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| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 86 - Artists United Against Apartheid | 12 Aug 2024 | 01:25:02 | |
In 1985, a group of musicians came together to raise awareness about the oppressive, racist government in South Africa.
Organized by Steven Van Zandt, the group calling themselves Artists United Against Apartheid was, according to music critic Dave Marsh, “the most diverse line up of popular musicians ever assembled for a single session” and the list is pretty amazing.”
Just some of the names include Bono, George Clinton, Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, Kurtis Blow, Miles Davis, Ringo Star, David Ruffin, Joey Ramone, Run DMC, Keith Richard, Bruce Springsteen, Herbie Hancock, Bonnie Raitt, that dude from Midnight Oil, AND the Fat Boys.
They jointly refused to ever play at Sun City, a luxury resort in South Africa that symbolized the racial segregation of South Africa, and they released a protest album called Sun City to raise awareness.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re diving into the history and impact of Artists United Against Apartheid.
Episode Playlists
Check out the Artists United Against Apartheid album here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 85 - When They Tried to Assassinate Bob Marley | 29 Jul 2024 | 01:19:48 | |
Bob Marley is one of the most famous figures in reggae music. On December 3, 1976, seven gunmen stormed into Bob Marley’s home in Kingstown, Jamaica and opened fire, wounding the singer, his wife, and members of his inner circle. The assassination attempt came just days before Marley was scheduled to perform at a concert in Jamaica that was supposed to calm political violence in the country.
Shot but not seriously wounded, a defiant Bob Marley performed at the Smile Jamaica concert anyway, and the incident also has a profound impact on his life and music.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the assassination attempt on Bob Marley: the details of the attack, the mysterious motives behind it, and the impact it had on Marley’s music and message. And of course, we'll pay tribute to Marley's enduring legacy and the powerful message of peace and unity that his music continues to spread.
Episode Playlists
No episode playlist for this one. Most of the songs we played in this episode are on Bob Marley, Legend.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 76 - Hot Rod Radio! Songs About Cars | 15 Jan 2024 | 01:17:14 | |
Rock and roll and cars are a classic combination. In fact, the very first rock and roll song, Rocket 88, was about a car.
So get ready to rev your engines and hit the open road because on our next episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we're shifting into high gear and exploring of music about cars. From the rhythmic hum of the engine to the wind in your hair, these tunes capture the essence of the open highway and the freedom that comes with it.
We'll be diving into the classics and exploring the rock and roll rebel attitude embodied in some of these great songs.
But it's not just about the classic rockers; we'll also hit the gas on some unexpected picks from various genres. From country roads to city streets, music about cars has a universal appeal that transcends genres and generations.
So, buckle up and get ready to cruise with us through the highways and byways of the ultimate playlist for road trips and joyrides. It's an episode fueled by the spirit of adventure, the love of the open road, and the unmistakable sound of rock and roll. Tune in and let's take a musical journey that'll make you want to hit the gas and never look back! Let’s get our kicks on Route 66.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 75 - A Classy, Classic Christmas | 15 Dec 2023 | 01:16:54 | |
We’re rock and rollers at heart here at the Prisoners of Rock and Roll, but we both have a soft spot for Christmas music. In our annual Christmas episode, we decided to hope in a one horse open sleigh and take a trip down memory lane to the classic Christmas songs of the 40s, 50s, and 60s. These are the songs we opened our presents to as kids – and many of them are from artists who were enormously popular at the time but we really only hear around the holidays this year.
So grab some punch and settle in as we are having a classy, classic Christmas.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 74 - What Are Bruce Springsteen's 5 Best Albums? | 04 Dec 2023 | 01:32:49 | |
Bruce Springsteen has released more than 20 studio albums over the course of his 50-year career, including some of the most iconic rock and roll albums in history.
We’re both huge fans of the Boss here at Prisoners of Rock and Roll, and we unfortunately didn’t get to see him this summer after he canceled part of his tour due to illness.
So in this episode we are taking a close look at we think are his top five albums. We’re going to explain how we came up with the list, talk about the songs that make him such an important figure in music and our lives, and get into what his music means to both of us.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 73 - A Look Back At We Are The World | 20 Nov 2023 | 01:30:08 | |
There were several ambitious projects in the 1980s where the music industry tried to make a difference by raising money to make a difference. One of those projects happened in 1985, when dozens of musicians formed a supergroup called USA for Africa and recorded We Are the World.
Written by Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson and produced by the legendary Quincy Jones, We Are the World included dozens of performers in a star-studded ensemble cast made up of some of the biggest names in music at the time: Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Paul Simon, Willie Nelson, Kenny Loggins, Bruce Springsteen, Cyndi Lauper, Smokey Robinson, Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Diana Ross, Huey Lewis, Hall & Oats, the Pointer Sisters, and more.
All walked into a studio where they were greeted by a sign that said “check your egos at the door.” And they did.
