Podcasts by Category
American Song is a podcast that traces the origins and development of American - and ultimately world-wide - forms of modern musical entertainment. Over time, we will trace every major genre from its origins through the current day.American Song looks at the development of our music through the lens of social, political, and economic changes that were occurring in each case, and we'll feature the most important musicians in each genre.Every episode is chock-full of the music we love and where possible, we include archival interviews so you can hear about, in the actual words and voices of these great musicians and singers, the motives and passions that drove their creativity.
- 36 - Southern Rock: Coming to Terms with a Complicated Past (Part Two)
This is the second half of a two-part episode
In the late 1960's and early 1970's, Southern rock, a rebellious fusion of blues, rock and roll, and country music, emerged as the defiant cry from the heart of the South. Lynyrd Skynyrd's guitars wailed like banshees, their lyrics echoing the region's resistance to outside finger-pointing and strengthened a determination to preserve their own cultural identity. Never mind the warts and blemishes. The Allman Brothers Band played with improvisations like soaring eagles. Their music captured the untamed spirit, passion and raw energy of the South.
The intensity of Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Outlaws was a force of nature, their music was a raw and unfiltered expression of southern pride. Their guitars roared like thunder, their drums pounded like a heartbeat, and their lyrics spoke of rebellion, and the indomitable spirit of the South.John Fogerty and Creedence Clearwater Revival's showed that Southern music extended past Southern borders. Their music, infused with idealism and earthiness, captured the hopes and dreams of ordinary people. Their melodies were catchy and memorable, their lyrics were simple yet profound, and their art spoke directly to the hearts of their listeners. CCR offered a sense of hope and possibility in a world often filled with uncertainty.
Robbie Robertson and the Band's music was a tapestry of Americana, woven from the threads of blues, country, rock and roll, and folk. With songs written by a member of America’s first people, who crafted melodies that were both familiar and fresh, The Band captured the essence of the American experience. All its triumphs and tragedies, from the pinnacle of joy to the depths of sorrow, Robertson helped reveal a nation in search of an identity.
All of this and more await you in this latest episode! Hope you enjoy it!
Featured Artists
Alabama
The Allman Bros.
The Band
Black Oak Arkansas
Carl Perkins
The Charlie Daniels Band
Creedence Clearwater Revival
Graham Parker
Hank Williams
John Lee Hooker
Lonnie Mack
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Molly Hatchett
Muddy Waters
Neil Young
The Outlaws
Rossington Collins Band
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Links to Supporting Episodes
Season One Episode Four
Season One Episode Seven
Season One Episode Eight
Season Two Episode EightTue, 12 Dec 2023 - 35 - Southern Rock: Coming to Terms with a Complicated Past (Part One)
In the late 1960's and early 1970's, Southern rock, a rebellious fusion of blues, rock and roll, and country music, emerged as the defiant cry from the heart of the South. Lynyrd Skynyrd's guitars wailed like banshees, their lyrics echoing the region's resistance to outside fingerpointing and strengthened a determination to preserve their own cultural identity. Never mind the warts and blemishes. The Allman Brothers Band played with improvisations like soaring eagles. Their music captured the untamed spirit, passion and raw energy of the South.
The intensity of Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Outlaws was a force of nature, their music was a raw and unfiltered expression of southern pride. Their guitars roared like thunder, their drums pounded like a heartbeat, and their lyrics spoke of rebellion, and the indomitable spirit of the South.John Fogerty and Creedence Clearwater Revival's showed that Southern music extended past Southern borders. Their music, infused with idealism and earthiness, captured the hopes and dreams of ordinary people. Their melodies were catchy and memorable, their lyrics were simple yet profound, and their art spoke directly to the hearts of their listeners. CCR offered a sense of hope and possibility in a world often filled with uncertainty.
Robbie Robertson and the Band's music was a tapestry of Americana, woven from the threads of blues, country, rock and roll, and folk. With songs written by a member of America’s first people, who crafted melodies that were both familiar and fresh, The Band captured the essence of the American experience. All its triumphs and tragedies, from the pinnacle of joy to the depths of sorrow, Robertson helped reveal a nation in search of an identity.
All of this and more await you in this latest episode! Hope you enjoy it!
Featured Artists
Alabama
The Allman Bros.
The Band
Black Oak Arkansas
Carl Perkins
The Charlie Daniels Band
Creedence Clearwater Revival
Graham Parker
Hank Williams
John Lee Hooker
Lonnie Mack
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Molly Hatchett
Muddy Waters
Neil Young
The Outlaws
Rossington Collins Band
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Links to Supporting Episodes
Season One Episode Four
Season One Episode Seven
Season One Episode Eight
Season Two Episode EightTue, 12 Dec 2023 - 34 - Reggae Music: How Jamaica Conquered the World! (Part Two)
This is part two of a two-part focus on Reggae music.
The heart of Reggae music has always been politics and spirituality.
