Originally Appeared on TheseDays.News (August 2016)It’s a scene that’s becoming all too familiar in these turbulent times: a large group of protesters clogging downtown streets, disrupting corporate commerce and planting themselves on the ground with their hands up. Once again our city’s voice stand up for a fallen friend, brother, son as thousands poured onto Michigan Ave this past Sunday to stand up against the latest brutal police shooting, this one that left 18-year-old Paul O’Neil dead. Once again the Chicago Police Department trotted out a list of reasons to try and explain. Once again Rahm Emanuel pursed his lips, gripped the podium and dipped his head to the floor in a gesture that has come to embody the greater mentality on the subject. And once again, another young man didn’t come home because of the itchy trigger finger of one of those lives in blue. With hearts heavy and spirits waning, the pain is once again palpable.
Category Archives: These Days
October Cover Story • The Endless Tour: How DJ Oreo Played The Support Role To Center Stage
It’s nearing ten o’clock and DJ Oreo is tucking a pink towel into the neck of his shirt as he settles into a big orange chair at a barbershop on the west side of Chicago. Home for a brief spell from tour with Atlanta-based sensation Lil Yachty, he’s been quickly summoned back to tour, so a visit to the barber is a necessity longed for on the road.
As the stylist goes about pulling at his locks, Oreo similarly pulls on a strand, peering at it in the mirror. “It’s about a foot now,” he says questioningly, looking over his shoulder. The barber, nodding in agreement, “yeah, about a foot now, maybe more.” Tossing back the strand and resettling himself in the chair, adjusting the yellow towel across his shoulders, he thinks back on his last haircut.
Home Team • Ian Eastwood
As we continue along this ever-expanding idea of a Chicago Renaissance, it’s undeniable that the forward-thinking artistic movement goes well-beyond just music. Art, at its essence is interpretation and no one takes cues like fast-rising dancer, choreographer and Oak Park native, Ian Eastwood, who has been forging a new path in his own lane that speaks to a larger independent movement that has come to pace this scene of artists and creatives operating out of the midwest. Continue reading Home Team • Ian Eastwood
Brandon Breaux: The Man Behind The Cover Art Of Acid Rap, 10 Day & Chance 3
(Originally Appeared for TheseDays)
At this point, it’s a sort of foregone conclusion that Chance The Rapper will only continue to assert his control over the music world at-large with the impending release of his #Chance3 project. That got a further teasing this week with the unveiling of theartwork for the project. Three years since Acid Rapand nearly five since 10 Day, Chance’s new project will be the third installment in what he’s calling his mixtape trilogy, As Chance has grown and evolved both as a musician and a person, the covers of his projects have seemed to reflect each; the music itself following suit. One prevailing aesthetic of each project though has been the cover art, which seems to be artistic takes on distinct points in young Chano’s growth. The reason for that consistency is easy to figure as well, there has been a singular force behind the imagery that finds itself to the front page of Chance’s work and that force is none other than Chicago artist Brandon Breaux. Continue reading Brandon Breaux: The Man Behind The Cover Art Of Acid Rap, 10 Day & Chance 3
Artistic Empathy: Kweku Collins Moves To The Front Of The Class
(Originally Appeared for TheseDays News)
At a time when most of his peers are hunting down summer jobs, jonesing for internships or cramming for finals, 19-year-old Evanston native Kweku Collins is lounging idly on a couch. An electronic vaporizer in one hand, the other rubbing his loose collection of curious locks, each with it’s own plan and direction that dictate his wily look, Collins looks very much the part of a college student nearing the end of his freshman year and in a way, he is.
Instead of picking a school and signing up for classes though, the ever-sleepy-eyed Collins sent a mixtape to Alex Fruchter and Mike Kolar, owners of the local imprint Closed Sessions. He hit send on the email at the beginning of February 2015, by the time the Chicago River was dyed green, he was a signed artist with a team to boot.
Continue reading Artistic Empathy: Kweku Collins Moves To The Front Of The Class
The Evolution Of Jamila Woods
It’s not all that difficult to read what Jamila Woods is thinking or feeling.
To do that, you just have to look to her expressions, which tell a story that has been evolving for some time.
The 25-year-old native Chicagoan has been plying her trade around her hometown for some time now. Having entered the creative world as a poet, she has since made welcome forays into music, teaching and writing. Pulling from a multitude of experiences, Jamila speaks with a sort of frank realness that allows any listener an immediate understanding of her comfortability within her own thoughts and feelings.
Continue reading The Evolution Of Jamila Woods
Editorial • Let Dej Loaf Live!
As a writer that often focuses on hip-hop music, I tend to pay attention to things that wouldn’t make it onto most others’ radars. Like, who the first artist with a ‘Lil’ name was, what ever happened to the ‘real’ Rick Ross, or the non-fictional motivations behind Drake lyrics. It’s a symptom of the habit. Sometimes, though, tracking these trends, news items, and rollouts can get tiresome and boil over into straight up cynicism. Lil Durk’s forced ‘celebrity relationship’ with Dej Loaf is one of those items: I just can’t fuck with it anymore.
Hurt Everybody: Hip-Hop’s Magical Realism
Respect The Neighbors • Jay IDK
The DC/Maryland/Virginia area, affectionately known by locals as the ‘DMV’, has been a solid outpost for hip-hop music for some time, producing well-known talents such as Wale, Pusha T and Pharrell as well as progressive new-age acts like GoldLink, Fat Trel, and Kali Uchis. While not necessarily a hotbed of talent, the locale is consistent if anything, which makes sense that it also birthed current rising star Jay IDK. Continue reading Respect The Neighbors • Jay IDK
Only officially a group for a little over a year at this point, Hurt Everybody’s exponential rise has been both surprising and an indication of the scene at large which rewards a little elbow grease. Their debut project, Hurt Everybody EP, released on Fourth of July last year, put the trio on the map decidedly. A year later, Supa Bwe, Qari, and Mulatto Beats are in charge of their own destinies. Their music is at once uplifting, intense, and deep; all delivered with a distinct chip on their collective shoulder. The owners of their own studio, purveyors of some of the most exciting shows in town, and two months removed from a successful sophomore release, Hurt Everybody may just be ready to take the city over from their own little corner.
“I can genuinely say me, along with my brothers, built this from the ground up and it’s dope that it’s getting recognition because it’s something that we really started from the base. When we get recognition for our music, it’s a good feeling because we’re still building and other people are going to see what we’re going to do,” said Devon. “I really believe in Qari and Freddy. I listen to all the rappers on the radio every day and I know that’s who they’re competing with.”
The group grew organically out of the ground-floor collective Legion of Dudez, a loose conglomerate that counts ShowYouSuck, Holt, and photographer Bryan Lamb amongst its ranks. A band of misfits that didn’t quite seem to
Together, the sum of Hurt’s parts are stronger than its whole, for now. On October 4, Supa Bwe released his debut full-length solo project, The Dead Occasion (despite having a series of past EPs). For the time being, it is obvious that he is the center of the stage, evidenced by the group’s decision to release 2K47 on his SoundCloud profile which boasts over 17,000 followers. While Supa might be the spectacle of the three, Qari is the steadying voice, the consistent undertone that keeps folks coming back. While he doesn’t have a solo project out yet (other than his short Beta EP), the whispers around the debut are thick and we would expect to see something of the singular variety some time before the next president is chosen.