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Politically charged postpunks Petrol Girls combine fun and purpose on Baby

Politics are an inherent part of punk and hardcore culture, but not even the most ardent fans like feeling preached to, especially by artists who seem more focused on their messaging than on their music. On their new full-length, Baby, British-Austrian postpunk band Petrol Girls step away from all that (and even poke fun at their own bouts of sanctimony) to churn out a set of songs that turn up the party vibes without toning down the politics. Their tunes can sound joyful even when they take direct aim at deathly serious topics such as the carceral state and the exploitation of crime victims and survivors; they also highlight how absurd it is that, in the so-called civilized world, anyone has to fight for basic human rights and dignity in the first place. Lead single “Baby, I Had an Abortion” is an absolute banger with a gritty guitar hook that could stick in your head for days, with lyrics by front woman Ren Aldridge about her experience encountering anti-abortion protesters after she underwent the procedure in 2018. The indignant “Fight for Our Lives” features guest vocals from feminist organizer Janey Starling, whose Dignity for Dead Women Campaign with Level Up (referenced in the lyrics) made inroads for better reporting practices on gender-based violence in the UK. That song provides one of the album’s most powerful moments of catharsis: Aldridge screams “You don’t own us” at anyone who would try to control women and force them into a life of fear. The stripped-down, live-sounding production, which doesn’t airbrush out imperfections, underscores the urgency of the material—even in the Petrol Girls’ missteps, their passion comes through loud and clear.

Petrol Girls’s Baby is out 6/24 via Bandcamp.

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Erica Dawn Lyle and Vice Cooler recruit feminist rocker friends for a collaborative benefit compilation

Land Trust: Benefit for NEFOC embodies the spirit of mutual aid that guides many punk communities. When Bikini Kill’s 2020 reunion tour was canceled, touring guitarist Erica Dawn Lyle and drum tech Vice Cooler wanted to make themselves useful. But during lockdown, they were isolated in their respective homes on opposite sides of the country—Lyle, a longtime artist, critic, and organizer in the DIY community, was in New York, and Cooler, a photographer, producer, and drummer who’s performed with the likes of Peaches and the Raincoats, was in California. They began trading riffs and beats via file sharing, and eventually invited friends to write lyrics and develop the material into finished songs. The result is a 16-track sampler that sounds like a survey of feminist punk from the past 30 years. The artists are using it to raise money for the Northeast Farmers of Color (NEFOC), a BIPOC-led grassroots organization fighting for land sovereignty.

Most of the heavy hitters contribute flourishes of their signatures style to their songs with Lyle and Cooler: the Linda Lindas add bratitude to the crunchy guitars on “Lost in Thought” (which also features Bikini Kill bassist Kathi Wilcox), Kim Gordon shows up with bored indignation and anxious reverb on “Debt Collector,” and Alice Bag brings her bouncy brand of edutainment to “Soul Fire Farm.” But there are plenty of surprises too. The Raincoats take a deliciously dark turn on the standout instrumental track “AGAVE”: driven by blooming synths and nervous strings, the momentum builds, then crashes like a crushingly elegant wave before the drums march solemnly toward a skittering violin frenzy. On “Immortals,” Brontez Purnell of defunct electroclash group Gravy Train!!!! sings a punky doo-wop number about overlooked people achieving immortality. And bassist Emily Retsas, known for her work with Phoebe Bridgers, joins vocalist Ali Carter of Philly postpunk trio Control Top on “Cracks in the Ceiling,” a whipping, distortion-heavy track that anticipates collapse from above. Not only does Land Trust reveal the stylistic and aesthetic diversity of the scenes that helped forge Lyle and Cooler’s musical sensibilities; it also imagines simple but elegant possibilities for what a collaborative album can be and do. After all, we’re all stronger together.

Erica Dawn Lyle & Vice Cooler’s Land Trust: Benefit For NEFOC is available via Bandcamp.

