

This is called deceptive packaging. Although there are laws against this they are pretty fuzzy as to what pertains to deception.

Deceptive packaging along with shrinkflation seems only to be getting worse.

Case in point

Although I personally have nothing against Trader Joe’s – – I was very disappointed with the Mushroom and Black Truffle flatbread with mozzarella cheese (pictured at top of post) that I bought yesterday.

Six dollars seemed like a real bargain according to the mouthwatering picture on the box. My disappointment was immediate upon opening it.

Instead of being rectangular like the box the base was oval–measuring 9 1/2” inches long and 6 inches at the center–tapering to 4 inches at each end–making it smaller than I expected.

Talk about cutting corners.

The frozen flatbread dough came punctuated with white dots of cheese but no visible mushrooms or truffles. And it was really flat – – maybe an eighth of an inch.

Fortunately I had some mozzarella and basil on hamd to kick things up a notch. But even with these additions the finished product looked nothing like the picture on the box.

Shrinkflation

Shrinkflation is a term made up of two separate words: shrink and inflation. The “shrink” in shrinkflation relates to the change in product size, while the “-flation” part refers to inflation.

It’s happening everywhere.

At restaurants the shrimp cocktail that used to have 5 shrimp now has 3 or 4. But it’s still the same price. The house wine may have been a 6 ounce pour but now it’s 4 ounces.

Things are even worse in the food aisles.

Gatorade has gone from 32 ounces to 28 ounces with the price remaining the same.

Kleenex napkins are down to 60 from 65.

Even though families have not gotten smaller in the past year, the family size cereal boxes have. Cocoa Puffs’ family size box dropped from 19.3 ounces to 18.1 ounces, while Cinnamon Toast Crunch fell from 19.3 ounces to 18.8 ounces.

Wheat Thins thinned down its family size from 16 oz to 14 oz, with about 28 fewer crackers per box.

Even yogurt is decreasing the amount of product in a container. In a rather large decrease, percentage-wise, Choba Flip yogurt has slimmed down to 4.5 from 5.3 ounces.

And it’s not just food products that are shrinking.

Does it seem like your family is going through more paper towels and toilet paper?

Cottonelle’s Ulta Clean Care toilet paper is down to 312 sheets from 340.

Bounty Triples reduced sheet count from 165 sheets to 147.

Even Walmart shoppers have less to rip off. Walmart Great Value Paper Towels are not quite the great value they used to be–now that the sheet count dropped from 168 sheets per roll to 120.

Half full or half empty

I’ve always wondered why a box of cereal or a bag of chips seems to be half empty when you open it. To me this is not only deceptive but wasteful.

Strangely enough, the government allows this saying that the extra space in the boxes and bags keeps the chips and cereal from being damaged, Nothing said about the extra waste

What’s in a name

If the label says watermelon does it have to contain watermelon?

Not always.

Misleading, yes. Surprising, not so much.

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Exploring Bulls Draft Rumors Ahead of the 2022 NBA DraftDrew Krieson June 22, 2022 at 1:38 pm

Last Thursday night, the Golden State Warriors won their 4th NBA championship in the past 8 seasons. During an interview, Steve Kerr made it a point to give credit to Bob Myers, the teams General Manager and President of Basketball Operations. It was certainly well deserved. He helped assemble the Bay Area dynasty after all. Kerr’s comments and the topic of, “giving credit where credit is due”, reminded us of one NBA dynasty we’re all too familiar with. The Bulls of the 90’s. And more specifically, one member of the organization during the decade. Mr. Jerry Krause. A man who never shied away from giving himself and the front office some props when the team won a championship. His self-pats on the back were replayed often in The Last Dance docuseries. To his credit though, Krause did a pretty solid job at assembling a team around Jordan for years.