The finished product sold more than 20 million copies and was simultaneously played on 8,000 radio stations around the world. The project raised more than $63 million for famine relief in Africa. Nearly 40 years later, USA For Africa, is still active and fighting poverty.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and World, we’re taking a look at We Are the World – the idea behind the project, the recording, and it’s impact.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 72 - Gnarly One Hit Wonders of the 1980s | 06 Nov 2023 | 01:42:43 | |
There were a lot of things about the 1980s that we’d like to forget but one of the most memorable parts of the decade was the music. While artists like Madonna, the Police, Def Leppard, and Michael Jackson were popular for huge parts of the decade, the music scene of the 1980s is filled with artists who had one, and only one, hit song.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re talking about the one hit wonders of the 1980s. We’ve got a list of songs that includes some that we still listen to today…and some that haven’t aged very well.
So, Come On Eileen and Take On Me while we Put On the Ritz down in Funkytown.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 71 - Scandalous! A History of Music Scandals | 09 Oct 2023 | 01:43:55 | |
In today’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re digging into some of the most scandalous moments in music history. We’ve put together a list of scandals that span nearly 70 years and cover controversies, deaths, scams, crime, and outrageous behavior that drew media attention around the world.
From John Lennon saying the Beatles were bigger than Jesus to Sinead O’Connor tearing up a page of the Pope on SNL. The shocking trail of abuse left by total piece of garbage R. Kelly to Ozzy biting the head off of a bat. The circumstances of Sam Cooke’s murder to years of speculation over if Elvis really died at all. The Great White concert fire to the dumpster fire of the Fyre Festival. Milli Vanilli getting caught lip synching to U2 “giving” you one of their albums whether you wanted it or not.
We’re covering a lot of ground in this one and some of it isn’t pretty. Let the drama begin!
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 70 - When Celebrities Sing | 18 Sep 2023 | 01:30:52 | |
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at celebrities who make music. Now, a lot of famous people have decided to make albums over the years. Some of them dabble in rock and roll on the side like a lot of us and use their celebrity status to get an album recorded.
Others might have had gotten some misguided advice from someone in their inner circle telling them that releasing an album is a great way to increase their profile or make a quick buck.
We spent a lot of time looking for and listening to music for this one, and we’ve put together a pretty solid list of celebrities who released albums, including a few that might make you say, “wait, THEY released an album?”
We uncovered a lot of stuff for this one – and some of it should have stayed where we found it. A few of these albums have been scrubbed from streaming platforms but luckily the Internet is forever.
But some of these tunes aren’t bad either.
So settle in and join us as we look into the sometimes bizarre world of celebrity music.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 69 - That Song Stinks! | 04 Sep 2023 | 01:30:34 | |
If you’re one of the thousands of people who listen to Prisoners of Rock and Roll – and shame on you if you aren’t – you know we do a segment in every episode called The Electric Chair where we kill a song for being terrible.
Now, there’s a lot of awesome music out there. But let’s face it: there’s a lot of bad music too.
So much bad music that this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll is volume 2 of a show totally dedicated to talking about music that sucks. We have spent hours plumbing the depths of music
We also asked our awesome listeners and some of our podcast friends to submit their picks for the most cringe-inducing tracks out there and man, did they deliver. Get ready go groan and say, “oh no, not THAT song” as we plumb the depths of music hell for songs have left scars on our music souls. Yacht rock, southern rap, novelty songs, one hit wonders, dance tracks, and just plan bad music. It’s all here.
Parental advisory on this one rock and rollers. Having to listen to some of these songs made us pretty angry.
Special shout out to Set Lusting Bruce as well as Rock and Soul Tarot podcasts for contributing to this one!
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 68 - Does Disco Suck? | 21 Aug 2023 | 01:42:40 | |
Alright, folks, it's time to dust off those platform shoes, grab your shiniest disco ball, and get ready to debate the ultimate question: Does Disco Suck?
That's right, on this electrifying episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we're diving headfirst into the glittery, dance-filled world of disco music.
Now, disco, oh disco, you've been the life of countless parties, the soundtrack of Saturday nights, and the rhythm that had everyone hustling on the dance floor. But let's face it, you've also faced your fair share of backlash. From "Disco Demolition Night" to the "Death to Disco" movement, there's been no shortage of disco haters.
But hold on to your sequined jumpsuits, because we're here to give disco a fair shake. Say what you want about the music, it was a cultural phenomenon that brought people together under the dazzling lights of places of the discotecques.
We'll explore the roots of this genre, its rise to pop culture domination, and the artists who made us boogie 'til dawn. From Donna Summer's sultry voice to the infectious beats of the Bee Gees.
We'll discuss the impact of iconic clubs like Studio 54 and the role of dance in the disco movement. And yes, we'll even talk about those infamous dance moves that made us question the flexibility of our hips.
But does disco really deserve the bad rep it sometimes gets? Was it a necessary evolution of music, or just a fleeting trend that deserved its fate? Join us as we weigh the pros and cons, groove to the unforgettable beats, and decide once and for all: Does Disco Suck?
So dust off those old records, put on your best polyester outfit, and join us on this disco-fueled adventure. Whether you're a disco diva or a skeptic, get ready to strut your stuff, shake your groove thing, and get down to the rhythm that defined an era. It's time to boogie, baby, and settle the score – Does Disco Suck? Let's find out!