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Ne-Hi alum Mikey Wells drops a mellow, summery new album with Flamingo RodeoJ.R. Nelson and Leor Galilon June 21, 2022 at 5:36 pm

Chicago postpunks Ne-Hi split in May 2019, and since then guitarist-singer Mikey Wells has expanded his palette of delightful pop hooks in two standout projects: Spun Out, which is indie dance oriented, and Flamingo Rodeo, which plays choogle rock a la 1970s AM radio. On Flamingo Rodeo’s new album, Pontoon (due this month on Shuga Records), Wells is joined by a cast that includes guitarists Jake Gold and Timothy Gurnig, bassist Matt Ciar-leglio, and drummer (and fellow Ne-Hi alum) Alex Otake. On the strummy, summery single “Tooth and Nail,” Colin Croom of Twin Peaks adds buttery riffs on Wurlitzer organ. On Thursday, June 30, Flamingo Rodeo celebrates Pontoon at the Empty Bottle with a listening party.

The lead single from the forthcoming Flamingo Rodeo album

This weekend, Edgewater arts nonprofit 6018North combines two long-running series, Water Music on the Beach and Boulevard Dreamers. Boulevard Dreamers is a traveling community-based variety show that includes studio portraits of the performers and a stage that’s also an art installation; it’s happening on Saturday, June 25, on Lane Beach as this year’s Water Music concert. The program begins at 3 PM with an exhibit of performer portraits at 6018 N. Kenmore. At 3:45 the crowd will walk to the shore, where musicians and artists will assemble on a stage that frames Lake Michigan’s splendor. The three-hour lineup is by nature flexible—Boulevard Dreamers plays with the distinction between professional and amateur—but it will include Loud Bodies Dance, Michael Zerang with Janet Bean and Tyler Damon, the band Lifeguard, Honestly Same members Sam Scranton and Zach Moore, and dozens more.

Queer Black Chicago musicians Sarai Bernice and Khalyle Hagood started releasing arty synth-pop under the name Gilt Drip a couple years back. Last Friday, they released Earthly Concepts, their stunning debut EP—this wolf is especially fond of the replenishing “Water Walking.”

Sarai Bernice of Gilt Drip created the album art for Earthly Concepts.

Got a tip? Tweet @Gossip_Wolf or e-mail [email protected].

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Ne-Hi alum Mikey Wells drops a mellow, summery new album with Flamingo RodeoJ.R. Nelson and Leor Galilon June 21, 2022 at 5:36 pm Read More »

Politically charged postpunks Petrol Girls combine fun and purpose on BabyJamie Ludwigon June 21, 2022 at 5:00 pm

Politics are an inherent part of punk and hardcore culture, but not even the most ardent fans like feeling preached to, especially by artists who seem more focused on their messaging than on their music. On their new full-length, Baby, British-Austrian postpunk band Petrol Girls step away from all that (and even poke fun at their own bouts of sanctimony) to churn out a set of songs that turn up the party vibes without toning down the politics. Their tunes can sound joyful even when they take direct aim at deathly serious topics such as the carceral state and the exploitation of crime victims and survivors; they also highlight how absurd it is that, in the so-called civilized world, anyone has to fight for basic human rights and dignity in the first place. Lead single “Baby, I Had an Abortion” is an absolute banger with a gritty guitar hook that could stick in your head for days, with lyrics by front woman Ren Aldridge about her experience encountering anti-abortion protesters after she underwent the procedure in 2018. The indignant “Fight for Our Lives” features guest vocals from feminist organizer Janey Starling, whose Dignity for Dead Women Campaign with Level Up (referenced in the lyrics) made inroads for better reporting practices on gender-based violence in the UK. That song provides one of the album’s most powerful moments of catharsis: Aldridge screams “You don’t own us” at anyone who would try to control women and force them into a life of fear. The stripped-down, live-sounding production, which doesn’t airbrush out imperfections, underscores the urgency of the material—even in the Petrol Girls’ missteps, their passion comes through loud and clear.

Petrol Girls’s Baby is out 6/24 via Bandcamp.

