All posts by Jake Krez

A writer/publicist/media hired hand from Chicago, Il who came up writing for the Chicago Sun Times where he helped break artists like Chance The Rapper, Vic Mensa, Kids These Days and many more. Since then Jake has written for the likes of XXL, Complex, Noisey, New City, Billboard, DJBooth and many others while staying up to date on all things Chicago music and beyond.

Huntley edges Crystal Lake South

 

09/14/2012, 11:49pm CDT Originally Appeared at Chicago Sun-Times

 By Jake Krzeczowski

Kameron Sallee’s 54-yard touchdown pass to Bryce Beschorner in the fourth quarter helped lift Huntley to a 20-19 win against Crystal Lake South.

Huntley’s Kam Sallee

Senior quarterback Kameron Sallee threw for 119 yards and one touchdown as Huntley outlasted visiting Crystal Lake South 20-19 in Fox Valley Valley action Friday night.

After a quiet first half that found the Red Raiders down 10-6, the offense picked up through the air with Sallee finding a nice connection with senior wide receiver Bryce Beschorner, who finished the game with five catches for 94 yards and a touchdown.

Huntley went ahead on a 54-yard touchdown connection from Sallee to Beschorner in the fourth quarter.

“We knew they weren’t expecting us to throw out of the full formation,” said Sallee. “We had it planned the entire week and were ready for it when we had the chance.”

Crystal Lake South (1-3, 0-2) was in control for most of the game, finding most of its offense on the ground with junior quarterback Austin Rogers, whose 60-yard run in the first quarter put the Gators ahead 7-0.

The win was the first for Huntley (2-2, 2-0) against Crystal Lake South and it was evident as players celebrated with fans who stormed the field as the final seconds ticked off the clock.

“What we’re trying to do is make strides, so sometimes you have to win really close games,” first-year Huntley coach John Hart said. “We had to fight through some adversity with the penalties but our kids got it done.”

Crystal Lake South let a big opportunity slip away on the first possession of the second half.

Following an interception by Gators senior Dennis Gardeck, the offense faced a first-and-10 from the Huntley 15. After taking the ball down to the 1-yard line, a delay of game penalty made Crystal Lake South settle for a field goal.

“I thought we had plenty of time,” said Crystal Lake South coach Chuck Ahsmann. “Unfortunately we didn’t see (the referee) counting. That one is on me.”

Rogers had a stellar game on the ground with an 84-yard scamper on second down from his own 7-yard line in the third quarter, but it wasn’t enough to overcome the Huntley defense, which held in the red zone.

Rogers finished 5-for-13 for 43 yards passing to go along with 160 yards on the ground. He also recorded an interception on defense.

Junior Jake Scalise paced the Huntley offense on the ground with 45 yards on 17 attempts.

“It was a good win for them. It was a fun game but we came up short,” said Rogers. “We just take this and motivate ourselves for next week.”

Socially conscious band Kids These Days head out to learn from striking CPS teachers

By Jake Krzeczowski September 13, 2012 6:52PM

Updated: September 14, 2012 4:49PM

At 5:30 a.m. Wednesday, Vic Mensa of the Chicago-based band Kids These Days dragged himself into his house after a long night in the studio to find his mother, Betsy, furiously preparing protest signs. He knew he couldn’t go to sleep just yet.

Mensa and Cunningham are graduates of Whitney Young High School so that is where they headed, with camera and questions. They spent the day speaking with teachers about the strike’s impact and their concerns to gain a deeper understanding of the issues. Continue reading Socially conscious band Kids These Days head out to learn from striking CPS teachers

Isaac’s surprise return fuels JCA

09/08/2012, 1:48am CDT

 By Jake Krzeczowski

Originally Appeared @ Chicago Sun-Times

 Joliet Catholic senior running back Ty Isaac returned from a shoulder injury to spark the Hilltoppers to a 33-20 win over host St. Viator Friday.

 Joliet Catholic senior running back Ty Isaac may not have started the game for the Hilltoppers Friday night, but he sure finished it.

Isaac ran for 94 yards and two touchdowns en route to a 33-20 win over St. Viator at Forest View field in Arlington Heights.

With Isaac not expected to play while nursing a sore shoulder, the first half was an even matchup as senior running back Tyler Reitz rushed for 43 yards and junior fullback Michael Ivlow punched in a pair of touchdowns to put Joliet Catholic up 13-6.

With the score close and St. Viator picking up steam, Hilltoppers coach Dan Sharp made the decision to go with the USC-bound Isaac late in the second quarter.