Like Myers, one way Krause assembled his dynasty squad was through the NBA draft. Some of the more impactful draft moves Krause made throughout his career were selecting Horace Grant in 1987, and trading for Scottie Pippen in the same draft year. Big moves like the ones Krause made can change the dynamic of a franchise for years after the fact. And with the 2022 NBA draft quickly approaching, we’re hoping to see some big moves out of the Bulls this year. After making the playoffs last season, the Bulls received the 18th pick in this year’s draft. Will they look to move up or down from that spot? Use it to trade for a new piece? Or simply stay put? We’ll get to all of that as we explore some Chicago Bulls draft rumors for the 2022 NBA draft!

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Staying Put

Like many teams who will be on the clock Thursday night, the first option for the front office is staying put at 18. Based on all the Bulls draft rumors circulating the internet, we’d have to guess that this doesn’t pan out. According to recent mock draft projections, the Bulls could have options like Ohio State’s Malaki Branham with the 18th pick. 

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Going with Branham wouldn’t be a bad move by any means. He’s considered to be one of the more talented prospects in this draft class. With his frame, scoring abilities, and aggressiveness, he’d definitely add to the Bulls roster. But, we’d have to guess one of the options below is what ends up happening.

Upgrading or Downgrading Spots

Another possible, yet unlikely, scenario to address in the mix of all the Chicago Bulls draft rumors is the team moving up or down from the 18th spot in the draft. 

Many would argue that with how the Bulls are currently built, they’re in their title-window. We see some truth to that, which is why we can’t picture the Bulls downgrading their first round pick to a lower spot. Doing so would certainly give the Bulls some draft capital in future years. However, we have a hard time envisioning them trying to build towards that future with what they have now. Especially if LaVine stays – and it sounds like he will!

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Upgrading to a better first rounder is another possibility for the Bulls in the 2022 NBA Draft. This one is more likely to happen than moving down, but it’s another option we see as having little chance of happening. The reason for this is that we don’t believe the front office is willing to give up future capital to move up in this year’s draft. It’s pretty clear that the Bulls are a piece or two away from making themselves a serious contender, and opting for a better rookie in the draft might not be the addition they’re looking for.

Trading The Pick Away

The final Bulls draft rumor we have to address is the team trading the 18th pick away for an established player. Out of all the draft rumors for this team, we can seriously see (and hope for) this one happening.

One interesting rumor circulating around the NBA media says that the Bulls are interested in trading for Utah Jazz center, Rudy Gobert. Bleacher Nation has reported that the trade is pretty much expected by the rest of the league at this point. The only question mark comes with the specifics of the deal.

As far as trade packages go, it’s likely that the Bulls trade away this year’s 18th pick in a package for Gobert. Some reports indicate that Bulls’ guard Coby White is a name being thrown around as a tradeable piece. Between Alex Caruso, a healthy Lonzo Ball, a rising Ayo Dosunmu, and the potential return of LaVine, it makes all the sense in the world that White’s named is being included in trade talks. With Gobert potentially at the five spot, it’s likely that Nikola Vučević is moved given the lack of minutes that could come his way and the larger contract he has. Could Vučević go to the Jazz? Possibly. We just have to wait and see!

This year started a new era of Bulls basketball. It’s only the beginning. pic.twitter.com/CEa2Ppc59P

— Chicago Bulls (@chicagobulls) May 18, 2022

Watching the 2022 NBA Draft

This year’s NBA draft is on the calendar for Thursday, June 23 at 7 P.M. CST. The event will take place at the Barclays Center in New York City, which is where the Brooklyn Nets call home. Fans looking to watch the draft live can tune into ESPN or ABC to see all the action from the first round on draft night. And if you’re a superfan and want to watch the second round, you’ll need an ESPN+ or cable subscription, as round two will only be available on the ESPN network.

Only time will tell to see which Bulls draft rumor comes true, and if there’s anything we know for sure, it’s that Artūras Karnišovas is going to work his magic in the next few days. Stay tuned #BullsNation!

Featured image Credit: Chicago Bulls’ Instagram

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Exploring Bulls Draft Rumors Ahead of the 2022 NBA DraftDrew Krieson June 22, 2022 at 1:38 pm Read More »