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Politically charged postpunks Petrol Girls combine fun and purpose on BabyJamie Ludwigon June 21, 2022 at 5:00 pm Read More »

Erica Dawn Lyle and Vice Cooler recruit feminist rocker friends for a collaborative benefit compilationMicco Caporaleon June 21, 2022 at 5:00 pm

Land Trust: Benefit for NEFOC embodies the spirit of mutual aid that guides many punk communities. When Bikini Kill’s 2020 reunion tour was canceled, touring guitarist Erica Dawn Lyle and drum tech Vice Cooler wanted to make themselves useful. But during lockdown, they were isolated in their respective homes on opposite sides of the country—Lyle, a longtime artist, critic, and organizer in the DIY community, was in New York, and Cooler, a photographer, producer, and drummer who’s performed with the likes of Peaches and the Raincoats, was in California. They began trading riffs and beats via file sharing, and eventually invited friends to write lyrics and develop the material into finished songs. The result is a 16-track sampler that sounds like a survey of feminist punk from the past 30 years. The artists are using it to raise money for the Northeast Farmers of Color (NEFOC), a BIPOC-led grassroots organization fighting for land sovereignty.

Most of the heavy hitters contribute flourishes of their signatures style to their songs with Lyle and Cooler: the Linda Lindas add bratitude to the crunchy guitars on “Lost in Thought” (which also features Bikini Kill bassist Kathi Wilcox), Kim Gordon shows up with bored indignation and anxious reverb on “Debt Collector,” and Alice Bag brings her bouncy brand of edutainment to “Soul Fire Farm.” But there are plenty of surprises too. The Raincoats take a deliciously dark turn on the standout instrumental track “AGAVE”: driven by blooming synths and nervous strings, the momentum builds, then crashes like a crushingly elegant wave before the drums march solemnly toward a skittering violin frenzy. On “Immortals,” Brontez Purnell of defunct electroclash group Gravy Train!!!! sings a punky doo-wop number about overlooked people achieving immortality. And bassist Emily Retsas, known for her work with Phoebe Bridgers, joins vocalist Ali Carter of Philly postpunk trio Control Top on “Cracks in the Ceiling,” a whipping, distortion-heavy track that anticipates collapse from above. Not only does Land Trust reveal the stylistic and aesthetic diversity of the scenes that helped forge Lyle and Cooler’s musical sensibilities; it also imagines simple but elegant possibilities for what a collaborative album can be and do. After all, we’re all stronger together.

Erica Dawn Lyle & Vice Cooler’s Land Trust: Benefit For NEFOC is available via Bandcamp.

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Erica Dawn Lyle and Vice Cooler recruit feminist rocker friends for a collaborative benefit compilationMicco Caporaleon June 21, 2022 at 5:00 pm Read More »

Stevens to Tatum after Finals: Get some reston June 21, 2022 at 4:46 pm

After Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum had a rough NBA Finals, Brad Stevens had a simple message for his team’s franchise player.

“I just told him to go on vacation,” Stevens, Boston’s president of basketball operations, said with a smile during a video conference call with reporters after Boston’s season ended with a loss to the Golden State Warriors in six games in the league’s championship round. “Go get some rest.

“This guy gave us everything he had. When you look at the minutes, when you look at the games played … I’ve said this many times: he’s a superstar that doesn’t want to sit. He wants to play, he wants to play all the time. I thought that in the Finals, obviously, I think he would be the first to say that he would like to have some of those moments back but I thought there were other contributing factors to how he played.”

The 24-year-old superstar, coming off being named to the All-NBA first team, had an up-and-down playoffs. He finished the postseason with the most turnovers any player has had in a single playoffs in NBA history, and in the Finals he shot 50 percent from the field once, and under 40 percent four times in Boston’s loss to Golden State — including shooting just 31.6 percent on 2-point shots.

As a result, not surprisingly, both 2-point shooting and playmaking were issues not just for Tatum, but the team as a whole in seeing Boston fall just short of its goals. However, Stevens said it should be remembered just how good both Tatum and Jaylen Brown have already been to this point in their careers in terms of postseason success, and that the team wouldn’t have gotten to where it did without them.

Stevens pointed specifically to Tatum’s 46-point game on the road in Milwaukee in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals as proof of that.