In this two part episode, you'll learn about some of the musical and political forces in Jamaica's colorful past that all contributed to the music that we celebrate as reggae today. From Marcus Garvey, the modern-day prophet who had a vision for the black people living in the new world, and Ethiopia's Emperor Hailie Salassie, whose formal title included "Lord of Lord, King of Kings, and Conquering Lion of Judah", and claimed to be a direct descendant of King Solomon and the Queen of Shebah, to great early reggae musicians like Derrick Morgan, and Desmond Dekker, to the firey Peter Tosh, and the brilliant reggae, who brought reggae to the rest of the world, Bob Marley - they're all here and you'll learn their stories, hear their music, and understand the major forces that fused to create a brand new genre.
In this latest episode, learn the inside story of how Bob Marley came from crippling poverty in one of Jamaica's poorest neighborhoods to became reggae's greatest musical luminary, and how he then faced off against the brutality of systemic Jamaican racism to permanently change his country and the rest of the world.
In This Episode
Bob Marley and the Wailers
1. Trench Town Rock
2. Simmer Down
3. 400 Years
4. I Shot the Sheriff
5. Rebel Music (3 0'Clock Road Block)
6. War
7. Exodus
8. Is This Love
9. Survival
10. Could You Be Loved
Also in this episode:
Interview with Bunny Wailer, formerly with the Wailers
Interview with Marlon James, Jamaican author of A Brief History of Seven Killings
Continue the experience on line.
Visit American Song PodcastFacebook page.Wed, 02 Aug 2023 - 33 - Reggae Music: How Jamaica Conquered the World! (Part One)
This is part oneof a two-part focus on Reggae music.
The heart of Reggae music has always been politics and spirituality.
In this two part episode, you'll learn about some of the musical and political forces in Jamaica's colorful past that all contributed to the music that we celebrate as reggae today. From Marcus Garvey, the modern-day prophet who had a vision for the black people living in the new world, and Ethiopia's Emperor Hailie Salassie, whose formal title included "Lord of Lord, King of Kings, and Conquering Lion of Judah", and claimed to be a direct descendant of King Solomon and the Queen of Shebah, to great early reggae musicians like Derrick Morgan, and Desmond Dekker, to the firey Peter Tosh, and the brilliant reggae, who brought reggae to the rest of the world, Bob Marley - they're all here and you'll learn their stories, hear their music, and understand the major forces that fused to create a brand new genre.
In this latest episode of American Song, you'll see how a tiny Spanish colony developed to become Jamaica as we know it today, and how Reggae was instrumental in helping Jamaican culture 'conquer the world'!
In This Episode
Paul Simon - Mother and Child Reunion
The Flying Lizards - Money (That's What I Want)
Bob Marley - Redemption Song
Bob Marley and the Walers - 400 Years
Burning Spear - Slavery Days
Sly Mongoose - Count Lasher
The Folkes Brothers - Oh Carolina
Toots and the Maytals - 54-46 Was My Number
Marcus Garvey (Political Speech)
Derek Morgan - Forward March
Ernest Ranglin - Below the Bassline
Derrick Morgan - Tougher than Though (Rudie's in Court)
Desmond Dekker - 007 Shantytown
Desmond Dekker - Israelites
Stephen Marley (with Ziggy Marley) - Selassie is the Chapel
Peter Tosh - Let Jah be Praised
Culture - Behold
Sonjah Stanley - (Academic discussion)
Third World - 96 Degrees in the Shade
Peter Tosh - African
The Skatalites - The Guns of Navarrone
Mutabaruka - (Jamaican Poet; Dis Poem)
Bob Marley and the Wailers - No Woman, No Cry
Peter Tosh - Steppin' Razor
Burning Spear - Lion
Continue the experience online:
Visit the American Song Podcast facebook page.Wed, 02 Aug 2023 - 32 - The Masters of Funk: James Brown, the Meters, Sly Stone, Stevie Wonder, George Clinton
In today's episode, we’re going further up the musical family tree – into the funk. Funk grew in the shade of jazz, soul, R&B, gospel and rock. In time it’s going to give rise to other branches – for instance, disco, and hip-hop. It will influence branches that have been growing for a while already, like rock, jazz, even classical music believe it or not. Funk is growing in some difficult environments, like urban ghettoes. It’s impacted by some heavy weather, like the Civil Rights movement, and the war in Vietnam. There’s been a ton of cross-fertilization along the way. Funk’s going to become another important branch in our tree.
Funk has a direct lineage out the blues and plantation communities, jazz, Pentecostal gospel music, soul and R& B. In a lot of ways, funk is a proud, positive re-telling of the African American social story. Heavy with improvisation, and syncopation – just like its musical grandparents are. Like the blues, jazz, R&B and soul, funks driving rhythms were the hardpan roadways that carried its soulful vocals. Likewise, funk sprang out of rock and roll which also grew out of the blues and soul. Funk and rock are first cousins in music’s family tree. And like soul, funk is steeped in emotion and feeling.
In This Episode:
James Brown
The Meters
Sly and the Family Stone
Stevie Wonder
George Clinton/ Parliament-FunkadelicWed, 31 May 2023 - 31 - Jazz Rock Part 2: The Music of Steely Dan, Traffic and SupertrampIn this second episode of our third season, we pick up the trail and continue our exploration of jazz rock - a journey we started in episode one. In this episode, we'll take a close look at the amazing work done by three great bands in that genre; Steely Dan, Traffic, and Supertramp.
