Service Stations chicago home    
city guide events calendar    
bars & clubs    
restaurants    
specials    
best of chicago    

Editorial art    
film and video    
food and drink    
music and clubs    
stage    
style    
words    
sports    
features    









words

Click for words events

Tip of the Week
Chicago Humanities Festival 2008

Tom Lynch

The nineteenth annual Chicago Humanities Festival kicks into full gear this week with a long list of panel discussions, lectures, readings, performances and screenings, all of which fall under this year’s theme, “Thinking Big,” and all of which are more or less equally worthy of your time. Some highlights over the next few days: On Saturday New Yorker music critic Alex Ross discusses his award-winning “The Rest is Noise” (2:30pm, Thorne Auditorium) and a distinguished panel moderated by Northwestern’s Bill Savage discusses “The Great American Novel, Revisited” (1:30pm, MCA)…On Sunday author David McCullough (“John Adams”) receives the Chicago Tribune Literary Prize (10am, Symphony Center) and authors Mark Doty and Achy Obejas talk “Queer Lyrics” (3:30pm, Harold Washington Library Center)…On Monday veteran American composer David Amram discusses his life in the film industry (6:30pm, Columbia College)…and on Wednesday there’s a “Great Books Discussion: On the Road” event (5:30pm, Columbia College). And that’s just this week.

The Chicago Humanities Festival runs all the way through November 16 at various venues across the Chicago area; tickets for events are $5 unless otherwise indicated, visit chfestival.org for a complete schedule and event details.

(2008-10-28)




Also by Tom Lynch

Tip of the Week
The quickest way to publicly reject rock ‘n’ roll institution and unspoken rules of music in North America is to toss the f-bomb into your band name. The New York Times even wanted to write about the Toronto hardcore outfit, but couldn’t print its name due to the newspaper’s editorial guidelines
(2008-10-22)

The Horror! The Horror!
We all have nightmares. For some, it’s a dusty leather glove with knives attached to the fingers, a torn green-and-red striped sweater. Others, a hockey mask and the woods, or an eerie white mask shaped in the likeness of William Shatner. The overwhelming buzz of a chainsaw in the dark. For me, it’s a little girl spouting obscenities and oozing split-pea soup
(2008-10-22)

Brothers in Arms
The band’s newest record, a self-titled jaunt that builds on what was started with 2001’s “Newness Ends” and continued with 2004’s “The End is Near,” features much more piano than on its predecessors, but the sonic blend of that emotive instrument and Matt Kadane's whispery voice adds an even deeper element to an already successful band
(2008-10-14)

Tip of the Week
In 2002, when Germany’s The Notwist released “Neon Golden,” it was not only an unexpected reinvention of the previously darker and mediocre-at-best band, but also a fresh melding of influences and musical genres, a bittersweet, inspiring brew of indie-pop and electronics that pre-dated The Postal Service by a year. Six years later the band finally offers a follow-up record, titled “The Devil, You + Me,” which, to no surprise, travels farther in the pop direction
(2008-10-14)

Tip of the Week
(2008-10-14)

Crossing Lines
(2008-10-07)

Tip of the Week
(2008-10-07)

Folktronic Currents
(2008-09-30)

Tip of the Week
(2008-09-30)

A Loveless Day
(2008-09-23)

Tip of the Week
(2008-09-23)

Tip of the Week
(2008-09-23)






Copyright Newcity Communications, Inc.

about Newcitychicago | about Newcity magazine | advertising | privacy policy | FAQ | employment

~