Check out these 5 Chicago artists at Lollapalooza. Whitney, Noname, Kweku Collins, The O'My's and Chance The Rapper

Let’s dive into the incredible lineup at this year’s Lollapalooza. Chicago artists came to represent at one of the largest music festivals in the world. The talent to tough but their Chicago breed artist standout in a big way. Below let’s visit five artists that call Chicago their home that you absolutely can’t miss at this year’s Lollapalooza!

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Whitney

Indie-rock band Whitney will represent the Chicago indie scene well. The young band will have the perfect match of blended tunes and heart wrenching lyrics. Their debut album Light Upon the Lake is one of the best pieces of work coming out from Chicago in the past few years. Seeing them rock the stage at Lollapalooza will be a great experience for the young band. It definitely won’t be the last time on the Lollapalooza stage.

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Noname

After an incredible year of appearances at Saturday Night Live, Bronzeville native Noname will be making her Lollapalooza debut. The spoken word artist made the past year her own with her soulful and honest approach to storytelling that we hear in her latest protect, Telefone.

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Kweku Collins

Closed Sessions rapper Kweku Collins will bring his poetry and melodic rap sound to life at Lollapalooza. Making his Lollapalooza debut, the Evanston (close enough) native will represent the young label well. He will be rubbing shoulders with some heavyweight rapper while making a bold appearance at Lollapalooza in his own right.

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The O’ My’s

Rock meets soul back again when the O’ My’s return at Lollapalooza. Showing early support in their career to the likes of Chance The Rapper, the O’ My’s will receive a long overdue warm welcome. Seeing Maceo Haymes taking the stage with Nick Hennessey, Boyang Matsapola, Baron Golden, Erick Mateo will bring the longtime Chicago favorites to new heights. If you haven’t already do yourself a favor and check out their EP, Keeping The Faith.

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Chance The Rapper

This one goes without saying. If you’re from Chicago, you have to come through and support Chicago’s biggest name in the business. Chance The Rapper just a few short years ago performed at the smaller BMI stage. This year, Chance The Rapper will headline August 5 on the main stage expecting his biggest crowd to date.

After a number of incredible accolades for the young 24-year-old artist, Chance The Rapper will bring it all home at Lollapalooza. After his three well deserved Grammy wins, donating over 1 million dollars to the Chicago Public School District and widely praised third released mixtape Coloring Book, Chance’s set will be one to remember for years to come.

4-Day Passes and single day passes are currently sold-out, VIP passes are now at Lollapalooza.com.


L Train Chicago by Bobby Reys

Chicago Acts to Look Out For in 2014

Photo by Bobby Reys

Chicago has been on lately. The Second City has always been known as a musical city and the current rate at which it has produced talent as of late is only adding to that legacy. As festival lineups roll out as we transition into Spring, it has become common to find a Chicago act, if not several, on the list. For this reason, we decided to put together a list of up and coming artists from Chicago that we expect to fully blossom throughout 2014. We added numbers, but there's no real order as far as rankings, just a collection of musical acts from the city that deserve a spotlight. Last year, Chance The Rapper, Chief Keef and a host of hip-hop artists dominated music headlines as a pipeline was established in the Midwest. There is plenty in the city that isn't rap music too though, and we made sure to highlight everyone. Take some time to flip through the next batch of stars to rise out of Chicago.


Photo of The O'My's

[Video] The O'My's: "Sweet Love"

The O'My's are easily one of the most soul-packed bunch in Chicago. Led by Maceo Haymes and Nick Hennessy, the band has seen its stock grow since releasing their latest album, A Humble Masterpiece late last year via RH and playing a host of high-energy sets around their hometown and beyond. Yesterday, playing on the "love is in the air" vibes of mid February, The O'My's crew dropped their latest visual for the song "Sweet Love" off their latest release. The video, directed by Dan Moraru, details what it's like when a friend of yours falls in love, worse yet, a roommate and what that means for everyone he was friends with. Check out the full video below.

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ProbCause & The O'My's: "One of a Kind"

Chicago natives ProbCause & The O'My's teamed up to drop some heat in the midst of one of the city's record-breaking cold spell with their collaborative effort, "One of a Kind." ProbCause, who will continue to build on a successful 2013 by re-joining dance duo Cherub on tour in March, shows his full range with this latest track, tearing off a measured, rapid-fire verse over the soulful, horn-laden backing of The O'My's. Maceo Haymes, owner of one of the more delightfully soulful voices around, takes the reigns halfway in, crooning his way through the rest of the track. Collaborations like this are a big part of the reason this scene is on the up and up. Listen and download the track below.

Catch ProbCause live in Chicago on February 28 at Schuba's. Tix.


Lili K & The O'My's: "Baby It's Cold Outside"

Today listeners got a treat from two of the most soulful up and coming acts in the Chicago market. With a heavy helping of Christmas spirit, Lili K & The O'My's linked up to produce their own version of the timeless wintertime classic. The song, premiered today on Okayplayer, is a perfect crossroads for the 22-year-old songstress, Lili K, who released a Christmas-themed single last year with frequent collaborator Peter CottonTale and earlier this year dropped a project of her own eclectic takes on classic Jazz standards in My Favorite Things. The O'My's, who closed out their year with the release of their album, A Humble Masterpiece, are who you thought they were, setting the backdrop for a beautiful interplay between frontman Maceo Haymes and Lili K's voices. Check out the song below.