Great songs, and interesting artist interviews abound! Here's what you can look forward to:
INTERVIEWS WITH
Donald Fagen
Dave Matthews
Jim Capaldi
Dave Mason
Steve Winwood
Roger Hodgson
John Helliwell
FEATURED SONGS
Steely Dan
My Old School
Deacon Blues
Bodhisatva
Reelin' in the Years
Aja
Cousn Dupree
Traffic
Mr. Fantasy
John Barleycorn (Must Die)
Medicated Goo
The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys
Supertramp
All Along the Watchtower
Surely
Your Poppa Don't Mind
Dreamer
School
Hide in Your Shell
Easy Does It
The Meaning
Fool's Overture
Breakfast in America
Goodbye Stranger
Don't Leave Me Now
CURIOUSITIES
Tom Lehrer - World War Three Blues
Jay and the Americans - Capture the Moment
The Joint - Freak
Argosy - Mr. Boyd
Argosy - Imagine
Sun, 09 Apr 2023 - 30 - The Other Side of Fusion: Jazz Rock
The first generation of jazz rock musicians had been heavily influenced by some of the pioneering jazz musicians who forged jazz fusion, beginning with Miles Davis. Miles was the first of the great jazz artists to venture into the new, amplified and electronic sounds of 1960’s rock music, and in doing it he recruited a number of very young, incredibly talented, and mostly unknown musicians who became giants in their own right,
As a number of jazz musicians embraced elements of rock music, rock’s audience re-discovered jazz. Music is a living, breathing part of our culture, it is changeable in the hands of both listeners and players. We take it up and use it as it gives us pleasure. Just as jazz musicians were blending rock music into their art, rock musicians were equally influenced by jazz players, and they also added jazz elements into their own music.
This is the first of a two-part deep dive into the world of jazz rock. In this episode, you'll see how some of rock's greatest musicians have been influenced by jazz. We'll also spend some time on a deeper dive into a few of the great jazz rock bands of the past, including Blood Sweat and Tears, and Chicago. In part two, we'll come back and explore the music of Steely Dan, Traffic and Supertramp. I think you'll enjoy it!
Music In this episode:
Weather Report: Boogie Woogie Waltz
The Grateful Dead: Help On the Way
John Coltrane: A Love Supreme
Duke Ellington: Take the A Train
The Modern Jazz Quartet: Bluesology
David Bowie: Life On Mars
Keith Richards: Blues Jam
Nat King Cole Trio: Straighten Up and Fly Right
Ornette Coleman:
Jimi Hendrix: South Saturn Delta
John McLaughlin: Devotion
Charlie Watts: All or Nothing at All
Tim Ries: Miss You
Ginger Baker's Air Force: Da Da Man
Miles Davis: Guinnevere
David Crosby: Amelia
Bob Dylan: Like a Rolling Stone
Blood Sweat and Tears: I Love You More than You'll Ever Know
Blood Sweat and Tears: God Bless the Child
The Buckinghams: Kind of a Drag
Chicago: Questions 67 and 68
Chicago: Make Me Smile
Chicago: If You Leave Me Now
Chicago: It Better End Soon
Chicago: Alive Again
Interviews in This Episode
Al Kooper
David Crosby
James Pankow
Danny Serafine
This episode is dedicated to the memories of:
Charlie Watts
Wayne Shorter
David Crosby
Thank you for all the beautiful music!Sun, 12 Mar 2023 - 29 - Electric Walls of Sound: Jazz Fusion Part 2
In today's podcast episode, we pick up our exploration of jazz fusion by looking at the amazing careers and music produced by a number of genius musicians who came out of Miles Davis' bands. We'll visit with Herbie Hancock, John McLaughlin and his band, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Joe Zawinul, Jaco Pastorious and the band Weather Report, Chick Corea and his bands Return to Forever and the Elektrik Band.
The forces that Miles pioneered and set in motion continued to evolve in multiple directions. You'll discover in today's episode, and you'll be able to hear from the musicians themselves about what it was like to play in these bands and create this adventurous, beautiful new music!
IN TODAY'S EPISODE:
Interview; Herbie Hancock from a lecture given at Harvard University
Herbie Hancock
Chameleon
Watermelon Man
Interview: John McLaughlin talks about what it was like to play with Miles Davis.
Graham Bond Organisation: Train Time
The Mahavishnu Orchestra
Inner Mounting Flame
One Word
Eternity's Breath Pt. 1
Weather Report
Birdland
Nubian Sundance
Tears
Herandnu
Interview: Jaco Pastorious talks about his collaboration with Joe Zawinul
Jaco Pastorious/ Weather Report
Teen Town
Interview: Pat Matheny
Interview: Chick Corea talks about joining Miles Davis' band.
Return to Forever
Return to Forever
Interview: Chick Corea talks about forming his band, Return to Forever
Spain
The Elektrik Band: Rumble
Steely Dan: AjaMon, 01 Aug 2022 - 28 - Electric Walls of Sound: Jazz Fusion Part 1
As jazz musicians started realizing that rock and electric bands were stealing their audiences, Miles Davis, who’s alternately been called most important musician in the history of jazz, the man who transformed jazz, and even the man who changed music itself, took the music in a new direction when he invented jazz fusion. In fact, during his lifetime, Miles didn’t change music just once, he did it five times.