“To be honest I wasn’t supposed to even play in this game,” said Isaac who was unsure of his status almost until kickoff time. “I felt like [the shoulder] progressed pretty well to the point if the team needed me I could come in. It’s much better than it was last week.”

Isaac pumped life into the Joliet Catholic offense by converting on several long third- and fourth-down situations, capping the second drive of the second half with a 15-yard touchdown run to break a 13-13 tie.

The fourth quarter belonged to the Hilltoppers as St. Viator struggled to find an answer on the offensive end. An interception by junior Zack Jackovich early in the quarter set Joliet Catholic up to go 27-13 on a Ivlow touchdown. Jackovich finished the night with three picks.

St. Viator, led by junior Bobby Calmeyn (19-34, 172 yards two touchdowns, three interceptions) put forth a tremendous effort in the loss, making plays when they were needed and converting several key fourth downs.

The Lions tied the score at 13-13 with under four minutes in the third quarter, but the Joliet Catholic defense stopped the rally, outscoring the home team 20-7 over the remainder of the contest.

“If we play like this every game good things are going to happen to us,” St. Viator coach Brendan New said. “It’s frustrating, to play so hard and come up on the short end but they’re a great team.”

Joliet Catholic has its horse back and now focuses on conference foe Nazareth for homecoming next week.

“For the past few years we haven’t been the most talented or the biggest but as a group we all fight,” Isaac said. “Without that we wouldn’t be able to do what we do.”

Hall & Oates bringing ‘rock ’n’ soul’ to Ravinia

BY JAKE KRZECZOWSKI | Contributor August 29, 2012 2:28PM

 Originally appeared at Sun-Times
Story ImageHall & Oates have been bringing their distinctive rock-soul sound to Chicago since the late 1970s. They’ll do it again when they play Ravinia on Sept. 1.

Updated: August 29, 2012 2:30PM

Darryl Hall and John Oates, one of the most influential rock duos during the Reagan years, return to Ravinia on Sept. 1.

Better known as Hall & Oates, the two men rocked the pop stage with their rock and R&B fusion throughout the late ’70s and early ’80s, en route to being named Billboard’s best duo of all time.

“Chicago’s always been a great city for us, but has really embraced us these past couple of years. And the shows have gotten better and better,” said Oates. “It’s amazing that after all these years we’re able to go out there and bring excitement, and the fans are still showing up.”

This year marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Hall & Oates’ first album. The duo got their start in the early ’70s in Philadelphia and found their voice with hits like 1976’s “Sara Smile” and “Rich Girl” in 1977, before taking over the pop charts in the early ’80s with a string of hit songs and top-grossing albums.

The success hinged mainly on their distinctive, hybrid sound that Hall & Oates called “rock ‘n’ soul.”

“Coming from Philadelphia, we were exposed to a lot of different sound, such as rock and R&B, so we tried to open ourselves up to incorporating all of those,” said Oates. “For lack of a better term, we came up with ‘rock ‘n’ soul’ because we rocked and we have soul.”

Oates still pays tribute to what he calls “the tree of rock,” the work of past artists he and Hall built on as their personal sound evolved.

It’s something he’s noted in a new generation of musicians.

“An original sound is something that’s hard to accomplish,” said Oates. “This younger generation, though, is doing exactly what we did. They just have new tools to work with because of the technology and whatnot.”

Currently, Oates is working on a solo album that he expects out sometime in 2013. Hall released a solo CD, “Laughing Down Crying,” in September 2011, and is rumored to be working on an album with electrofunk duo Chromeo.

Though the two have traveled the world with their music for 40 years, and have reached a level of satisfaction with their accomplishments, they have no desire to stop, or even to slow down.

“We’re pretty firmly implanted in the world of rock music and it’s been great,” said Oates. “We’ve been coming to Chicago since the ’70s and we’re excited to keep doing so with this show.”~

SKisM: Division Mix Pt 2 of 4 (NSD VOL. 27)

Date: Sep 05, 2012 (Wednesday)
Originally appeared for The Untz

By Jake Krzeczowski
UK legend SKisM has set off on a journey in electronic music that he has dubbed the Division Mix.

Part Two picks up right where the first installment left off, allowing for the two pieces to be played one after the other to create a pair of puzzle pieces that eventually will lead up to an 80-minute odyssey through EDM.

The second part of the series gets ominously darker with slow, methodic basslines accented by haunting synth lines before including a uniform snare that sends the whole track careening off the rails toward a moombahton-like dance line.

The twenty-minute track is everywhere at once, hopping from drum n’ bass to hard dub and back again faster than the listener can really pay attention. As artists try to conquer all aspects of the burgeoning electronic scene, SKisM has proved he can find a way to mesh it all into one.