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 67 - An Anthology of Beatles Outtakes and Rarities | 31 Jul 2023 | 01:35:37 | |
The Beatles were one of the most successful bands of all time, and critics loved them as much as their fans. Lucky for music fans, they also kept tons of recordings in their archives. The Beatles Anthology was a multimedia project that included a television documentary series, a book, and three double albums that includes outtakes, rarities, demos, and even a couple of new tracks that Paul, George, and Ringo recorded with some unfinished work by John Lennon.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re going on a magical mystery tour with one of the greatest rock and roll bands of all times – The Beatles! So get ready to twist and shout, come together, and experience the music of the Beatles Anthology.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 84 - The Huge Sounds of Arena Rock | 08 Jul 2024 | 01:22:32 | |
Rock and roll got really big in the 1970s. We don’t mean in terms of popularity, although it had that going for it too. We mean the sounds got big. The audiences got big. The performances got big. Arena rock was loose definition for commercial, radio-friendly music designed to be played in big stadiums to tens of thousands of people with singalong choruses and huge stage productions.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame calls this era the golden age of hard rock in terms of its commercial airplay, but it also has its critics. People also call it dad rock, old wave, and corporate rock because it was music for mostly middle class white dudes powered by big corporate record labels.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re going to look at both sides of the argument, talk about bands like Journey, Boston, Foreigner, Kansas, and more. Let’s hit it.
Episode Playlists
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 66 - Women Who Rock | 04 Jul 2023 | 01:47:16 | |
Let’s face it. Rock and roll has always been dominated by dudes, but music is full of female trailblazers and trendsetters who rocked our world and left their mark on the industry.
We’re talking about the soulful blues of Janis Joplin to Joan Jett’s punk guitar riffs. Debbie Harry embraced her hotness while leading a band that dipped into as many different types of music as the Clash, while Annie Lennox’s androgyny helped make her an advocate for gay people around the world. Tina Turner was a rock star in every sense of the world.
The list doesn’t stop there. Heart, Stevie Nicks, Melissa Etheridge, the Go-Gos, Garbage, Halestorm, Florence & The Machine, X, the Plasmatics, the Interrupters, and Scandal. They all show that rock and roll is for everyone.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, in honor of the Kate Bush fans who are STILL calling us misogynists for not liking her music, we’re throwing a guitar through the glass ceiling by looking at women who rock!
So turn up your radio and let’s wreck some stereotypes as we celebrate the women who rock.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 65 - The History and Legends of Jazz | 05 Jun 2023 | 01:41:12 | |
Jazz was the soundtrack of America for decades – through prohibition, two World Wars, the Harlem renaissance, and more.
From the soulful trumpet of Louis Armstrong to the haunting vocals of Billie Holiday, from the trailblazing talents of Dizzy Gillespie to the cool sounds of Miles Davis, these musicians shaped the landscape of jazz and inspired countless generations of musicians.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we're taking a look at the melodies, rhythms, and improvisational genius of jazz.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 64 - When Hair Metal Saved Rock and Roll | 22 May 2023 | 01:40:35 | |
Are you ready to crank up the volume, tease your hair to new heights, and rock out like it's the 1980s? We're diving into the glitz, the glam, and the power chords of hair metal on the next episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll.
Now, let's address the elephant in the room. Hair metal often gets a bad rap, dismissed as nothing more than cheesy anthems and over-the-top fashion. But hold on as tight as a pair of spandex pants because we’re going to give hair metal the respect it deserves.
Sure, the hair was big, the outfits were outrageous, and the makeup was, well, a lot. But beneath the spandex-clad exterior, there were some seriously talented musicians who created infectious tunes that still make us pump our fists and sing along.
Believe it or not, hair metal had its roots in the rock and roll of the 1950s. Just like those pioneers, the music was all about relationships, good times, and, of course, a healthy dose of rebellion. Think about it: the lyrics were filled with tales of wild nights, broken hearts, and the pursuit of freedom. It was rock and roll escapism at its finest.
But hair metal wasn't just about the music. It was a cultural phenomenon that defined an era. It brought people together, created a sense of community, and became a soundtrack for countless memories. Whether you were headbanging at a concert or blasting your favorite cassette in your beat-up car, hair metal had a way of making you feel alive.
So join us as we pay homage to the bands that rocked the stadiums and the arenas. We're celebrating the anthems that still get our hearts pumping, and we'll prove that hair metal wasn't just a guilty pleasure – it was a damn good time that deserves respect. It's time to crank up the volume and embrace the power of the riff, the power of the party, and the power of rock and roll. Hair metal, we salute you!
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 63 - The Smooth Sounds of Doo Wop | 08 May 2023 | 01:24:20 | |
Doo wop music. It’s the harmonized sound of street corner serenades and teenage romance. The irresistible sound that makes you wanna snap your fingers, sway your hips, and sing along with those timeless harmonies.
This music broke down racial barriers years before the civil rights movement, as millions of kids across the country just cared about listening to great music.
Some of the most popular groups of the era were Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, The Drifters, the Platters, Dion & The Belmonts, and more. There were also dozens of one hit wonders that you still hear today, like Earth Angel and Get A Job.