Fusion started happening in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Like trad jazz, it uses acoustic instruments like trumpet, trombone, saxophone, piano, guitar, bass, and drums, but to all that, fusion also adds heavy use of synthesizers, electric piano, drum machines, and effects-saturated electric guitars.
IN THIS EPISODE:
Santana: Welcome
Interview: Teo Macero; Miles Davis' legendary record producer.
The Free Spirits (featuring Larry Coryell) - Girl of the Mountain
Gary Burton
Norwegian Wood
I Want You
Steve Marcus
Tomorrow Never Knows
Interview: Larry Coryell talks about his early days in '60s New York City
Miles Davis
So What
Stuff
Tout de Suite
Mademoiselle Mabry
In a Silent Way
Interview: John McLaughlin talks about playing with Miles Davis
Interview: Teo Macero
Jimi Hendrix
Little Miss Lover
Miles Davis
John McLaughlin
Miles Runs the Voodoo Down
Time After Time
Interview: Miles Davis talks about PrinceMon, 01 Aug 2022 - 27 - Action: Reaction - American Bands and American Society Respond to the English Invasion
First of all, Happy Independence Day everybody! I'm so pleased to publish another episode of American Song on America's birthday!
Back in America, ever since the plane crash in the winter of 1959 that ended the lives of Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, the Big Bopper, American rock and roll had been sort of losing steam. By 1964, it very easily could have just petered out. Certainly, the likes of Frankie Avalon, and post-army Elvis were not going anywhere exciting. It was a new day, what was needed was music for a new generation. The British Invasion shot a whole new attitude, excitement and energy right into the veins of American culture.
Just like American culture changed England, the Brits changed American music. You can see that play out in the competition between the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and the Beatles. The English band's changed American culture, too. Sex was prolific. Drugs were everywhere. On the Merv Griffin show, Timothy Leary told his audience he'd used LSD 311 times and predicted a coming age when kids would be educated through the use of psychedelic drugs, unlocking their internal Smithsonian Institutes or Libraries of Congress.
The British Invasion also caused a chain reaction all across America when local musicians formed new bands, for instance Roger McGuinn and David Crosby who formed the Byrds. It was a powerful response to the excitement, new sounds, perspectives, and inspiration that bands like the Beatles, the Stones, and the Who injected back into our rock scene.
All this, and lots more, in this month's episode of American Song!
IN THIS MONTH'S EPISODE:
The Who - My Generation
Bob Dylan - 4th Time Around
The Beatles - Norwegian Wood
The Beatles - You've Got to Hide Your Love Away
Bob Dylan - Got to Serve Someone
John Lennon - Serve Yourself
The Rolling Stones - Crackin' Up
The Beatles - Rain
The Beach Boys - Wouldn't It Be Nice
The Beatles - Sargeant Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band
The Beach Boys - Good Vibrations
Brian Wilson - Our Prayer/ Gee
John Lennon - Promo for Tower Records
Elton John - Texan Love Song
Led Zepellin - Whole Lotta Love
John Lennon - Cold Turkey
Paul McCartney - Interview 1967
The Beatles - Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds
The Rolling Stones - 2000 Light Years from Home
Dr. Timothy Leary - Interview 1967
Blind Faith - In the Presence of the Lord
John Lennon - God
John Lennon - Interview 1966
The Byrds - Eight Miles High
The Standells - Dirty Water
The Monkees - The Last Train to Clarksville
Jimi Hendrix - Purple Haze
Bob Dylan - Mr. Tambourine Man
Paul Revere and the Raiders - Indian Reservation
The Turtles - Happy Together
The Lovin' Spoonful - Do You Believe in Magic
Simon & Garfunkel - Mrs. Robinson
The Young Rascals - Good Lovin'
The Mama's and the Papa's - California Dreaming
Tommy James and the Shondells - Hanky Panky
The Beatles - Revolution 9
The Doors - The End
Vedder/ Tierney/ Krieger/ Manzarek - Doors Induction to Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
The Velvet Underground - Heroin
The Strokes - Walk on the Wild Side
Sonic Youth - European Son
U2 - Satellite of Love
REM - Femme Fatale
David Byrne - Candy Says
Bowie/ Reed - Waiting for the Man
Queen - God Save the QueenMon, 04 Jul 2022 - 26 - When the Blues Came to Britain, the British Came to America Part 2
With the big English interest in blues music, suddenly, America’s original bluesmen started hearing about the chance to reignite their careers with English, French and German audiences. Unbelievably, they found themselves welcomed, even celebrated. American Bluesmen like Big Bill Broonzy, after living years in poverty, discovered they could actually have careers in Europe. The Cunard Yanks, and the American Folk Blues Festival were the catalysts behind cultural and musical changes that revolutionized Britain in the years after World War 2.
The impact on young English musicians was epic. The bands and musical brilliance of the period has been an inspiration for several generations that followed. You know the names: The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Who, The Kinks and many more. Now, hear the music, and learn the history!
