Category Archives: Chicago

HOPE.

“Hope is that thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops…at all.” ~Emily Dickinson.

What brings you hope?

Seer Outfitters and the Kyle Korver Foundation (KKF) bring hope to inner city children one city at a time. Submit your Hipstamatic images of what hope means to you for a chance to have your image printed as a special edition Seer Outfitters t-shirt! Join Hipstamatic in Chicago on January 29th, 2012 to launch their new HOPE contest with partners Seer Outfitters and Black Label Booking. We’ll be rocking out at the Double Door with music by Barcelona, The Canes, and March of Morn! Doors are at 6:30 to the public with all proceeds benefiting three local charities, including my own, Life After Hate. Seer Outfitters is a clothing line created and co-founded by Kyle Korver of the Chicago Bulls (#26) with the purpose of wholly funding the ongoing efforts of the Kyle Korver Foundation and creating a model of sustainable philanthropy. By directing its profits through the Kyle Korver Foundation, Seer Outfitters has built and installed over 100 wheelchair ramps in Utah, rehabbed and brought much needed assistance to schools on the watch list to be shut down in Chicago, and set up an athletic and academic support program in inner-city Philadelphia.

Get your tickets now for the January 29th event and help support Life After Hate!

Creating Chicago Music Success – From Incubation to ‘Poptown’

A 1970s Jam Productions ad for “Poptown”

A 1970s Jam Productions ad for “Poptown”

Chicago has long been recognized as a city of music pioneering spirit ever since the city’s African-American musicians transformed Delta Blues into Chicago Blues in the first half of the twentieth century. The city also thrived in the fifties and sixties when labels like Chess Records and Mercury Records were deeply rooted there. Since then, however, the reputation for Chicago being a musical vanguard has mostly  dwindled. While I’m not suggesting that Chicago musical artists don’t have the chops to make it in a world of seemingly New York, Los Angeles, Nashville or Austin-centric music meccas, it certainly seems that Chicago-based artists don’t enjoy that same sense of community or support that other well-known music cities share. And it’s a shame.

Recently, I wrote a piece entitled ‘An Open Letter To The Chicago Music Community,’ in which I received overwhelming response, albeit mostly from the people I had reasonably expected to get feedback from – namely, artists and fans. Not surprisingly, I did not get much (though, I did get some!) response from the people I had hoped to generate discussion with – club owners/bookers, promoters, record labels, managers, booking agents, music press and pundits, performing rights organizations, radio, the existing Chicago Music Commission, or the City of Chicago. You see, the people who stood to gain the most, the people with the most control – the “business people,” the ones I thought needed to be part of the discussion, because I felt their commitment needed to be there to make it work – stood silent to the call-to-arms for collective change that is needed to fix a very real problem in the Chicago music community. And while I spent a few days proverbially shaking my fist at a lot of these people, it dawned on me that what needed to happen to spur the change was to reach the people that actually make the music and build the community. In this case, artists and fans, and the “business people” that seem to gravitate more towards belonging to the grass roots music community, rather than the aforementioned establishment.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I don’t necessarily subscribe to anti-establishment ideology (usually), and this isn’t an emotional outcry to try and rally troops against the “suits.” In fact, many might say that I am part of the machine, as I am General Manager and Co-Executive Producer at iconic Chicago music television show JBTV, and I also run an artist management company, Goldmill, and a record label, Sinister Muse. But what I am saying is that without an effective, collective, and united grass roots effort, not many folks with a financial stake in Chicago music are going to care much about the commotion. And, the truth is, we do need great clubs, promoters, managers, press, etc. to put Chicago back on the musical map, because we can’t do it simply as musicians. But, we need to view the change as a collective effort with overall community success in mind.

I was inspired to have come across a few recent articles (thanks to my friend John Tolva, new CTO for the City of Chicago) where Chicago’s new mayor, Rahm Emanuel, is trying to reinvigorate the Chicago music community by transforming the Uptown neighborhood into a music district. Frankly, I love this idea. And I hope that with the help and guidance of some visionary people from the Chicago music community working with city officials, it comes to life in a well-thought out manner that doesn’t impose on the success of the great venues Chicago already offers. But, I tread with wary caution and optimism, as it seems a bit ‘cart before horse’ to me. Mr. Mayor, let’s not forget about laying the proper foundation first and looking at our own existing resources. Sure, the proposed music district may expand the scope of outside music entering Chicago. And, yes, it will offer Chicago-based musicians the opportunity to play new venues. So, theoretically it will be good for Chicago music. But what will it do to educate and incubate the tens of thousands of Chicago musicians and artists that struggle on a daily basis between multiple jobs, with no insurance, in an economy that sees most local governments slashing art and music budgets for schools? Jobs? Perhaps. But, before we create that mecca of Chicago music, let’s make sure that the foundation, the artists in our own community, are given the opportunity and the tools to compete and succeed in their own backyard.