The Division Mix series is essentially a Costco for EDM music, a Now! album sampler that doesn’t delve too deeply into anyone one discipline, rather allowing for the listener to get a taste of each.

That isn’t to say that the sound is watered down. It is no easy task to take several very different sounds and bring them together into a single track, much less an 80-minute monster that is the goal here.

That the mix is being released under Never Say Die Records makes sense, as the London-based label has long pushed for expanded creativity in the EDM scene and SKisM perpetuates that perfectly.

Focusing on working in the studio, SKisM’s tour dates have slowed a bit, paying shows in Belgium and France over the next two months.

Known for his dubstep remixes that have brought him attention from the EDM world, SKisM has set out on an interesting exploration of which we find him only halfway done and eager for the rest.

The Malah – “Light Forms” Review

By: Jake Krzeczowski (Originally Appeared At TheUntz.com)

As the culture of electronic music has pushed its way into mainstream miasma, artists from far and wide have found new and interesting ways to incorporate the intricacies of largely computer-generated tunes with live instruments to create a wholly new sound. One of the most refreshing instances to hit the scene during this time is the Denver, Colo., trio, The Malah, who blend the aesthetics of a jam band seamlessly with throbbing bass and synth lines into a trance-like euphoria on their latest album, Light Forms.

The Malah open up their newest offering since 2010’s Live From Earth by allowing the listener to ease into the funky, grooving texture on the first track, “Lights” which employs a rolling rhythm section accompanied by light electronic aesthetics. The aptly-named song offers a light glimpse into what the album has to offer from there on out.

With criticism beginning to run rampant in the DJ game these days for a perceived lack of live-performance ability (see Swedish House Mafia), a premium has been placed on the ability to create the electronic sound on cue with live instrumentation. The Malah find themselves poised to strike on the rising popularity that acts similar to them have only begun to find.

As seems to be par for the course on Light Forms, each track gets increasingly different from the one before. “As Above So Below” features a series of rocking piano solos that feel like an amped-up Billy Joel sample which is paired with light synth work and the ever-present guitar rhythm that is the obvious trademark for the group.

“Rectangle” also switches things up a bit by providing anything but straight lines as grooving bass lines drive an interesting blend of jam-rock and moaning synth with a rasta-inspired wah-wah guitar to boot. The resulting sound is reminiscent of an upbeat Radiohead tune, minus the wailing of Thom Yorke.

The Malah produce a refreshing aesthetic sound that is both experimental and poignant to today’s burgeoning music culture. At a time when festivals like Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza and Camp Bisco are offering a smattering of both jam bands and electronic artists, this trio appears poised to raise the bar to another level through their incorporation of both into a live-performance dynamic.

Iowa track Hawk Farley leaping all hurdles

Article Originally APpeared HERE
BY JAKE KRZECZOWSKI | APRIL 02, 2009 7:30 AM

As she gradually eases herself into the blocks, each step carefully placed, one can see the precise routine Iowa sophomore Karessa Farley goes through before a race.

It is a process she has repeated over and over, one that has helped guide her to her first NCAA indoor national meet.

The Hawkeye is on her hands and knees, shaking her legs out as she looks out over the track at the army of hurdles before her, waiting to be overcome, yet looming to bring her down.

The look on her face is calm and collected. The words of Iowa assistant coach Clive Roberts come to mind.

“Her best asset is that she is very calm; not much gets to her,” he said.

And nothing seems to.

 

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On the outside she may seem calm, but underneath that collected exterior is a nervous interior.

“There is definitely a lot more nerves and pressure than at a regular meet,” Farley said about the national meet.

She shakes her legs loose, puts them back and then stretches them again, the muscles in her legs flexing and contracting in the anticipation of the race. Farley has come a long way since her freshman indoor season, which she spent much of injured.

Her coaches have focused this year on keeping her healthy through a rapport between her and the staff.

“The biggest thing we did this year was just get her to the starting line,” Roberts said.

Finally, she is ready. Her hands set, her pink and white spikes firmly planted in the blocks, her body is rigid, waiting to be let loose.

Coming into the preliminaries of the NCAA meet, Farley was seeded 13th, not quite the favorite to make it to the podium.

“She wasn’t expected to get into the finals,” Iowa head coach Layne Anderson said.

A well-timed lean and she had a fourth-place finish, making the finals by .01 of a second.

The burst with which she leaves the starting line is astounding, the stiffness of one moment replaced by the pumping of arms and legs as she propels herself out of the blocks, head down, seeing only the track directly ahead of her.