In this episode, you'll hear the stories, the music, and the artists who lived and created this formidable library of music that millions around the world are still listening to!
Inspired by American music, sculpted, painted, and built by the English, the music is in many ways, still with us today. Enjoy this second installment in the story of the British Invasion!Tue, 31 May 2022 - 25 - When the Blues Came to Britain, the British Came to America Part 1England was caught between two cultures: the old order and whatever came after it. The rigid class distinctions between upper and middle classes were disappearing, and government reforms had a lot to do with it. The Conservative Party with their slogan, “Set the People Free,” won the 1951 election, and popular culture began to replace stuffy, upper crust stuff like classical music, opera, theatre, and fine art with mass-market media like radio, movies, and television.
The BBC believed they had a responsibility to the nation to uphold the pre-war idea of ‘respectability’, or, at least, not broadcast music that could threaten the morality of England’s youth. It was a lot like the U.S. stations refused to broadcast black music in the U.S. in the ‘20s and ‘30s. More than that, they believed they claimed a responsibility to inform and educate the public in what it perceived as ‘good music’.
English kids were being seduced by the rhythm and forward thrust of American entertainment with movies like Blackboard Jungle (where Rock Around the Clock was heard for the first time), Elvis, and Bill Haley & the Comets. Both these bands were MAJOR influences on those four guys from Liverpool, England. The other musical influencers from America were the living legends of American Blues.
The timing was perfect for a musical revolution that would impact two continents!
Welcome to Episode Eight, Season Two in the American Song series: American Song Ushers in a Changing of the British Guard.
Thanks to Mark Davis, for the new bumper music included in this episode.
You can learn more about Mark and his music at www.towakeyou.com!
Tue, 31 May 2022 - 24 - American Song and the Fight for Hispanic Equality.
In a country based on freedom, equal opportunity, and democracy, you’d think that lessons related to social justice would not need to be re-hashed so often. But that does seem to be our fate. And so, in every generation, we’ve witnessed one group after another struggle to claim their own share of the American dream.
Music has had a huge role in raising awareness, unifying people, inspiring empathy, and challenging the status quo in every major social wave of change. Today, we’re looking at how American music was used, like the trumpets at Jericho, to knock down the walls that separated Hispanic Americans from the promises made to all Americans, beginning in 1776. In many ways, this is a fight that continues today, and its as true about the Hispanic struggle for justice as it's been for every group in our history. Hispanics have had a wide range of musical inspirations, including familiar faces such as Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, and Woody Guthrie, and musical heroes from their own communities.Music from the black civil rights struggle was also borrowed, early on. But the most important parts of the cultural foundations that the Chicano community drew from came from their own Mexican heritage – especially the corrido, which we talked about last month in the Roots of Latin American music episode. As the revolutionary tide of the 1960s began to swell in American culture, Chicanos started by resurrecting the corrido, and added to it a new, political consciousness, giving air to their grievances and struggles. Soon, out of the streets, and in the rising youth movement, Chicano rock and roll bands from both sides of the border were filling the radio waves, and encouraging their own people to advance towards a better future.
Welcome to Episode 22, American Song and the Fight for Hispanic Equality.
In This Episode:
Agustin Lira
Azteca
Cannibal and the Head Hunters
Chan Romero
El Chicano
Carlos Santana
Chuy Negrete
Clarence Sonny Henry
The Village Callers
El Jarocho
Thee Midnighters
Freddy Fender
Trini Lopez
Jose Suarez
Los Shakers
Los Lobos
Los Teen Tops
Ozomatli
Richie Valens
Robert DeNiro
Son Jarocho Master MusiciansSun, 24 Apr 2022 - 23 - Puerto Ricans Sing Out for Justice.
Before the arrival of Colombus and the Spanish, Puerto Rico was peopled by the Taino tribe. They’d called it home – and paradise – for over 1,000 years, having come either from the Amazon river basin, or maybe from the Colombian Andes before they arrived on the island. In our March episode, we talked about the Jones Act – a law made during the Wilson presidency. The chief goal of that act was to help the U.S. shipping industry recover after World War I. It also annexed Puerto Rico, and gave citizenship to everyone living there.
U.S. citizenship started major migration to the U.S. mainland. At first, Puerto Ricans settled into East Coast cities like New York and later Miami where mostly they were stuck in the bottom end of the labor market, working as domestic workers, in manufacturing jobs (back in the old days when we still had those in America, and maintenance industries.
Puerto Rican Americans, on both sides of the US coast, have contributed beautiful music to the American Song jukebox. These songs echo the rich cultures that became Puerto Rico, their love for their island home, their struggles in the United States and their determination to succeed, despite the hardships.
Today's episode builds on what I began in March, adding more current sounds to the mix. I think you'll find it equal parts fascinating, and entertaining!
In This Episode:
Bomba street musicians in Old San Juan Puerto Rico
Fiel a La Vega
Field Recording of La Tierruca (old Puerto Rican woman)
Haciendo Punto en Otro Son
Hector Carrasquillo Sr.
Original Cast from West Side Story
Pablo Milanés
Piri Thomas
Ricky Martin
Roy Brown
Steven Colbert
Taina AsliSun, 24 Apr 2022 - 22 - Land of A Thousand Dances - Latin American Music
Latin music and 'American' music were once considered to be separate and unique. They had distinctly different properties and music labels managed them differently. But not anymore.
