Visit Us on

Gift Card

The perfect gift for any music lover. Valid for tickets, food, & drinks at Lincoln Hall and our sister venue Schubas- click here to get yours now!

Follow our blog

Check out our tumblr blog for all things Lincoln Hall & our sister venue, Schubas.

Private Events

Book Your Next Event at LH

With our state-of-the-art sound and video systems, world-class catering options, top-rate staff, full kitchen, three stocked bars, gorgeous dining room, and spectacular music hall, Lincoln Hall is perfect for your next event.

Find Out More

Newsletter

Email Sign Up Form

Menu

With Featured Weekly Specials


Full Menu | foursquare

  • Lincoln Hall is located at 2424 N. Lincoln Ave. in Chicago, IL.

  • Advance tickets guarantee entry to the show.
    • They are general admission only and DO NOT guarantee seating.
    • For the best seats/position in the music room please arrive 30 minutes prior to show time to pick-up your tickets.
    • All shows are 21+ unless otherwise noted.
  • Tickets ARE NOT mailed to you.
    • A NON-REFUNDABLE $2.75 per ticket service charge will be added to the purchase price of each ticket - in the instance of a show cancellation, this fee will not be returned.
    • All tickets purchased through the web site are NON-REFUNDABLE.
    • All tickets are NON-TRANSFERRABLE.
    • The name in the 'Shipping Address' portion of your order will be the name your tickets are held under at the door- if you are buying tickets for someone else, you must indicate their name in these fields.
    • Advance tickets are only available through LincolnHallChicago.com (until 5 pm day of show) and JamUSA.com when noted. Lincoln Hall does not have a physical box office. Walk-up ticket purchases are only available at Lincoln Hall beginning one hour before listed show time unless the show is sold out.
Fri. Oct 22 2010

Friday, October 22 2010 10:00 PM
21+ $17.00

Lincoln Hall
Jam USA button

Theres a certain beauty and the beast quality to the greatest male/female singer/songwriter duos Consider Jane Birkin, the well-heeled toast of 60s society, hooking up with Serge Gainsbourg, the filthy Gallic singer/songwriters ever-present gauze of Gauloise smoke irreversibly clouding her reputation. Or theres Nancy Sinatra, the golden daughter of the Chairman Of The Board, whose career was rescued from its early doldrums thanks to the intervention of producer Lee Hazlewood, who injected a gravely, cynical tone that gave Nancys subsequent records a disquieting, idiosyncratic charm. And so it is with Ballad Of The Broken Seas, an album length collaboration between Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan.

Theres a similar sense of contrast, between Isobels aching, pristine chill of a vocal, and Lanegans wounded, regret-stewed burr. Their musical backpages could hardly be more different; Isobel found her initial fame playing cello and singing with deftly-melodic Glaswegian indie collective Belle & Sebastian, before branching off for the lushly-orchestrated melancholia of her Gentle Waves for two LPs, and releasing her debut solo album, the acclaimed Amorino, in 2003. Lanegan, on the other hand, sang for Screaming Trees, perhaps the greatest and most underrated of all the grunge bands, until their dissolution in 2000, since when he has juggled the solo career he began while still in the Trees, and a unique role as occasional frontman of Queens Of The Stoneage. The sweet, folksy girl and the grizzled rawk guy; a classic cocktail, perhaps, but the roles are inverted, in this case.

Tags | Follow | @ | @ |
[[field name="Sponsors Image" format="
"]]
Tonight @ Schubas
Site design by Someoddpilot