When speaking to her coaches, it is evident she is not one to take it easy in her training.

“There is always a lot of work to be done, and she’s willing to do it,” Anderson said.

The work has begun to pay off, as Roberts described her progress, saying “she’s probably running a little better than she did at NCAAs right now.”

Farley whizzes by, her shoes a blur of pink and white as she speeds down the track. Earlier in the year, she spoke of focusing on keeping her arms moving, something that has obviously improved as her open hands cut through the stale air.

Her sixth-place finish at the indoor nationals was good enough to be named All-American.

“I didn’t really think about it until I was on the podium,” Farley said. “It felt really good to be up there.”

She also feels as though she has gained more confidence from the experience, realizing she is as good as the best hurdlers in the country. That confidence will be important going into the outdoor portion of the season.

As Farley crosses the finish line, she gives a slight lean before slowing herself.

She takes her bright spikes off and walks back down the track, her training for the day done. Before she is halfway back, Roberts reminds her to pick up the hurdles.

At Iowa, even an All-American has to pick up after herself.

Cold Blank: The Agenda Review

Date: Aug 06, 2012 (Monday)

By Jake Krzeczowski

In the past decade or so, electronic dance music has exploded as the advent of low-cost software and marketing have allowed for a sea of artists to emerge from local bedrooms and studios alike.

While the explosion has brought about both good and bad, the latest to rise from the waters and make a mark on the scene, Los Angeles electro duo Cold Blank, has sought to do things the right way.

The Agenda is the debut offering from the team, released via their own independent label Burn The Fire.

At a time when a distinct sound is hard to find, the album features a smattering of EDM variety from drum n’ bass to house, with a healthy dose of dubstep thrown in for good measure.

Seemingly trying to find themselves on their first full-length foray into the public consciousness, Cold Blank spreads it around, opting to try many different sounds rather than focus on a specific lane.

On the house-rocker “Los Angeles” a popping synth line is accompanied by robotic vocals declaring “we are from Los Angeles, this is where the party is,” in case anyone forgot. In a nod to early successes, Tiësto featured the track on his Club Life podcast.

A sure gem from The Agenda is the first single, “Onslaught” featuring original Duran Duran member Andy Taylor lending a smooth distorted guitar brilliantly paired with a bumping bass line and synth structure that builds to crescendos throughout.

Leaning away from the house feel, Cold Blank opts for a trance-like vibe that carries you into the sky before pummeling you into a full-fledged drop complete with grinding dubstep basslines and punching synth hits on “Louder Than Bombs.” The track debuted on MTV Hive and reached #2 on the Beatport Top 100 Dubstep Chart.

The album also features some help from notable acts such as Veela and Blake Miller of Moving Units.

Currently nominated in the Top 100 DJs in America by DJ Times, Cold Blank will be touring across Australia and New Zealand before settling back into the states with a show in Oklahoma City on September 19.

If this duo set out to distance themselves from the competition they did so not as much on the strength of individual songs as much as the complete body of work which sets the stage for a wide open future by demonstrating their ability to craftily handle a wide range of sounds.

For Cold Blank, the future looks as open as the toolbox from which they constructed The Agenda.

Diplo: Express Yourself EP Review

Date: Jul 06, 2012 (Friday) Originally appeared on TheUntz.com

By: Jake Krzeczowski

In July, Wesley Pentz, better known as Diplo, will be on a long train ride through Canada with fellow EDM mainstays Pretty Lights, Grimes, and Skrillex as they headline the Full Flex Tour.

Perhaps inspired by the solo success of those three as well as his own skyrocketing reputation, Pentz is putting out Express Yourself, an EP expected to be released at the end of 2012, and his first meaningful individual work since his debut, Florida, in 2004.

On his newest offering, Diplo keeps the party rocking and the backsides bouncing with his particular blend of electro house.

With nearly a decade in the game, the Tupelo, Mississippi-born Pentz proves his hunger to continue to develop a sound he helped popularize.

Mixing his special blend of loops, heavy bass lines and quick synths, Diplo weaves together consistently-progressing lines of sound that easily open into an all out ear assault.

The title track of the EP builds slowly, evolving itself from a trance-like introduction before quickly building the beat into his signature moombahton sound.

The Philadelphia DJ achieves this through a mix of squirreling synth lines and reggae inspired sample loops that take you on a journey of sound that finally dumps you off three and a half minutes later feeling as though you’ve explored the full catalogue of your music library.

Always one for experimentation, Diplo doesn’t shy away from trying something new on his latest EP. While maintaining his signature dancehall influenced rhythm he weaves in throughout.