Danny Ocean is a singer-songwriter and native of Caracas, Venezuela, and has said “Music is something that transcends beyond any language or nationality…it’s all about being a global artist.” Latin music has become mainstream - it's no longer a 'crossover' genre. Today, Latin culture is American culture. Latins are now the largest minority in the United States, and the second largest ethnic group after whites.
All across Latin America, the cultures that we talked about in episode 4 have combined to create distinct, regional music and dances that have each entertained and inspired the people in their home nations, while also making their way to our homes in the United States and entertaining people across the entire world! Salsa, mambo, rumba, calpyso, bomba, latin jazz, samba, batucada, samba de enredo, bossa nova, tango, festejo and lando. These are the names of the inspired music that came out of the New World once the Spanish, Portuguese, Native Americans, and Africans blended their music and rhythm. In this episode, we'll hear examples and learn about the artists, and cultures that devoted their lives to this fabulous art!
You're in for a treat! Enjoy!
In Today's Episode
Tango - La Cumparsita
Ignacio Pineiro - Echale Salsita
El Orquesta Belisario Lopez - El Cimarron
Orquesta Arcano y sus Maravillas - Mambo
Perez Prado - Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White
Julian Whiterose - Iron Duke in the Land
Hubert "Roaring Lion" Charles - Mary Anne
Hary Belafonte - Jump in the Line
BP Renegades Steel Orchestra - Like Ah Boss
Winston "Mighty Shadow" Bailey - Bass Man
Bomba Example
Ismael Rivera - Volare
Plena De Puerto Rico
Tito Puente
Machito _ Ni Chi, Ni Cha
Willy Colon y Ruben Blades - Buscando Guayaba
Rumba Examples:
1. Yambu
2. Guaguanco
3. Columbia
Stan Getz / Luiz Bonfa - So Danco Samba
Candomble Example - Orixa Ossaim
Ernesto "Donga" Dos Santos - Pelo Telefone
Os Oito Batutas - Meu Passarinho
Noel Rossa- Com Que Roupa?
Batucada Bradileira
Ratos e Urubus - Larguem Minha Fantasia
Frank Sinatra / Antonio Carlos Jobim - The Girl from Impanema
Jorge Ben - Mais Que Nada
Bola Sete - Baccara
Luis Correa - Siete Mujeres
Libertad Lamarque - Yo Soy La Morocha
Carlos Gardel - Mi Noche Triste
Anibal Troilo - Te Aconsejo Que Me Olvides
Pepe Vasquez - Ritmo de Negros
Oscar Aviles/ Arturo Cavero - El Alcatraz
Charango example - Sebastián Pérez
Cajon Example - Maestros del Cajon Peruano
Charagua Example - Son de los DiablosSun, 13 Mar 2022 - 21 - The Roots of Latin Music in the New World
In this episode, we shift focus to consider another important cultural vein, brought here by the Spanish, and rising out of the American west and Southwest as well as New York City – and obviously all of Central and South America, Cuba and Puerto Rico.
A few things have struck me as I’ve been putting my thoughts together for these next few episodes. Of course, the first thing is that – just like in earlier genres that we’ve talked about – the music we hear today has gone through a long journey of changes. Second, like jazz and the blues, the music often gives voice to the frustrations and struggles Latin Americans have experienced while hacking and carving out their own rightful place in America.
In this episodes, we’ll explore the origins of Latin music, – not just in the United States, but on a wider level, across most of the New World. When the Spanish and Portuguese came to the New World, they brought European music traditions with them, including the influences from several hundred years of Moorish occupation of Southern Spain. They were coming to a land that had already been hope to millions of Native Americans - stretching from the Bering Strait to the southern tip of Argentina - and the people that lived here had their own musical traditions that made their way into Latin music. African slaves also brought their rhythms. Like we've seen in American music, African traditions would have an enormous impact on music that would develop over centuries.
This is a fascinating musical journey - I’m so excited to share it with you!
In Today's Episode:
Gypsy Kings - Una Amor
Ancient Consort Singers - Serenisima Una Noche
Spanish-Arabic Music of Andalucia
Flor De Un Dia
Djembe tribal drumming
Native American Flute with Tribal Drum
Jorge Reyes - Native American (Mexico) Music
Traditional Inca Music Being Played in Cuzco
Los Monjes del Monasterio de Silos - Gregorian Chant
Gloria Missa de Los Angeles - JUan Bautista Sancho - 18th Century California Mission Music
Zephyr -El Cantico del Alba - A Choir of Angels II: Mission Music
Charles Lummis Wax Cylinder - Corrido de Leandro Rivera
Lydia Mendoza - Mal Hombre
El Vez - Rock and Roll Suicide/ If I Can DreamSun, 13 Mar 2022 - 20 - Folk Music Played the Changes in American Society.
In our July, 2021 episode on the first generation of folk music, “Folk Music Stood for America”, we talked about how the music was swept up in the major social movements of the day, especially the socialist/ American Communist party movements which gathered speed because of events like the Great Depression and the Dustbowl.