“The way I try to look at it is obviously we’re all subjective in every moment and get react emotionally but when you start looking at it objectively and more so historically, what Jayson and Jaylen have done in the playoffs, historically at their ages, is rarified air,” Stevens said. “I think we’re very cognizant of the fact that even though Jayson would admittedly not have played his best series, there’s no chance we’re there without him and without all of his great play all the way through.

“I think back to all of the times … Game 6 in Milwaukee was one of the best games I’ve seen an individual play in my time, certainly in person and with the Celtics. Without that performance, we would have had this discussion a month and a half ago.”

By “this discussion,” Stevens was referring to how Boston fell short in these playoffs, and what the Celtics need to do in terms of improvement. The two areas he singled out? More consistent bench scoring, and playmaking across the roster.

That said, Stevens was equally quick to point out that the Celtics were able to get as far as they did this season thanks to a unique combination of size and versatility across the board — and that, as Boston looks to improve this summer, the Celtics have to stay cognizant of those strengths, and not take away from them to improve other things about the team.

“I think we have to walk a fine line a little bit,” Stevens said. “I think teams are fragile. I think the way teams work together and operate together are fragile. And I think your identity as a team, when you find one that’s successful, which we did this year on the defensive end of the floor and when we were at our best sharing the ball offensively, those things are fragile. So just to add doesn’t mean that you’re not taking something away from the group.”

He went on to say that no Celtics — including Robert Williams, who dealt with left knee soreness throughout the playoffs — will require surgery, saying that rest will be enough for him and everyone else on the roster to bounce back from a grueling playoff run that saw Boston play 24 of a possible 28 games.

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Stevens to Tatum after Finals: Get some reston June 21, 2022 at 4:46 pm Read More »

Get a Ticket Now for This Verbal Bandwagon

Get a Ticket Now for This Verbal Bandwagon

Are you too a fan of the newest word game?

It’s really great fun! It’s Wordle, by name.

A word of 5 letters each day you must get.

Like ‘pecan’ or ‘pekoe’. Like ‘eagle’, ‘egret’.

It’s done round the globe at sunrise and sun sinking.

It’s trial and error, Sherlockian thinking.

Addictive it is. Like matutinal brews.

A brief antidote to the daily bad news.

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Ex-Purdue star, NBA 1st-rounder Swanigan dieson June 21, 2022 at 3:32 pm

Former NBA player and Purdue Boilermakers standout Caleb Swanigan is dead at 25.

The Purdue men’s basketball program said Swanigan died Monday night, but it did not provide further details.

A first-round pick of the Portland Trail Blazers in 2017, the 6-foot-9 Swanigan played three years in the NBA with the Blazers and Sacramento Kings.

Indiana’s Mr. Basketball in 2015, Swanigan was a highly-sought-after recruit who elected to stay home and play for the Boilermakers after originally committing to Michigan State.

Swanigan had a standout sophomore campaign at Purdue and was named the Big Ten Player of the Year and was a consensus first-team All American. He was also a finalist for the Naismith Award. Following the season, he entered the NBA draft and was selected No. 26 overall.

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Ex-Purdue star, NBA 1st-rounder Swanigan dieson June 21, 2022 at 3:32 pm Read More »

What is going on with the Chicago Blackhawks head coach search?Todd Welteron June 21, 2022 at 1:00 pm

Chicago Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson sure is taking his time naming a new head coach.

Davidson said last month he was looking for a head coach that can get the Blackhawks through a rebuild and eventually raise the Stanley Cup. Davidson has been deliberate in his search for new a leader behind the bench.

Chicago Sun-Times Blackhawks beat writer Ben Pope wrote that the Hawks hoped to have a new head coach in place by mid-July. He also reported that interim head coach Derek King is not being considered for the permanent position.

Suddenly, it sounded like the Chicago Blackhawks were getting close to naming Calgary Flames assistant Ryan Husk as head coach according to Kevin Weekes of ESPN and the NHL Network.

Chicago Tribune Blackhawks beat writer Phillip Thompson reported that Husk is not being hired as head coach.

Blackhawks have denied report that Ryan Huska has been named the new head coach: “The process is still taking place.”