As the 1950s gave way to the 1960s, doo wop began to give way to other styles of music like rock and roll and soul. But it’s legacy and the music lives on.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re looking at the history of doo wop music so gather ‘round that burning trash barrel out on the corner. We’re going on a music journey that will have you singing “shoo be doo” in no time.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 62 - Does Kid Rock Suck? | 24 Apr 2023 | 01:17:32 | |
Kid Rock. Some love him, some hate him, but everyone has an opinion. He’s been around for nearly 25 years and has sold tens of millions of albums as his sound has evolved from hip hop to nu metal to country. But does he suck? That's the question we're going to argue today on Prisoners of Rock and Roll.
On one hand, he sings, he raps, he plays multiple instruments. He likes soul, country, rock and roll, and blues music.
On the other hand, he’s become a caricature of himself. He's embraced a certain kind of redneck culture that turns some people off. He's been accused of cultural appropriation and insensitivity. And his music can be formulaic and repetitive.
So where does that leave us? Is Kid Rock a good musician or not? Does he evolve his sound or is he a pandering musical used car salesman?
It's a question that's up for debate. And that's exactly what we're going to do on today's episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll. We're going to listen to some of his biggest hits and some of his lesser-known tracks, and we're going to try and answer the question once and for all: does Kid Rock suck?
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 61 - John Williams: The Greatest Music Composer of All Time | 10 Apr 2023 | 01:41:26 | |
If you’ve ever watched a movie, you’ve heard music from John Williams. He’s one of the greatest classical music composers of the last 100 years and one of America’s most accomplished musicians. His music has won 5 Oscars, 25 Grammys, and four Golden Globes. The only person with more Academy Award nominations is Walt Disney himself.
The list of movies he’s written to the music to is practically a guide to American cinema: ET, Indiana Jones, Harry Potter, Home Alone, Jaws, Jurassic Park, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Superman, Star Wars. Should I continue? He also wrote the music for the Olympics, Sunday Night Football, and more.
On this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re going to mix it up and take a look at the music of John Williams.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
Check out the episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 60 - Why the Judgment Night Soundtrack Was So Groundbreaking | 20 Mar 2023 | 01:35:26 | |
Released seven years after Aerosmith and Run DMC brought rap and rock together on Walk This Way, the soundtrack to the 1993 film Judgment Night was a groundbreaking moment in the crossover between the two music genres. Every song on the album was a collaboration between an artist from each genre and it featured some of the biggest names in music at the time.
Helmet, Faith No More, Sonic Youth, Pearl Jam and Slayer worked with Ice-T, House of Pain, Cypress Hill, Onyx, and De La Soul. 30 years later, it’s a seminal moment in music history that showed us what the fusion of these two genres could do.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the Judgment Night soundtrack. The story behind the concept. How the artists worked together. How one guy in the story is the inspiration for Happy Gilmore. Plus, Cyndi Lauper fans make a strong case for her induction in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Kate Bush fans are coming for us with their pitchforks and torches for saying we don’t like her music.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
Be sure to listen to all of the crossover songs on the Judgment Night soundtrack here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 59 - The 2023 Rock Hall of Fame Nominees | 06 Mar 2023 | 01:38:26 | |
It’s pretty easy to complain about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominees every year – heck, we’ve done it ourselves more than once. But the nominees for the class of 2023 are out and it’s a pretty solid list. There’s a mix of artists from different eras and different genres. Some first timers and some artists that made us go “yeah, why AREN’T they in the hall of fame yet?” Still no Motorhead, Funk Brothers, or Motley Crue though.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re talking about the nominees of the rock and roll hall of fame. What do we think of this year’s list? Who is getting in? Who deserves to get in? And how much do we dislike Kate Bush? Grab a cold one and settle in for this one.
We’re sponsored by Boldfoot Socks (www.boldfoot.com) and McCusker’s Tavern (17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia). We’re also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network (http://pantheonpodcasts.com/)
Episode Playlist
Check out this week’s episode playlist:
Listen
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| 58 - Honoring Chris Cornell | 20 Feb 2023 | 01:19:24 | |
Chris Cornell was one of the best rock and roll singers of the last 40 years. He had an incredible four octave vocal range that showed could be incredibly powerful and delicate, sometimes in the same song. And the music he created was as diverse as his range.
He came up in the music scene in the 1990s as the front man for Soundgarden and Temple of the Dog before taking over lead vocals for Audioslave. He also released a handful of solo albums that includes singer / songwriter material with an acoustic guitar, the theme from a James Bond movie, and some more electronic work with Timbaland.
He also struggled with depression and addiction until his suicide in 2017.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear more Chris Cornell, check out the Spotify playlist for this episode.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
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| 57 - The Music of 1993 | 06 Feb 2023 | 01:50:50 | |
We are heading back to 1993 to to look at songs and albums that turn 30 this year. It was a solid year for rock and roll, with Versus from Pearl Jam, In Utero from Nirvana, and Siamese Dream from Smashing Pumpkins. Debut albums from the Counting Crows, the Cranberries, Bjork, Tool, Collective Soul, Candlebox, Lenny Kravitz, Snoop Dogg, and the Wu-Tang Clan.
We’ve got a lot of great music to talk about in this one – and some not so good tunes too (we're looking at you, Snow).