The second revival of the 1960’s also had its own causes; the war in Vietnam, Civil Rights, and the Women’s movement primarily. The ‘60s was the era when all the WWII war babies grew up. Highly idealistic, they wanted to seize the moment in history and change the world for the better. Raised in the suburbs of the concensus-driven fifties, and living under the palatable fear of the Cold War, with Eishenhower’s warning about the military industrial complex ringing in their ears, seeing their classmates ship off to Vietnam, and shipped back home in body bags, they’d grown cynical about their parent’s generation and demanded change NOW.
Folk music was the soundtrack to their rebellion; you could hear it played on college campuses all over America. Many of the musicians matched that idealism note for note. That’s the theme of today’s episode, Folk Music Played the Changes in American Society.Artists Featured in This Episode
Tom Paxton
Richie Havens
Peter, Paul & Mary
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Bob Dylan
Phil Ochs
Crosby, Stills & NashMon, 07 Feb 2022 - 19 - 1960’s Folk Music: How the Fire Spread
The 1960’s were a period of massive social change and tension all over the country – all over North America in fact - because we have to include Canada, too. The conditions were just right for a whole group of passionate, inspired, and gifted young singers and songwriters to lift their voices. They came from many different American communities; Jewish immigrants, First Nations people, Americans, Canadians, African Americans, Hispanics, Caucasians, from the cities and from the heartland. All of them had a message to share with their generation, and a desire to build a better world.
This episode is about a number of these artists, and the legacies they’ve left behind. Many of them are still with us today, and a few of them still create new music. Welcome to today’s episode, 1960’s Folk Music: How the Fire Spread.
Artists Featured in this Episode
Fred Neil
Dave Van Ronk
Karem Dalton
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Leonard Cohen
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Brothers & Curry
Bob Dylan
Simon & Garfunkel
Paul Simon
Joni MitchellMon, 07 Feb 2022 - 18 - The Second Folk Revival – A Passing of the Torch.
Happy New Year and welcome to season two in the American Song podcast series! It's been a bit since we last got together. I hope you all are doing well.
In both the first and second folks waves, many of the musicians were heavily influenced by the times and events that lived in. During the first folk revival, the most important social issues included the Great Depression, and the Oklahoma Dust Bowl. In different ways, both of these catastrophes laid waste to the dreams and scrapped together fortunes of the hard-working American people. Overseas, political revolutions had overthrown ancient monarchies, the latest one being Russia’s Romanov dynasty where powerful winds of change had driven the half starved and long-neglected Russian peasants to revolt, and whose actions were spurred on by ideologues like Marx and Lenin.
The second folk revival that started in the late 1950’s and early 1960’s was, again, another social movement bent on change, but this time, the causes were different. The 1960’s have been romanticized in a lot of ways. It’s difficult today to still feel the thrill, and electric charge of what Beatlemania must have been like, or to experience the ‘Us’ versus ‘Them’ pitched emotions that led to student riots and slain college students at Kent State, but they were very real. Folk music was at the heart of it all. Just like Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie had demanded better treatment for workers, and economic assistance to America’s poor, the second folk revival rallied people behind Civil Rights, Equal Rights for women, and an end to the war in Vietnam war. A chorus of new musicians, were inspired by, and in turn inspired social change. Brave young kids, like Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Barry McGuire, and Joan Baez – as well as a few old-timers from the first wave - gave voice to a new generation of Americans who dreamed of better things and better days.
Welcome to season two in the American Song Podcast series; today’s episode, “The Second Folk Revival – A Passing of the Torch.”
Featured Artists in this Episode
Bob Dylan
Woody Guthrie
the Kingston Trio
Bill & Belle Reed
Joan Baez
Steve Allen and Jack Kerouac
Bonnie Dobson
Simon & Garfunkel
Max YasgurMon, 07 Feb 2022 - 17 - Musique Concrete: A Radical Re-Thinking of Sound and Performance
If there’s an over-riding theme across the last several episodes, it is that music can be whatever we say it is. In this third and last episode on this theme, we’re talking about Musique Concrete. It’s the name applied to a one of the most radical descriptions of music ever imagined.
Think of this music like you do when you think of abstract, visual art. For instance, Picasso’s Guernica. There aren’t too many people that think of that painting as traditionally beautiful, but there is a shocking, provocative, stirring power to it. The same holds true with this challenging music.
With musique concrète, (French: “concrete music”), natural and mechanical sounds were captured or created using new inventions, the tape recorder, and later the computer and the synthesizer. Sounds can either be used in their natural forms, or they could be processed and changed and then combined with other sounds to create a montage. Other traits that define musique concrete include randomness, and the discard of the traditional composer-performer roles. Sounds can be looped, played backward, sped up, slowed down, cut short or extended. Their natural pitches could be varied, echoes could be added and so on.
As I did with episodes 14 and 15, I'm also going to show you how these really bizarre ideas eventually made their way into our current popular music scene. Musique Concrete has made an impact in jazz and rock, too. This is fun stuff!