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The O'My's: "Mystic Pussy" (feat. Iceface, GLC, and Dally Auston)

Last week The O'My's dropped their new album, A Humble Masterpiece showcasing the band that has been making waves in Chicago for years. Today, we get the other side of The O'My's project as Maceo Haymes and Nick Hennessy and crew set the production for GLC, Dally Auston and Iceface who do their thing over the soulful instrumental beat accented by Haymes vocals and Will Miller's inspired horn playing. Check out the track below and stay posted to RH for more updates on The O'My's coming soon.


[Album] The O'My's: "A Humble Masterpiece"

The O'My's have been a mainstay around the Chicago music scene for six years now. In that time they have done everything from shows to hip-hop production, and last Friday celebrated their latest album, A Humble Masterpiece,  at a raucous release party at Subterranean and today on Ruby Hornet and iTunes. The core duo of Maceo Haymes and Nick Hennessy provide the backbone for the cross-genre group that blends the sounds better than anyone in the Midwest. I was able to catch up with Maceo for a few questions the other night, read more and listen to the full stream of the album below.

Jake: Tell me about putting together A Humble Masterpiece?

Maceo: The album was recorded over a year and some months, some of which is recorded with Blended Babies, a good portion was recorded at our own house. It was a pretty interesting process we went through  a lot of different phases of what we were trying to do and deciding if we wanted to do a certain sound and then just saying fuck it and make it and figure out what songs, so as of right now we still have like eight songs that are already recorded.

Jake: Does that mean we can expect another release soon?

Maceo: More so we just have them. We're just sitting on tons of fucking music, not a bad thing. It's kind of hard, it's like sitting on your hands.

Jake: Is it a quality control thing or just waiting?

Maceo: It's less about quality control. All the other songs are songs that I think are great but they didn't make it to the album because once we got the thirty-some odd songs we had to work with and then cut down, especially when putting together an album, you try to put together a sort of cohesive element or sound. That was mostly the reason for putting those eleven songs on the album and now we're figuring out what to do with the other ones. Mostly because we just want to get them out, you know? I'm not afraid that that was all of our creative juices, I just want to put it out so it's relevant, relevant to me personally. Just get it done and then I can move on.

Jake: Tell me about the production side of things with The O'My's.

Maceo: We've been doing production, we collaborate with a lot of different groups in the city, a lot of rappers and all different sorts of musicians, singers. For us it just made sense. To A: collaborate with them, but also because we make our own music and it's all live instruments and we have a sort of sound, producing for them has been interesting. We sort of stepped away from calling it The O'My's on the production side, just because it's terribly confusing, like 'these guys make rap music too?' It's been cool, the summer especially was really fucking awesome because we have a home studio and that's where we record everything and so the amount of talented people that were coming in from all around the city was a really cool thing to be a part of, I felt blessed to be a part of that.

Jake: Do you feel as though being in Chicago, eventually working with hip hop is inevitable?

Maceo: I don't think it's inevitable for everybody. It depends on the type of music you make and also the community you're a part of or connected to. Like, me and Nicholas are both super hip hop heads since the beginning, since before I sang or did any of that stuff. I've always been involved in hip hop, whether it was break dancing, DJ'ing, producing Nick threw graffiti. So in terms of who we're friends with in the scene, we're definitely way more close with the hip-hop community Lots of the live music scene in Chicago, we definitely have connections there but our roots are in hip-hop, at least community-wise.

Jake: What's next for The O'My's now that the album is out in the world.

Maceo: Next is gigging. Now that the album is done we're going to do a couple shows in the city but also go out east and west coasts. We've got a little East coast tour at the beginning of December and then probably West coast beginning of the year. Just gonna gig around with the album. The past year we've been gigging, but our focus hasn't been on performing, it's been on mostly just recording. Live shows are an integral part of our sound. What made the release show so fun for us was being able to play all these songs that we'd recorded with the band because most of the recordings, the band wasn't all there at the time. Different members of the band had different relationships with the album. It's cool to transfer that sound and make it something live. The project then takes on a whole other life, which is a lot of fun.


Photos of The O'My's shot by Rene Marban

[RH Photos] The O'My's at Sub-T 10/11/13 (Chicago)

Photos by Rene Marban

The O'My's packed Subterranean in Chicago's Wicker Park Friday night for the release of their latest album, A Humble Masterpiece. Having been a minute since their last release, Maceo Haymes, Nick Henessy and crew put on a hell of a show, getting the crowd moving with their blend of jazz and blues aesthetics mixed with an R&B/hip-hop vibe. Haymes' voice is one of the most easily-recognizable in the Chicago scene, a fact that was accented by screams and cheers each time he slowly approached the microphone. Also performing was NoNameGypsy, who joined the band onstage for a couple songs. She continues to impress around the city since hitting the scene hard earlier this summer after appearing on Chance The Rapper's seminal Acid Rap album. Warming things up was an inspired set by reggae-rockers Lion Heights who got the packed crowd moving before Milo & Otis, another eclectically amazing act, performed with their signature experimental pop sounds. All in all, the show was a solid pop off for an album that has long been awaited. As much as The O'My's have managed to work with seemingly everyone in town, the abundance of talent was the perfect accent.