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear the music of 1993, check out the Spotify playlist for this episode.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 83 - The Rocket Man & The Piano Man: Elton John & Billy Joel | 03 Jun 2024 | 01:29:56 | |
There are few rock and rollers in the last 40 years more synonymous with the piano than Elton John and Billy Joel. These iconic singer songwriters have sold over 450 million albums, had 90 top 40 hits between the two of them, and played tons of shows together during their Face to Face tours from 1994 to 2010.
While they are both known for their piano playing, each of them have their own signature styles. Billy Joel is known for writing biographical songs and incorporating pop and doo wop in his music. Elton John is a legendary showman who is just as known for his flashy outfits as his music.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, it’s the Piano Man versus the Rocket Man. Let’s hit it.
Episode Playlists
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 56 - Live Aid: When Music Fought Famine | 23 Jan 2023 | 01:45:59 | |
Live Aid was one of the biggest rock and roll concerts ever thrown. On July 13, 1985 dozens of some of the biggest acts in music performed at Wembley Stadium in London and JFK Stadium in Philadelphia to raise money to fight the devastating famine in Ethiopia. Organized in just 10 weeks, the show was attended by 72,000 people in London and 100,000 in Philly, while another 1.9 billion people in 150 countries watched the television broadcast. 95% of the televisions on earth at the time watched that concert.
The show raised $127 million dollars. More than 75 acts performed, including Queen, U2, David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Madonna, Tom Petty, the Beach Boys, Eric Clapton, Duran Duran, Judas Priest, Run DMC, Crosby Stills Nash and Young, and Santana. The Stones backed up Bob Dylan. Ozzy Osbourne reunited with Black Sabbath for the first time in 5 years. And Led Zeppelin played for the first time since Bonzo’s death in a terrible performance with Phil Collins on drums.
We’re going to cover it all in this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear the music from Live Aid, check out the compilation on Spotify or watch it on YouTube.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 55 - The Weird World of Les Claypool | 09 Jan 2023 | 01:48:35 | |
Les Claypool is a musical mad scientist and one of the weirdest musicians to have commercial success in rock and roll.
He’s best known for his amazing bass playing and quirky sense of humor in leading the band Primus (and for doing the theme for South Park), but he’s also put together a handful of other really cool projects that made other types of music.
Including Oysterhead, the funk jazz supergroup with Trey Anastasio from Phish and Stewart Copeland from The Police. The Duo de Twang country music project. And, most recently, the awesome partnership with Sean Lennon called The Claypool Lennon Delirium with Sean Lennon.
He produces most of his music from his home studio Rancho Relaxo and is also an author and film director. Oh, and he once auditioned for Metallica. Is there anything he can’t do? Let’s find out.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 54 - A Prisoners of Christmas Party | 19 Dec 2022 | 01:48:20 | |
The Prisoners of Rock and Roll 3rd annual Christmas special. This year, we’ve decided to fill up the punch bowl, bake some cookies, and have a very special musical Christmas party. We’re opening up the studio and inviting artists who have recorded some of our favorite Christmas songs to stop by for some festive cheer.
We’ll be spending time with Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole. Darlene Love and Elvis. Dean Martin and…Lemmy from Motorhead? AC/DC and Henry Rollins? Dee Snider Kermit the Frog?
I better pour an extra shot of rum into the eggnog for this one. Hallelujah, holy shit. Where’s the Tylenol?
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 53 - Heavy Metal History | 05 Dec 2022 | 01:41:08 | |
Heavy metal music is usually about speed or power, or speed and power. It’s an incredibly diverse genre of music: two metal fans can have a conversation at a bar about music and quickly realize that there aren’t any bands that they both like. The lines between metal and hard rock and roll are blurry – Encyclopedia Britannica says Aerosmith is a heavy metal band. Do they belong in the same category as Slayer or Sabbath?
There’s no simple definition of what heavy metal is but wethink those rock and roll scholars Beavis and Butthead defined it best when they said it just kicks ass.
In this denim-jacket-wearing, air guitar playing, horns up episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re looking at the history and evolution of heavy metal.
Our show is sponsored by Boldfoot Socks and McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We're also proud members of the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 52 - Is Rock Dead? | 21 Nov 2022 | 01:53:14 | |
We recently realized that we’ve been doing this show for almost two years and have rarely talked about modern rock and roll. That got us thinking – is rock and roll dead? The airwaves and Billboard charts are dominated by hip hop and country artists. The biggest draws on the concert circuit are older acts. So in this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re going to talk about the current state of rock music and ask ourselves if rock and roll matters any more? We’re going to play some songs from some bands and share our thoughts.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com. .
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 51 - Rock and Jock! Music & Sports | 07 Nov 2022 | 01:31:21 | |
Music is a huge part of any sporting event. Teams and stadiums use it to get crowds fired up and into the game, so much so that there are certain songs that you automatically associate with sports.