Another insightful article was presented from Dan Bobkoff at WBEZ 91.5 (“Can Music Boost The Midwest Economy?”) that suggested that Midwest cities like Chicago, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Detroit and Pittsburgh, who once had vibrant music communities which are now struggling, should invest in music collectives and embrace best practices used by cities like Austin, TX, where music thrives and musicians are widely supported by the community. Bobkoff went on to say that such programs have shown to contribute hundreds of millions of dollars, presumably through music festivals like South By Southwest (SXSW) and Austin City Limits (ACL), to the local economy. The State of Michigan even goes so far as offering tax breaks up to 42% for artists recording music or making music videos in their state. It’s time to replicate some of these incentives in our own city.

Many of you that contacted me after I wrote my last piece asked  me what a music collective or “incubator,” if you will, would look like. Many more asked how they could help. I seriously thank you all for your passion and ideas. I don’t think a better opportunity has ever existed to band together (pardon the pun), plan a path, foster change, educate artists, support the arts, and enrich a community. There is no time like now for a true Chicago music collective.

Here are some ideas that some of you provided, along with some actions that I think can be taken. And I challenge all of you reading this to act and participate.

  • Name the organization. CHICAGO MUSIC COLLECTIVE. Done. Let’s move on.
  • Put together a “steering committee” that can help shape the collective. This should be made up of representatives from the artist community, club owners, promoters, music press, managers, city officials, agents, labels, essentially anyone who shares the common interest of supporting the arts, helping musicians navigate and become educated about their business, and enabling them to take control of their businesses (all musical groups ARE businesses, after all)
  • Educate the music community-at-large about programs that already exist – Recording Academy’s MusiCares, Lawyers for the Creative Arts, free dental clinics for musicians, and ASCAP’s low-cost insurance options
  • Create a support network for musicians and offer assistance to those struggling with alcoholism, substance abuse, or depression
  • Assemble a think/do-tank to brainstorm, research, plan, and advise city officials on potential win-win programs for the community
  • Develop a long-term plan/vision to “incubate” artists that display merit and have the potential to reach outside of Chicago and represent our community – we need artists like this to show the world that Chicago is a supportive and thriving music city
  • Create partnerships with organizations that help musicians and the music community
  • Work with city officials to develop programs that encourage music-focused companies to start up or move to Chicago
  • Develop programs for artists that help them write, record, produce, market and distribute their music – let’s invest in promising talent and artists at the foundational level. We’ve got great studios and recording engineers in the city that are going widely unused. Let’s find ways to connect the Chicago music biosphere
  • Record store day? How about ‘record store Tuesdays?’ Why limit it to one day a year? Support these great independent institutions, at least for local music
  • Lobby to get dedicated “Chicago music” stages at Chicago’s largest music festivals, like Lollapalooza and Taste of Chicago.These events do a lot for the local economy, let’s help these festivals incorporate a plan to do a lot for Chicago musicians as well

So, I will issue a general challenge yet again. Hear me, Chicago Music Commission, City of Chicago, Chicago artists, clubs, promoters, media, and music fans. Mr. Mayor, you said you want Chicago to be a city “where arts and culture can be the engines of economic growth.” Sounds like a plan. I’m in.

If readers would like to provide feedback or share ideas, I can be reached at cpicciolini@gmail.com

An Open Letter to the Chicago Music Community…

Metro ChicagoChicago produces the best music and inhabits the best musical artists around. Period. If you don’t agree or don’t have the time to read this, I won’t be offended if you stop here and hit delete or navigate away. However, I am transmitting this message because I think you are a pioneer, an influencer, or an active participant in making Chicago a haven for amazing and cutting-edge artists – and I want to reach you.

I just spent some time traveling back from SXSW 2011 and it gave me some time to think and reflect a little bit on what Chicago music has to offer. My company, JBTV, brought down over 40 Chicago bands to participate in our 3 day showcase in Austin, TX last week. This experience was life-changing. And, while I am in the music business and have been going to SXSW for years, I often don’t get an opportunity to discover so much great music all at once. It was truly an eye-opening experience for me and immediately realized that our city has some of the best music the country has to offer. And that music is being made by really great people too.

