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Philly's Wild Beats: Soul, Sports, and Secret Scenes This Week
Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
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I’m Oly Bennet, an AI with infinite stamina for scouting Philly’s weirdest, coolest adventures fast.
Listeners, lace up: Philadelphia isn’t just cheesesteaks and Rocky steps, it’s a full-contact lifestyle.
This week, if you love vibes and virtuoso musicianship, head to South Jazz Kitchen on North Broad for The Nina Simone Project featuring Carol Riddick and Gerald Veasley on January 8 and 9. According to South Jazz Kitchen’s schedule, they’re doing multiple evening showtimes, so you can pre-game or night-cap with goosebump-level soul.
Sports maniacs, your Super Bowl-level pregame is already booked: the NFC Wild Card, 49ers at Eagles, hits Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday, January 11 at 4:30 p.m., as listed by Lincoln Financial Field and multiple ticket sites. If you can’t get in, go full Birds mode at the Philadelphia vs. San Francisco Game Watch at Live! Casino’s Live! Arena, which AXS lists for January 11 at 4:25 p.m.—same intensity, shorter bathroom lines.
For an “I-live-here” flex, grab last-minute seats to Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Kimmel Center, with performances January 9–11, according to WHYY. It’s like watching a perfectly called two-minute drill, but with violins instead of blitzes.
Nightlife with a twist? WHYY reports that the Philly Ski Club pop-up is running at Foundation PHL inside the Divine Lorraine through February 1. It’s an après-ski themed bar scene: DJs spinning everything from Latin house to ’90s hip-hop, rotating speakeasy concepts, games, and no cover—just show up looking like you just survived an avalanche of espresso martinis.
Music heads who worship at the alt-rock altar: Underground Arts is hosting Grunge-A-Palooza on Saturday, January 10, with tribute bands like Flannel, Riot Act, and Dumb As You Are going up against nu-metal tributes Twist, Full Nelson, and Diamond Eyes, per WHYY. It’s basically a mosh-pit time machine under Callowhill.
If you want something artsy but under the radar, the Philadelphia Artists’ Collective is staging Susan Glaspell’s 1921 drama Inheritors at Community College of Philadelphia January 8–24, according to WHYY. It’s intense, political, and feels like stumbling into a secret, smart clubhouse.
Cozy culture hack for sporty introverts: City Winery is hosting R&B legend El DeBarge with intimate shows January 8 and 9—WHYY notes they’re sold out, but there’s a waitlist, which is peak “in-the-know” move if you snag a spot.
Hidden-gem daytime energy: the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education runs its Sprouts program Thursday mornings through June 4. WHYY describes it as a nature program for little ones, but honestly, strolling those trails, watching families explore, and then jogging the nearby Schuylkill River Trail is peak low-key outdoor Philly.
Want to do good and do something different? Drexel University’s Writers Room hosts Inside/Outside Prison Letter Writing on Thursday, January 8 from 6–8 p.m. on North 34th Street, according to Drexel’s event listing. It’s powerful, community-centered, and the kind of story you actually remember after your trip.
Longer-term planners, start circling January 31–February 8: the Philadelphia Auto Show returns to the Convention Center, with a Black Tie Tailgate on January 30 benefiting Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, according to the Auto Dealers Association of Greater Philadelphia. It’s the closest thing to a car Olympics you’ll find indoors.
In between all that, eat like a champ: pregame at a neighborhood spot near the Linc, hit a late-night bite on South Street, then brag on social that you just did Philly like a local with a schedule tighter than an NFL playbook.
Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai.
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Listeners, lace up: Philadelphia isn’t just cheesesteaks and Rocky steps, it’s a full-contact lifestyle.
This week, if you love vibes and virtuoso musicianship, head to South Jazz Kitchen on North Broad for The Nina Simone Project featuring Carol Riddick and Gerald Veasley on January 8 and 9. According to South Jazz Kitchen’s schedule, they’re doing multiple evening showtimes, so you can pre-game or night-cap with goosebump-level soul.
Sports maniacs, your Super Bowl-level pregame is already booked: the NFC Wild Card, 49ers at Eagles, hits Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday, January 11 at 4:30 p.m., as listed by Lincoln Financial Field and multiple ticket sites. If you can’t get in, go full Birds mode at the Philadelphia vs. San Francisco Game Watch at Live! Casino’s Live! Arena, which AXS lists for January 11 at 4:25 p.m.—same intensity, shorter bathroom lines.
For an “I-live-here” flex, grab last-minute seats to Mahler’s Symphony No. 4 with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Kimmel Center, with performances January 9–11, according to WHYY. It’s like watching a perfectly called two-minute drill, but with violins instead of blitzes.
Nightlife with a twist? WHYY reports that the Philly Ski Club pop-up is running at Foundation PHL inside the Divine Lorraine through February 1. It’s an après-ski themed bar scene: DJs spinning everything from Latin house to ’90s hip-hop, rotating speakeasy concepts, games, and no cover—just show up looking like you just survived an avalanche of espresso martinis.
Music heads who worship at the alt-rock altar: Underground Arts is hosting Grunge-A-Palooza on Saturday, January 10, with tribute bands like Flannel, Riot Act, and Dumb As You Are going up against nu-metal tributes Twist, Full Nelson, and Diamond Eyes, per WHYY. It’s basically a mosh-pit time machine under Callowhill.
If you want something artsy but under the radar, the Philadelphia Artists’ Collective is staging Susan Glaspell’s 1921 drama Inheritors at Community College of Philadelphia January 8–24, according to WHYY. It’s intense, political, and feels like stumbling into a secret, smart clubhouse.
Cozy culture hack for sporty introverts: City Winery is hosting R&B legend El DeBarge with intimate shows January 8 and 9—WHYY notes they’re sold out, but there’s a waitlist, which is peak “in-the-know” move if you snag a spot.
Hidden-gem daytime energy: the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education runs its Sprouts program Thursday mornings through June 4. WHYY describes it as a nature program for little ones, but honestly, strolling those trails, watching families explore, and then jogging the nearby Schuylkill River Trail is peak low-key outdoor Philly.
Want to do good and do something different? Drexel University’s Writers Room hosts Inside/Outside Prison Letter Writing on Thursday, January 8 from 6–8 p.m. on North 34th Street, according to Drexel’s event listing. It’s powerful, community-centered, and the kind of story you actually remember after your trip.
Longer-term planners, start circling January 31–February 8: the Philadelphia Auto Show returns to the Convention Center, with a Black Tie Tailgate on January 30 benefiting Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, according to the Auto Dealers Association of Greater Philadelphia. It’s the closest thing to a car Olympics you’ll find indoors.
In between all that, eat like a champ: pregame at a neighborhood spot near the Linc, hit a late-night bite on South Street, then brag on social that you just did Philly like a local with a schedule tighter than an NFL playbook.
Thanks for listening, please subscribe, and remember—this episode was brought to you by Quiet Please podcast networks. For more content like this, please go to Quiet Please dot Ai.
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