In honor of the World Series, the Prisoners of Rock and Roll are holding our own music pep rally and talking about the best music to hear at a sporting event. Nothing gets a crowd fired up like Thunderstruck by AC/DC or Seven Nation’s Army by the White Stripes. And who hasn’t been at a game where they fire up some It Takes Two by Rob Base or Rock and Roll Part 2 by Gary Glitter
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 50 - Happy Birthday to Us! A Look Back at 2 Years | 24 Oct 2022 | 01:47:26 | |
Music is awesome. Have you ever had one of those moments where you start a song over at the beginning because you were doing something else and didn’t get to hear the whole thing? Or have you heard a song and are immediately transported back to some moment in time you associate with it? We have. And that’s why we love doing this show for the last two years. .
In episode 50 of the Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the Prisoners of Rock and Roll! We’re jumping in our Magical Mystery Musical Wayback Machine and talking about our favorite shows from the last two years.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
We put together an episode playlist for every episode. They're in the show notes for every episode.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 49 - Listen Up Y'All, It's the Beastie Boys | 10 Oct 2022 | 01:45:14 | |
The Beastie Boys are so important to music because they never stopped evolving. They started as a hardcore band before putting down their instruments and becoming part of the golden age of hip hop.
After being one of the first and most successful acts on Def Jam, they split with the label and took creative control of their music and their image. They picked up their instruments again and built a new sound on a foundation of dense samples and parts of rock, hip hop, jazz, funk, a sense of humor and some awesome videos.
In episode 49 of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the career and music of the Beastie Boys. The way they combined rap and rock. Their collaboration with Swiss filmmaker Nathaniel Hornblower. The female Beastie Boy in the early years. How they invented the term mullet. And more.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 48 - The Songs Led Zeppelin Ripped Off | 26 Sep 2022 | 01:46:59 | |
There’s no debate that Led Zeppelin is one of the most powerful heavy, blues, rock and roll bands of all time. But what IS up for debate is their originality. Several of their biggest hits borrow (or steal) from songs that came before them, mostly from African American blues singers who already sang the blues because they were getting shafted by society. They’ve been sued almost a half a dozen times for copyright infringement and have made a career of taking songwriting credits for stuff they just didn’t write.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at when the levee breaks from a flood of accusations of plagiarism by shining a light on the songs behind some of Led Zeppelin’s most famous tunes. We’ll play the originals and the Zeppelin cuts that quote unquote “inspired” them. We’ll look at all of the times Zeppelin has cut a check and updated the songwriting credits as well as some other songs that sound coincidentally like something else.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 47 - God Save the Queen: The Sex Pistols | 12 Sep 2022 | 01:46:12 | |
The Sex Pistols were one of the pioneers of the music, fashion, and attitude of the punk rock movement. They were only together for about 2 ½ a half years and released just one album. But over that period, they were just as famous (or infamous) for their behavior as they were as for their music. They didn’t care what you, the music industry, or society thought about them.
Led by frontman Johnny Rotten and an illiterate guitar player named Steve Jones who stole one of his first axes from David Bowie, they took a scorched Earth, double middle finger, bugger off attitude toward everything.
Over their short career, they were kicked off of two record labels, banned from British television, caused dozens of fights, and became the embodiment of punk rock anarchy. Then there’s the tragedy of Sid Viscious, who became an icon of the nihilistic live fast / die young attitude up when he died of a heroin overdose while out on bail for allegedly murdering his girlfriend.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a close look at the Sex Pistols. Including their chaotic manager Malcolm McClaren, the fights, the censorship, a Christmas party they threw for working class kids, and that one frigging amazing album that changed music forever.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear full versions of the music we discussed this week, check our our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 82 - The Moscow Music Peace Festival | 15 Apr 2024 | 01:12:18 | |
The Moscow Music Peace Festival was a two-day rock concert held in August 1989.
Held during Mikhail Gorbachev’s period of Glastnost, Russia allowed a handful of western rock and roll acts to perform for the first time in Moscow, and over 100,000 people living in Cold War Soviet Union packed into Central Lenin Station to witness the forbidden fruit of late 80s rock and roll in all of its excess.
Motley Crue, Ozzy Osbourne, Skid Row, Bon Jovi, and the Scorpions shared the stage with some Russian rock and roll acts to promote peace and raise awareness about drug and alcohol addiction….Because Ozzy and Motley Crue are just the people you want promoting the virtues of sobriety.
But the Moscow Music Peace Festival was also an important cultural moment near the end of the Cold War. By the end of the show, stoic Soviet soldiers were throwing their hats in the air and rocking out to the music. The event also inspired the Scorpions to write their hit song Wind of Change, which became an anthem for the end of the Cold War as the Berlin Wall came down just a few months later.
So tune in for this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll as we take a peek behind the Iron Curtain for a look at the Moscow Music Peace Festival.
Episode Playlists
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 46 - Woodstock: Peace, Mud, and Music | 22 Aug 2022 | 01:52:22 | |
Woodstock was an important moment in pop culture, music, and the hippie movement. The organizers of the event originally planned it as a way to raise money so they could build a recording studio in New York. They sold tickets in advance but decided to let people in for free when nearly half a million people showed up at Max Yasgur’s dairy farm in Bethel, New York over the course of three days in August during the summer of love in 1969.
The people in attendance were hammered by a massive rain storm that turned the dairy farm into a muddy mess. The traffic leading to the event was so bad that some concert goers abandoned their car on the road and walked to the venue.