Each track on the record sounds blindingly similar at times, which works within the context of keeping people moving and the party hopping.

Not to be mulled over, songs like “Butters Theme” and “Move Around” employ a host of guests from Elephant Man to Billy the Gent.

The bevy of features touch on genres from dancehall to moombahton and back again, demonstrating not only the DJ’s range of musical tastes, but also his ability to move seamlessly between them.

Express Yourself comes on the heels of a book, a TV show and a production credit on Usher’s newest single, and feels like a wave from the podium as he glances back on his rise over the past ten years.

If it is anything, the most recent digression by Diplo is more review of his career this far and only a small inkling of where he has to go from here.

Jazz Club

The smoke billowed from my cigar and rose to the ceiling (Picture 5), mushrooming into a cloud before being sucked away by the dull hum of a vent secured to the ceiling. My eyes followed the cloud as it rose and quickly disappeared, scanning the tiny jazz bar from top to bottom, the music popping and riding in a mix of Chicago and Cuban disciplines of the genre.

Looking on as the pianist, Robert Fonseca, worked his hands along the keys, the crowd hung on every note, bursting into applause as he eased out of his solo and back into the group dynamic. The bandleader quickly came in on saxophone, taking the reigns from Fonseca and scurrying down the rabbit hole with the plethora of notes he patched together in succession.

Jazz in America went a long way towards race relations, allowing African-Americans a platform in our country that had been previously denied. It allowed for self-expression, born out the brooding actualization of blues, it conveyed frustration, despair and light-heartedness in a single broad tune. The sounds moved into the white realm, result of its beginnings in culturally diverse New Orleans near the turn of the century. The great melting pot of sound and color, Jazz set the stage for people of all races to come together under the umbrella of music.

The bandleader tonight was a smooth-headed white Cuban, his mastery of the clarinet and saxophone easily evident. Flanked by a pianist, bass and drums, he was the only white person on stage, his obvious soul a sticking point for the sound popping from the speakers. Fonseca, to his right was the reason the small club was packed shoulder to shoulder, a small grey fedora perched on his head, a confident smile hardly leaving his lips, a finger on the key was enough to silence the crowd. The bassist and drummer, both seemingly of African descent waited for their orders, given in a measured mixture of sharps and flats. Our tour guide, Lian, had told us a bit about the state of race here in Cuba, a place where Spanish, European and African peoples mixed and came together.

Sitting in the underground club, it’s entrance a red antique English telephone booth that pointed down, I glanced over the packed room. Swaying, smiling, chatting those of all races mixed intermittently. A tall pale twenty-year-old from Portland worked game on a Mexican-American woman not far from where a white man gently graced the lips of his darker counterpart. To hear Lian talk of it, race is of nearly no concern to those from this cordoned nation, itself with a history of problems. “If you never get over it, you will dwell on it forever and be unhappy,” she says. A place that places a premium on smiles, dancing and the like; this couldn’t have summed things up more.

Langston Hughes, traveled to Cuba fairly early in his life, writing about it in a piece titled “Havana Nights and Cuban Color Lines” he noted the differences between the way we in America reacted to differences and the way it was handled here. He noticed what he called a “triple color line” during his stay, addressing the pureblooded blacks as the bottom of the totem pole, mixed above and white at the top. It was a result of the times, the social turmoil spilling over our borders and into other realms. With Americans allowed to travel south to the island, southern prejudices and problems were allowed to infiltrate the unique culture, our ugliness tarnishing their beautiful civilization.

The embargo allowed the people of Cuba to grow, independent of the problems that plagued the United States throughout the sixties, seventies and beyond. What stayed, however, was the art of Jazz; that of the great melting pot culture. Instead of being inundated with the problems from the north, the people of Cuba came together, created community, especially during the “Special Period” of the 90s. As the Soviets crumbled and pulled their support, race meant less as everyone, dark light or in between scrambled to find their next meal and survive day to day, an immense sense of community growing from the darkest days.

Leaning back in my chair I watched as the pianist rolls his chord into the chorus, syncopating in perfect harmony with the rest of the band, the loop building to a climax, dropping heavily and quickly picking back up before the drummer takes the reigns, tapping the snare in a hurried rush before working his way across drums with a flurry of hand movements, pointing a stick back at Fronseca to throw it back to the entire band. A black man with dreads bobs his head next to a blond girl with a straw hat, a mixed Cuban man with a cigar dangling from his mouth easing into a bar stool behind them. Mr. Hughes saw the land with American influence, before the absence of cultural vices that plagued our hegemonic society, they better for it.