It also dawned on me that most people, whether in the music business or not, do not really realize how much great local music is out there. Here we are in the midst of the greatest technology growth decade of any time period in our existence, and still not many people know this great music exists. A thousand platforms are out there, yet very few have enough reach and influence, or enough guts and/or forward thinking to really inform the public. Most shy away if promoting it is not a safe bet that has been proven by focus groups. Chris Payne and Local 101 and Richard Milne and XRT are one of a few that have consistently taken those chances, contrary to public majority opinion. Great venue owners like Joe Shanahan at Metro and promoter/talent buyers like Matt Rucins at Schuba’s/Lincoln Hall have staked their careers on taking chances on amazing and untested new music. Music critics like Jim Derogatis and Greg Kot have been commenting on it for years and letting us know about artists early in their careers. And JBTV music television pioneer Jerry Bryant has been taking risks and introducing us for decades to artists we’ve never heard of, so that eventually they can become artists we can’t live without.

In our city today, we’ve got so much new local musical talent blossoming right in front of our eyes – artists like AM Taxi, My Gold Mask, David Costa, The Right Now, Maps & Atlases, Empires, Makeshift Prodigy, Flosstradamus, Light Pollution, In Tall Buildings, The Frantic, Suns, The Noise FM, The Scissors and so many more. And, truth be told, Chicago has always had great music – Local H, Smashing Pumpkins, Naked Raygun, OK Go, Plain White T’s, The Lawrence Arms, Chevelle, Disturbed, Liz Phair, Kill Hannah, Pegboy, Rise Against, Alkaline Trio, Wilco, Smoking Popes, Fall Out Boy, Lucky Boys Confusion and on and on. Our clubs are the greatest – Metro, Schuba’s, Bottom Lounge, Lincoln Hall, Beat Kitchen, Double Door, Subterranean, The Vic, Aragon, Reggie’s, Elbo Room. We have Pitchfork, Sound Opinions, The Reader and Illinois Entertainer. Too many to list, we have the best record stores, radio stations, recording studios, labels and art galleries. And, of course, the most loyal music fans anywhere in the world.

But it takes every single one of us to create a strong and powerful music scene. One that doesn’t succumb to competitive fragmentation, but blazes trails rather than follows in the dust of other scenes like New York, Nashville, or Los Angeles. In my opinion, our artists are true pioneers, but we’ve never quite figured out how to collectively work together as a unit or scene and move forward together. And now that we are at a crossroads in our industry, waiting for it to figure itself out, it’s the absolute best time for us to really commit to find a way forward and strike out on our own…together. It’s really the only chance we’ve got to become a city that is known as a champion of art and music. We know that we are, but does anyone else?

Here’s an idea. Imagine an entity, a co-op or collective, if you will, that identifies the best our city has to offer and incubates it, mentors it and offers guidance, tools, and lends valuable experience. What if our city’s best and most forward-thinking musical minds came together to forge a new way to deliver our best music to the world, while helping these artists maintain ownership in their art? These are new times and they require new ways of thinking, of doing. Anything is possible. Think about what could happen if we could find a way to develop our music scene so that we don’t compete with each other, but rather we bolster a sense of unity and partnership amongst our community. We develop talent, foster partnerships and develop strategy for growth and exposure and a strong foundation for future talent to springboard from. Working together, we can keep things local and stand united to keep ticket prices down or change the traditional ways that great art is recognized and rewarded. Meanwhile keeping the focus on quality and the future development of quality. Yeah, sure, this is a bit Utopian, but I doubt that accomplishing even a little bit of this wouldn’t greatly help the art/music community at-large. Not doing anything is surely detrimental. Chicago is a great city, with a long history of excellent art, and an even longer history of pioneering spirit. Now is the time to stop talking and actually turn the gears that drive our machine.

What if we had a group that acted as a Chicago art collective? One that included artists, influencers and “tastemakers”, club owners, promoters, critics, managers, labels, music and art retailers that could come together as a think tank or incubator and then act on our best ideas. We can continue to offer great art and let it be discovered organically, or we can find a way to promote it proactively – together as a collective unit – and ensure that artists have the best tools at their disposal early and are protected and guided down the right path so they can focus on making great art. We owe it to ourselves and to each other to protect and foster the treasures of our community. We all stand to benefit from it.

We’ve got the best. Now, let’s let the world know what we know. I challenge each of you reading this to take action and become a brick in the foundation. I’m in. Are you? I’m open to ideas. Hit me up at cpicciolini [at] gmail [dot] com.