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Lincoln Hall (map)
2424 N. Lincoln Ave.
Lincoln Park
phone 773-525-2501

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Hideout (map)
1354 W. Wabansia Ave.
Wicker Park/Bucktown
phone 773-227-4433

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Jennifer Fletcher

Thu., May 23, 10 p.m.
Abbey Pub (map)
3420 W. Grace St.
Irving Park
phone 773-463-5808

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Smart Bar (map)
3730 N. Clark St.
Wrigleyville
phone 773-549-4140

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Paco Osuna

Thu., May 23, 10 p.m.
Spy Bar (map)
646 N. Franklin St.
River North
phone 312-337-2191

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Best Musical!

Through 5/23: Wed 7:30 PM

A full musical comedy is improvised with audience suggestions. $15

Stage 773 (map)
1225 W. Belmont Ave.
Lakeview
phone 773-327-5252

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Bilal, PJ Morton, Avery Sunshine

Fri., May 24, 8 p.m.

Bilal, PJ Morton, Avery Sunshine When Philadelphia modern-soul singer Bilal Oliver released his 2001 debut, 1st Born Second, he was poised to be the next big thing out of the Soulquarians collective, which also included D’Angelo, ?uestlove, and J Dilla. But during the decade that he kept his modest following waiting for a second album, the jazz-bred vocalist seemed to do little more than sing hooks on hip-hop tracks for artists such as Common, Little Brother, and Clipse. In 2010, when he finally dropped Airtight’s Revenge, it was worth the wait—he found a sharp edge he’d previously missed. He advances that sound on his recent third album, A Love Surreal (Entertainment One), whose title makes a not-so-subtle wink to John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme. The single “West Side Girl” makes his debt to Prince obvious, but on most of the album Bilal makes it harder to parse his influences by scrambling them together—the small-scale electronic soul of Timmy Thomas; the earthy, tightly coiled R&B of D’Angelo; the late-night humidity of current urban jazz, represented by pianist Robert Glasper, who guests on the album; the idiosyncratic melodies of Stevie Wonder. On love songs colored with uncertainty and disappointment as well as desire, his voice alternates between a raspy yet malleable falsetto and a throaty, declamatory high tenor. Bilal’s current material isn’t as hooky as the work of, say, Frank Ocean or Miguel, but they’d be less likely to exist if he never had—and he’s got a stylistic breadth and depth of feeling all his own. —Peter Margasak PJ Morton and Avery Sunshine open. $35, $30 in advance

House of Blues (map)
329 N. Dearborn St.
River North
phone 312-923-2000

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Metro (map)
3730 N. Clark St.
Wrigleyville
phone 773-549-0203

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Geoff Farina

Fri., May 24, 6 p.m.
Whistler (map)
2421 N. Milwaukee Ave.
Logan Square
phone 773-227-3530

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Bill MacKay

Fri., May 24, 6 p.m.
Hideout (map)
1354 W. Wabansia Ave.
Wicker Park/Bucktown
phone 773-227-4433

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Making Sense of Modern Yoga

Fri., May 24, 6 p.m.

Carol Horton, Ph.D., leads an "experiential discussion" on modern yoga, drawing examples from her books 21st Century Yoga: Culture, Politics, and Practice and Yoga Ph.D.: Integrating the Life of the Mind and the Wisdom of the Body.

57th Street Books (map)
1301 E. 57th St.
Hyde Park
phone 773-684-1300

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Permanent Records (map)
1914 W. Chicago Ave.
Ukrainian Village/East Village
phone 773-278-1744

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Schubas (map)
3159 N. Southport Ave.
Lakeview
phone 773-525-2508

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1549 total results