— Phillip Thompson (@_phil_thompson) June 20, 2022

NBC Sports Chicago Blackhawks insider Charlie Roumeliotis also reported the Hawks had not made a coaching hire.

I’m told the Ryan Huska to Chicago report is inaccurate. No decision has been made yet on a permanent head coach. #Blackhawks

— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) June 20, 2022

Weekes also followed up on his report confirming that the coaching search is still ongoing.

Per my last tweet, been in touch with people close to the @NHLBlackhawks HC process, as I’m told “situation remains fluid, working towards hiring new HC.” Will keep you great @NHL Fans posted as we hear more. @espn @StanleyCup #HockeyTwitter pic.twitter.com/I543T1782u

— Kevin Weekes (@KevinWeekes) June 20, 2022

At this rate, the Hawks may already have completed the draft, signed some free agents, and started training camp before a head coach is in place.

The Hawks’ season ended on April 29th and there is still no sign a head coach has been found.

Understandably, Davidson wants to take his time. The Chicago Blackhawks have the NHL Entry Draft and the start of free agency fast approaching. It would be nice to have a head coach in place.

Granted, Davidson has to build up the front office and reshape the scouting department in his image. The man has a lot on his plate as he completely rebuilds the Chicago Blackhawks back into playoff contenders.

It just feels like this search is going at a snails pace for a coach that is going to oversee at a minimum, a three-year rebuild. He needs to find a coach who can work well with young players and is a good teacher.

Then again, there are still seven teams looking to fill their head coaching vacancies. So it is not like Davidson is lagging behind his peers.

It would just be nice to get a sense of where Davidson is heading. We have a better idea of the Blackhawks wanting to move into the draft’s first round and the possibility of Alex DeBrincat being traded.

Up until Weekes’ report, it has been very quiet on the head coach search. There was a report the Hawks did interview at least one candidate.

Luke Richardson interview with the @NHLBlackhawks (head coach position) happened 48 hours ago. He’ll come back with @CanadiensMTL if he doesn’t get the coaching position with the Hawks.

— Renaud Lavoie (@renlavoietva) June 16, 2022

Once the Stanley Cup Finals are over, we should probably see more traction. Hopefully, through this very quiet and thorough search, Davidson can find a head coach that leads the Hawks through a rebuild and eventually lifts the Stanley Cup.

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What is going on with the Chicago Blackhawks head coach search?Todd Welteron June 21, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

3 possible trade packages for the Chicago Bulls to land John CollinsRyan Heckmanon June 21, 2022 at 12:00 pm

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Any moment now, there could be yet another huge report coming out of the NBA. The Chicago Bulls very well may be the center of that report, too, if the last couple of weeks are any indication.

Recently, we have seen plenty of reports and rumors come out in reference to the Bulls and their possible offseason moves. One of the big topics is that of Utah Jazz star big man Rudy Gobert and his impending trade out of Salt Lake City.

The Bulls aren’t just in on Gobert, though. They could be targeting a different big man via trade as well: Atlanta Hawks star forward John Collins.

According to NBA insider Marc Stein, Collins is as likely to be traded as ever. And, just as we’ve heard about Gobert, there have been rumors that the Bulls are interested in acquiring Collins.

John Collins could make the Chicago Bulls even more of a contender in the Eastern Conference.

The Hawks forward is just 24 years old and averages over 16 points and eight rebounds per game throughout his career, also adding in a block each night. He is in the midst of a 5-year contract worth $125 million, which actually seems fairly inexpensive considering how high star salaries are becoming.

The Bulls also have to pay free agent guard Zach LaVine a maximum deal to stay in Chicago, therefore making the salary work going forward could be tricky. However, a trade for Collins could still get done.

What’s interesting about a Collins deal is that the Bulls likely keep Nikola Vucevic, creating a “big four,” so to speak.

Just how would the Bulls be able to land Collins? It could get somewhat tricky, but there are three scenarios that work out financially.

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3 possible trade packages for the Chicago Bulls to land John CollinsRyan Heckmanon June 21, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »