Episodios

  • The Queen of Soul
    Nov 16 2025

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    Today we turn to a voice that has become a kind of measuring stick. A singer you can’t ignore, can’t casually imitate, and certainly can’t replace.

    Aretha Louise Franklin.

    You can line up all the adjectives: legendary, iconic, incomparable. But with Aretha, those words almost sound lazy. The real story is more interesting. It’s the story of how a shy, brilliant preacher’s daughter walked out of a Detroit church and, without surrendering where she came from, changed what mainstream American music could sound like — and what it could mean.


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    24 m
  • Dylan and the Fall
    Nov 15 2025

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    If you grew up in a certain era, his name isn’t just a performer on a poster. It’s a weather system. A shift in air pressure. A bulletin from the fault line where art, politics, faith, doubt, youth, age, and trouble all collided.

    And at the end of this episode, I’m going to tell you about one night—one Bob Dylan concert—that coincided with the most frightening turn my own life had taken up to that point, and how, in a way, it nudged me toward paying attention to people many others don’t see.

    But let’s start with the man himself.

    Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota, and grew up in the mining town of Hibbing on the Mesabi Iron Range. Hibbing was not Greenwich Village, not California, not London. It was wind, work, winters, and radio.

    Inside that small-town house, though, the signals of the wider world were pouring in: country music, blues, early rock ’n’ roll, gospel, and crooners—all collapsing into one restless imagination. He listened hard. He absorbed. And he did what born artists do: he tried things on.

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    20 m
  • California Counterpoints
    Nov 14 2025

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    Today’s pairing may look odd until you start really listening:

    The Beach Boys and The Grateful Dead.

    Two California bands. Two American institutions. Two completely different ideas of what a band is for.

    One built pop cathedrals in the studio and spent decades trying to bring that sound to the stage.


    The other built a moving city on the road and treated the studio almost like a postcard from their real life’s work.

    Let’s spend some time with both—and with the very different concert worlds they created.

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    18 m
  • Tickets and Conscience
    Nov 13 2025

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    Today I want to put two names in the same frame—Joan Baez and Taylor Swift—not because they sound alike or have the same values but because they tell us how the culture around music, fandom, and accessibility to their shows have changed in less than one lifetime.

    Same art form. Very different worlds.

    This episode is about those two worlds.

    No boxing match.
    No “who’s better.”

    Just what it means that one night with Baez cost you five dollars, and one night with Swift might cost someone else a small fortune.

    In one: Joan Baez at Catholic University—five dollars a ticket. A guitar, a voice that sounds like it dropped in from a kinder universe, and the feeling that history, morality, and music are all sitting beside you.

    In the other: Taylor Swift in a sold-out stadium—tens of thousands of phones glowing, a three-hour epic of costume changes and choreography, and ticket prices that can look like a month’s rent.

    Before I go any further, a brief portrait of Joan Baez - she was born January 9, 1941, in Staten Island, New York and raised in a Quaker family with a strong social conscience. She emerged at the end of the 1950s folk revival, her pure, ringing vibrato and unadorned guitar style making traditional ballads and spirituals feel both ancient and immediate. Her breakthrough came with performances at the Newport Folk Festival (1959–60) and early albums that brought folk music—and later protest music—to a mass young audience.

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    25 m
  • Enduring Stones
    Nov 12 2025

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    In a recent episode, we spent time with a man who changed popular culture and then became a warning about what fame, isolation, and addiction can do to a single human body—Elvis Presley. Brilliant, iconic, but ultimately tragic.

    Today… similar voltage. Very different story.

    This is about a band that came out of the same storm system of sex, drugs, and rock and roll… but somehow did not end as a cautionary tale on a bathroom floor. Instead, they turned danger into discipline, scandal into strategy, and raw rebellion into one of the longest-running creative partnerships in modern music.

    In this series, we’ve already met Frank Sinatra, who turned phrasing and breath into a method—and Chuck Berry, who wired the circuitry of rock and roll into the American imagination. Elvis showed us how a single, fragile human can be crushed under the weight of that circuitry.

    Today’s story is different. This is what happens when that same dangerous current is handed to a band that refuses to burn out.

    The Rolling Stones.
    This is not just a tale of sex, drugs, and rock and roll. This is the story of staying power.

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    19 m
  • The Beatles Blueprint
    Nov 11 2025

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    I’d like to begin, not in Liverpool or Hamburg or Abbey Road, but in an American living room—mine, and millions of others—on a Sunday night in 1964.

    It’s February 9th. The television is a piece of furniture. The picture is black and white. Ed Sullivan is the gatekeeper of what “really matters.” We’ve heard rumors about four long-haired boys from England. Maybe we’ve seen a little newspaper photo. Maybe a DJ has spun “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and sounded half amused, half alarmed, while the phone lines lit up.

    And then there they are.

    John. Paul. George. Ringo.

    Matching suits. Hair just long enough to scandalize parents without terrifying them. Tight harmonies. Songs that feel simple and impossibly fresh at the same time. Sullivan reading his cards. Teenage girls screaming. Camera cutting to faces in the audience already past language.

    Seventy-three million people watching at once. Almost 40 percent of the country.

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    22 m
  • The Elvis Trap
    Nov 10 2025

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    Today we’re stepping into complicated territory.

    Not a personal hero of mine.

    Not a composer whose scores I pore over, or a bandleader whose arrangements I quote with delight or a singer I enjoy listening to.

    We’ve just spent time with artists like Frank Sinatra, who turned phrasing into a method, and Chuck Berry, who wired rock’s circuitry with wit and precision. Both, in their own ways, were architects of how modern music sounds.

    Today’s subject is someone you simply cannot walk around if you’re tracing how popular music, celebrity, and American culture twisted themselves together in the second half of the twentieth century.

    Elvis Presley.

    For some, he’s the thrilling young rebel in black and white. For others, he’s a cartoon in a white jumpsuit. For many, he’s a brand—lunchboxes, impersonators, Halloween costumes—more than a musician.

    For me, and for this podcast, he’s something else: a case study in what happens when a very real, very shy Southern kid with a remarkable voice is plugged directly into a machine that never turns off.

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    23 m
  • Rock’s Rough Architect
    Nov 9 2025

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    Before we talk about charts and riffs and influence, I want to begin with a memory.

    Years ago, I saw Chuck Berry live at the Paramount Theatre in Manhattan.
    I later learned that a few years after that, the Paramount Theater was completely shut down. Anyway, that night Chuck Berry was on a bill with The Animals and The Dixie Cups—a lineup that already told you how fast the musical world was changing. The British Invasion bands were arriving with their sharp suits and American R&B records tucked under their arms. In fact, the animals had the number one song in the country with the house of the rising Sun. And there were girl groups with immaculate harmonies. The Dixie Cups had the number two song in the country with chapel of love. Here was a crowd already fluent in the new language of pop.

    And then one of rocks pioneers - Chuck Berry - walked onstage.

    No elaborate light show, no army of amplifiers, no sentimental introduction. Just that stance, that sly half-smile, and a guitar tone as clean and cutting as a bell. You could feel the air in the room shift.

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    21 m