Amazing
Wednesday, Feb 9, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller I’ve seen a lot of great concerts in my day. I saw AC/DC blow Aerosmith off the stage way back in 1978. I was right up front when the Ramones scorched a tiny hall in Munich in 1980 and was stunned with delight when the Clash roared through their setlist in ‘81. I’ve been mesmeized by more great bands than I have room or energy to talk about here. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better show than last night’s performance by Wilco. The band is legendary for envisioning new boundaries and then nonchalantly breaking them, and that’s just what they did last night. The texture was so rich you could feel it with your outstretched palms. Their sound was clear, yet not overly crisp. They were crafstmanlike without being too tight, artistic without being inaccessible. There’s just no comparison between the band’s admittedly great studio albums and their transcendent live peformances. You have to experience it to understand, so I’m gonna stop trying. Just go see them.
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Oy
Wednesday, Feb 9, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller This can’t be a good thing. Jim Gumm says he will officially drop out of the race for Milton Township Assessor today after his own investigation found support for claims of fraudulent signatures on his nominating petitions.
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Tools
Wednesday, Feb 9, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller For decades, Illinois governors have had to deal with the perception that they’re not providing adequate funds for public education. It never helped that the usually independent State Board of Education would always ask for a lot more money than the governor and the General Assembly were willing or able to provide. Not this year. With the governor facing a $2 billion budget deficit, he won’t have the added worry about high-ball requests from the education establishment. The independent state agency that oversees funding for Illinois schools won’t say how much money is needed for education for next year until Gov. Rod Blagojevich announces how much cash is available - a reversal that is fueling critics who say the board is nothing more than an arm of the governor’s office.
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