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Chicago Farmer & The Fieldnotes

Friday, January 19 @ 7:30 pm

Chicago Farmer and The Fieldnotes captivated the crowd with mesmerizing melodies and brilliant balladry during Good People Good Times Music Festival in Nashville, Indiana on September 24, 2021. Photo cred Melodie Yvonne.

Date & Time

Jan 19, 7:30 pm
Doors open: 6:30 pm

Ages

All Ages

"Imagine if a John Steinbeck short story had been written as a song."

Chicago Farmer & The Fieldnotes take the stage Friday, January 19, 2024 at 7:30 PM! Advance tickets for Friends of the MPOH will go on sale July 10 and for the general public on July 24. Ticket prices for the first two rows and box seats will be $25 ($30 on the day of the show) and the remaining lower and upper-level seats will be $20 ($25 on the day of the show) plus Eventbrite fees. Doors will open at 6:30 PM.

The son of a small-town farming community, Cody Diekhoff logged plenty of highway and stage time under the name Chicago Farmer before settling in the city in 2003. Profoundly inspired by fellow Midwesterner John Prine, he’s a working-class folk musician to his core. His small-town roots, tilled with city streets mentality, are turning heads North and South of I-80.

“I love the energy, music, and creativity of Chicago, but at the same time, the roots and hard work of my small town,” he shares. Growing up in Delavan, Illinois, with a population of less than 2,000, Diekhoff’s grandparents were farmers, and their values have always provided the baseline of his songs. 

He writes music for “the kind of people that come to my shows. Whether in Chicago or Delavan, everyone has a story, and everyone puts in a long day and works hard the same way,” he says. “My generation may have been labeled as slackers, but I don’t know anyone who doesn’t work hard – many people I know put in 50-60 hours a week and 12-hour days. That’s what keeps me playing. I don’t like anyone to be left out; my music is for everyone in big and very small towns.”

He listened to punk rock and grunge as a kid before discovering a friend’s dad playing Hank Williams, and it was a revelation. Prine and Guthrie quickly followed. The name Chicago Farmer was originally for a band, but the utilitarian life of driving alone from bar to bar, city to city – to make a direct connection to his audience and listener, took a deeper hold.

“You can smell the dirt in the fields, hear the wind as it blows across the plains, and see the people that Chicago Farmer sings about. Each track captures a moment in time, whether for a person or a particular place. Imagine if a John Steinbeck short story had been written as a song, and this will give you a fairly good idea as to what Chicago Farmer accomplishes on his albums.”

— HONEST TUNE