But those who braved the weather, the traffic, and the drugs saw performances by Richie Havens, Joe Cocker, Janis, the Who, CCR, the Grateful Dead, Crosby Still Nash and Young, Santana, and more. Oh, and a guy named Jimi Hendrix closed the show with a performance of the Star Spangled Banner that became a symbol of the anti war movement.
In this episode, we’re taking you to Bethel, New York for three days of peace and music. We’re going to talk about the story behind the event – when the town did everything they could to stop it from happening. We’ll look at the impact it had on music play some of the awesome music, and provide our insight along the way.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Hear More
If you want to hear more about the music of Woodstock, check out the documentary Woodstock. This playlist also has a lot of the awesome music from the event.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 45 - The Greatest Drummers of All Time | 08 Aug 2022 | 02:06:08 | |
The drum is the world’s oldest instrument. Drummers can use their kit to lay down the back beat and help the rest of a band keep time, or they can use it in solos just like a guitar.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the best drummers in music history. We’re starting with the big band drummers Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, who put the spotlight on their instruments and paved the way for modern drummers for generations. Then we’re covering legends like Bonzo and Keith Moon, Charlie Watts and Ginger Baker. Ringo and Rick Allen. All the way up to modern drummers like Questlove Meg White.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Episode Playlist
Support all of the drummers we talked about by checking out our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 44 - Truckin' With the Grateful Dead | 25 Jul 2022 | 01:47:50 | |
The Grateful Dead are among the most unlikely stars in the history of rock and roll. They created a culture and became one of the most famous bands in the world on their own terms. They toured relentlessly, made things up as they went and didn’t care about making mistakes. They never cared about being famous, and would probably hate me even calling them stars in this monologue.
In this trippy episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at Grateful Dead – the music, the drugs, the bootlegs, the Deadheads, their impact on music, their legacy, and what it’s like seeming in them in concert. Turn on, tune in, and drop out.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Episode Playlist
Ready to jam out to some Grateful Dead? Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or send us an email.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 43 - Back to the Beach: The Songs of Summer | 11 Jul 2022 | 01:37:45 | |
Summertime is the right time for heading to the beach, going to the lake, or sitting by the pool. And you can’t do any of that without some music. In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re talking about the best songs of summer. So open a cold beverage of choice, sit back in your beach chair, and turn up the volume.
Our show is sponsored by our home base of McCusker's Tavern at 17th and Shunk Streets in Philadelphia. We are proud supporters of our friends at Boldfoot Socks. We are just one of the dozens of awesome shows on the Pantheon Podcast Network.
Episode Playlist
Looking for some tunes to listen to this summer? We have you covered! Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or drop us an email.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| Update -- Where The Heck Have We Been? | 28 Jun 2022 | 00:03:01 | |
Hey guys!
Sorry you haven't gotten a new episode from us in a few weeks. Life outside of podcast land has been hectic, but we'll be back on July 11th. In the meantime, Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot us an email at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 42 - Rock The Mic with the Golden Age of Hip Hop | 05 Jun 2022 | 01:59:10 | |
Like rock and roll before it, hip hop gave a new voice to generations of people and became a cultural movement just as much as a type of music. In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the Golden Age of hip hop. We’re going to look at the pioneers who started hip hop in the wake of disco. The rappers who helped bring hip hop to the mainstream like Run DMC and LL Cool J. And rappers like Public Enemy and NWA who used their music to speak up about how black people were being treated in society.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot us an email.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 41 - Rock Around the Clock - Music of the 50s | 23 May 2022 | 01:52:07 | |
The 1950s were an awesome time for music. And when rock and roll crossed paths with television, it blew the doors off of post-war America and changed everything it touched. These artists built the foundation of modern music and you can still hear their influence on artists 70 years later. Elvis. Chuck Berry. Buddy Holly. And more.
But the story isn’t all sock hops and poodle skirts. The history of early rock and roll also contains stories of tragedy, scandal, and racism that ended this early era as quickly as it started.
On today’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the beginning of rock music and the 1950s.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or send us an email.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 40 - Hold Those Lighters High! Power Ballads | 09 May 2022 | 01:37:10 | |
Hair metal ruled the radio and the backs of denim jackets in the 1980s. A cornerstone of every hair metal band’s music output was a power ballad – this was a chance for the bad guys in rock and roll to show their softer side by slowing things down and singing about the women they love. These were the songs you put on a mixtape for the girl who sat in front of you in history class or requested on the radio on a Saturday night.
On tonight’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at our 10 favorite monster power ballads of all time. And we’ve got a pencil standing by in case the tape gets stuck in the player. Time to hold those lighters high!
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 39 - "Dear Loser" -- The History of Sub Pop Records | 18 Apr 2022 | 01:38:29 | |
Sub Pop was an independent record label that rose to fame by putting out albums by several Seattle rock bands before they got huge and had teenagers rocking Doc Martens and flannels. While the label is still around today, they’re best known for releasing early material from Nirvana, Soundgarden, Mudhoney, L7, and more. In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we take a look at Sub Pop Records and the role they played on the Seattle music scene. We read read their famous rejection letter that started with the salutation “Dear Loser” and tell the story about how the label owners got Nirvana’s first record contract out of a library book after a very drunk Krist Novoselic showed up at their home demanding one. And of course, we’ll talk about the bands and play some clips.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. New subscribers can get 10% off of your first month at betterhelp.com/prisoner.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 38 - The Hottest Band in the World: Kiss! | 04 Apr 2022 | 02:17:35 | |
When it comes to rock and roll, nobody does it louder or bigger than KISS. They took the idea that rock is about having a good time and then turned that up to 11 with their bluesy music, soaring solos, and some of the most recognizable looks in rock and roll.
