Chicago Sun-Times

THE FUN’LL COME OUT ‘TOMORROW’

Shake off January blahs with 10 must-see acts at music, comedy fest

- BY SELENA FRAGASSI 9 p.m. Thursday at Sleeping Village, 3734 W. Belmont 10 p.m. Thursday at The Hideout, 1354 W. Wabansia 8 and 10 p.m. Friday at The Hideout, 1354 W. Wabansia 9 p.m. Friday at Lincoln Hall, 2424 N. Lincoln Selena Fragassi is a local free

No need to wait until summer to enjoy the best of Chicago’s music festivals. Since 2005, the folks behind Lincoln Hall and Schubas have done a brilliant job of offering a multiday cultural event in the middle of humdrum January. Known as Tomorrow Never Knows, the fest — which also includes comedians — cheekily references the Beatles song but also tips its hat to emerging talent.

In past years, TNK has booked acts that have gone on to success including Sharon Van Etten, Father John Misty, Hannibal Buress and Cameron Esposito. This year’s festival takes place over five days at multiple venues including Lincoln Hall and Schubas as well as Metro, Smartbar, The Hideout and the newer outpost Sleeping Village. Here are our picks on the fest’s must-sees:

Grails

It’s a rare treat to see this Portland instrument­al troupe on a handbill anywhere in town. Tours are few and far between since their dawning in 1999, but always worth the wait. Grails is the very definition of avant-garde, shrouding its evocative compositio­ns in a haze of heavy metal, free form jazz, stoner psychedeli­a and artsy folk that defy convention.

Neil Hamburger

The king of anti-comedy believes in the philosophy that something can be so bad it’s good. With his askew comb over, overly formal suit and bow tie and predilecti­on for Q&A jokes taking jabs at the most obvious celebritie­s, Hamburger (the alter ego of Gregg Turkington) is a big-time recipient of slow claps — and has built a successful career around all of it, with albums on Drag City, appearance­s on Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” and the feature film, “Entertainm­ent.”

‘It’s A Guy Thing’

There are just some things in life a gal can’t understand. To the rescue comes the comedic trio of Catherine Cohen, Mitra Jouhari and Patti Harrison — along with a lineup of special guests — to woman-splain it all. It’s routinely voted as one of the best alt

comedy shows in New York City.

Sarah Shook & The Disarmers

Bloodshot Records has a unique way of describing their label signee as “a new voice for a new country.” Sarah Shook carries on in the outlaw spirit with a raw brand of gritty songwritin­g that has a punk rock ethos — rebelling against a fundamenta­list upbringing in North Carolina to find her true self as an outspoken atheist liberal. Backed by the Disarmers and plenty of twangy guitar, “shook” is one way to describe the set.

DJ Hell

The influentia­l German DJ and producer will feel right at home at Smartbar with his unique brand of techno spawned from vast influences including punk, New Wave, hip-hop and Chicago house, as well as vintage ’60s and ’70s Euro electro he grew up with outside of Munich. Rarely does he tour outside Europe, so this is a big get for TNK.

10 p.m. Saturday at Smartbar, 3730 N. Clark

Talkhouse

This podcast and online magazine finds itself in realtime with this showcase. Talkhouse is where musicians, actors and other creatives can share experience­s with each other in interviews or write about another’s work in essays and reviews. For this exposé, Joan Of Arc/ Owen/American Football musician Mike Kinsella speaks with Manchester Orchestra frontman Andy Hull.

2:30 p.m. Saturday at Sleeping Village, 3734 W. Belmont

Taylor Bennett

The Chicago hip-hop artist shares DNA with Chance The Rapper, whose brotherly love extended to a guest appearance on Bennett’s 2015 track “Broad Shoulders.” But it’s Bennett’s 2018 release, “Be Yourself,” that really sets him apart with layered production, catchy vocal-rap style and songs about being OK with who you are.

7 p.m. Saturday at Metro, 3730 N. Clark

Fee Lion

The pseudonym for Chicago artist Justina Kairyte, the atmospheri­c solo project combines slick pop overtones a la Grimes with synth heartbeats that could have been on a new Depeche Mode album. Combined with a love of fashion (Kairyte was just featured in a Nylon magazine spread), Fee Lion is the face of something fresh. Opening for Negative Gemini, but go early for fellow Chicago dark sire Panic Priest. 9:30 p.m. Saturday at Sleeping Village, 3734 W. Belmont

FACS

It’s been a hard pill to swallow that Disappears may be gone forever. But in the wake of the very extended hiatus of the local krautrock-shoegaze heroes comes FACS. The trio, who released their 2018 debut “Negative Houses” to wide acclaim, features former Disappears frontman Brian Case and drummer Noah Leger, along with another Chicago veteran, Alianna Kalaba, on bass. 5 and 8 p.m. Sunday at Metro, 3730 N. Clark

S. Carey

The Lake Geneva, Wisconsin-born multi-instrument­alist first caught attention as the drummer and pianist for indie great Bon Iver, but it didn’t take long for him to strike out on his own. With his solo project, Carey is a true sound lab, incorporat­ing ambient elements, chamber pop and jazz fusion into five EPs and full-lengths with inspiratio­n from nature at its core. 9 p.m. Jan. 20 at Schubas

 ?? JOHN GESSNER PHOTO GETTY IMAGES ?? Neil Hamburger Sarah Shook & the Disarmers
JOHN GESSNER PHOTO GETTY IMAGES Neil Hamburger Sarah Shook & the Disarmers

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