In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at KISS. Their rise to fame. The personality conflicts. The make up. The live shows with the explosions, fire breathing, and blood spitting. And of course, the merchandise!
Plus, we announce the winners of the vote for greatest Rock and Roll Hall of Fame snubs and talk to our pal Bert Lepore from the Mix Tapes and Tasty Cakes podcast.
You wanted the best and you got the best. The hottest podcast in the land, Prisoners of Rock and Roll!
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. New subscribers can get 10% off of your first month at betterhelp.com/prisoner.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 81 - The Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection | 01 Apr 2024 | 01:32:03 | |
Get ready to step into the ring as we explore the electrifying tag team of professional wrestling and rock and roll in this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll.
We’re going to take a look at the iconic rock and wrestling era of the late 80s, when the WWF superstars climbed out of the ring and picked up the mic to record TWO albums of them singing: 1985’s The Wrestling Album and 1987s Piledriver: The Wrestling Album II. And we’re going to talk about how Cyndi Lauper helped bring wrestling into the mainstream.
Then we’re going to check out some iconic entrance music from wrestling history, and listen to some other albums that wrestlers have put out over the years.
We’ve also got some weird stuff. Junk Yard Dog singing on American Bandstand. The Mouth of the South Jimmy Hart’s top 10 hit in the 60s with a song you probably know, and Mean Gene Okerlund’s rockabilly album of the 50s.
And what better time to do this!? Wrestlemania 40 is happening in Philadelphia and our home base at McCusker’s Tavern is hosting a very special event with our friend and former professional wresting star, The Blue Meanie, who calls McCusker’s his favorite bar on the planet.
So whatcha gonna do, brother, when the Prisoners of Rock and Roll run wild on you!?
Episode Playlists
Check out all of the songs we discussed in this week's episode here.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube. or drops us an email at show@prisonersofrockandroll.com.
Or if you're in Philadelphia, come visit our home base at McCusker's Tavern.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 37 - Return of the King: The Elvis Comeback Special | 21 Mar 2022 | 01:40:10 | |
By 1968, Elvis Presley he had been out of the music spotlight for a decade. He had only performed once since getting out of the army in 1960, and most of his time was spent turning out dozens of b-level movies that left him frustrated with his career. Then his manager and infamous jerk Colonel Tom Parker pitched an idea to NBC to have Elvis do a TV special. Presley took the stage in a black leather outfit and reminded EVERYONE that he was the King of Rock and Roll.
In this week’s episode, we’re taking a close look at Elvis’ 68 Comeback Special. We’re going to talk about his career before and after the event, play some of our favorite clips, and discuss why this show was such an important moment in rock and roll.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. New subscribers can get 10% off of your first month at betterhelp.com/prisoner.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
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| 36 - Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Snubs | 07 Mar 2022 | 01:59:41 | |
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has announced the nominees for the class of 2022. As always, the list includes some people who deserve to be inducted as well as some head scratchers. In this week’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re talking about artists who have been snubbed by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
We’ve put together a list of 10 artists that we think should be nominated, and we want you to vote on who should get in. VOTE NOW.
Plus, we’re going to send a song to the Electric Chair, talk about the death of Mark Lanegan, and chat with Jesse Jackson from the Set Lusting Bruce podcast in our Visiting Hours segment.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. New subscribers can get 10% off of your first month at betterhelp.com/prisoner.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 35 - The Faces of David Bowie | 21 Feb 2022 | 01:50:38 | |
David Bowie defied every category society tried to put him in. He constantly experimented with new sounds in his music and releasing albums that were glam, proto punk, industrial, and plastic soul. He blurred the lines of gender, fashion, and sexuality. He also combined theater and music by inventing characters that he played on stage and in his music.
In this week’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re going to take a look at the faces of David Bowie including Major Tom, Ziggy Stardust, Halloween Jack, The Thin White Duke, and the Blind Prophet from his final album, Blackstar.
We’re part of Pantheon Podcasts.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
| 34 - Does Rush Suck? | 07 Feb 2022 | 01:46:44 | |
Rush is one of the most successful progressive rock bands of all time. They’ve made 14 platinum albums and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame calls them “the patron saints of brainy, technical, ambitious rock and roll.” But we just don’t like them.
Are we missing something? Do we have bad taste in music? On today’s episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we agreed to put our opinions aside and objectively listen to some of their most popular and important cuts. Then we’re going to sit and down and discuss: does Rush suck?
Part of Pantheon Podcasts.
Episode Playlist
Check out all of the great music we talked about in our episode playlist.
Get In Touch
Check us out online, on Facebook and Twitter, or shoot get in touch at prisonersofrockandroll@gmail.com.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | |||
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