In This Episode:
Pierre Schaeffer
Pierre Henry
John Cage
Harry Partch
Karlheinz Stockhausen
The Beatles
Pink Floyd
Industrial bands
PlunderphonicsMon, 06 Dec 2021 - 16 - The Celestial Pulse of Minimalism.
In the world of American art music, Minimalism is another push away from traditional music. It’s earliest beginnings are found in the 1950’s again, with two American composers; Steve Reich (b.1936) and Philip Glass (b.1937). Reich, Glass, and another minimalist, John Adams, were all heavily influenced by mid-century popular music. Together, they’re known as the ‘big three’ in minimalist music. The founders of minimalist music absorbed a wide range of sonic influences – African rhythms, Indian ragas, bebop, rock and roll to create something startlingly original. It abounds in film scores, pop albums, jazz riffs, and other forms of more experimental music.
Jazz and rock were influenced by minimalism, too. Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and Pat Matheny all wrote music that show minimalism's influences. So does the music of Peter Gabriel, Brian Eno, David Bowie, Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, and Radiohead - just to name a few!
In This Episode:
Steve ReichPhillip Glass
John Adams
Miles Davis
John Cage
Pat Matheny and Lyle Mays
Brian Eno
David Bowie
Peter Gabriel
Kraftwerk
Tangerine Dream
Radiohead
Mon, 06 Dec 2021 - 15 - When the World Was In Chaos, Music Became Atonal
The 20th century scientific explosion had been in the works since the Enlightenment, but the rate of change, which had been slow, and adaptable, now came in flashes – like a supernova - and repeatedly, one major wave after another and in ways that dramatically changed our society; instead of having time to gradually adapt and fold these changes into our ordered lives, our lives were forced to conform instead.
I hope you’re ready for an adventure, because this episode, and actually the next two after this, are going to challenge you. You see, the music we’ll discover together was written in complete rejection of the basic assumptions about western music. What’s equally fascinating is what the rest of the music world did with these musical ideas!To understand what was happening in America, we have to start away from home, in Europe, in the late 1930’s. There were a number of European musicians and composers who developed completely new ways of creating, performing, and sharing music that had an equally transformative influence on the music being made in America.
In This Episode
Arnold Schoenberg
Milton Babbitt
Charles Wuorinen
Jerrald Goldsmith
Gerard Schurman
Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind
The Beatles
Primus
Dave Brubeck
Bill Evans
John Coltrane
Ornette ColemanMon, 06 Dec 2021 - 14 - Hail Hail Rock and Roll
By the 1950’s, American Music had been on a fascinating journey. Rolling out of the Appalachian Mountains and into southern cities; drifting out of the cotton plantations of the south, winding its way up from New Orleans, along the Mississippi Delta, carried along many musical creeks, tributaries, and rivers, rolling its way along mysterious trails past the crossroads, and chugging its way across railroad lines. American Music had evolved, and grown, and changed, just like the culture that produced it. We’ve seen the rise of jazz in its different forms, and heard the echoes of slavery in the blues – as it evolved from the country blues of Robert Johnson and Huddie Ledbedder to the electric blues of Muddy Waters and BB King – and the evolution of Country music as it grew out of English, Scottish, and Welsh ballads into the slick, urbanized sound of Nashville or the honky tonks and juke joints - the urban sounds of Hank Williams.
In the few decades that led up to the mid-1950’s, there were just a few more cobblestones that needed to be laid into the roadbed that ended with the birth of rock music. Among these were Western Swing and Rockabilly.
The rock and roll attitude – rebellion, sexuality, and freedom – is a rockabilly hand-me-down sweatshirt from rock’s big brother. However, the true rockers that came later were true, dyed in the wool non-conformists and rebels. There’s a world of difference between someone like, say, Jim Morrison, and Kung-Fu Elvis. Morrison’s disgust for authority was the real thing. Elvis, on the other hand, had his picture taken at the White House next to Richard "Tricky Dick" Nixon. Compare that to many, very public apologies that aging rockabilly artists made later for their antics in younger years.Good Golly, Miss Molly…. Welcome to the latest edition of American Song; episode 13. Hail Hail Rock and Roll!
IN THIS EPISODE
Tex Williams
Moon Mullican
Arthur Smith's Hot Quintet
Tennessee Ernie Ford
The Maddox Bros. and Rose
Elvis Presley
Jerry Lee Lewis
Buddy Holly
John Lennon
Paul McCartney
Ringo Starr
Jackie Brentson
Roy Brown
Big Mama Thornton
Sister Rosetta Tharpe
Chuck Berry
Fat's Domino
Little Richard
Eddie Cochran
the Teen Queens
Bobby Freeman
Wanda Jackson
Pat Boone
Allen Freed
The Platters
The Dominoes
Thomas Hardin/ Moondog
The WhoSun, 24 Oct 2021 - 13 - Special Feature: 1950's American Culture; the Seedbed of Rock and Roll
Newton’s Third Law of Motion; For every action, there’s an equal and opposite reaction. I mentioned that rock and music was equal parts music and social movement. This was a totally new event for music. In earlier episodes, we’ve seen how jazz was borrowed by the US Government for global PR purposes, and of course, music has always given a voice to the hopes, dreams, hurts, and fears of people everywhere. But this was something totally different. Ever since the ‘50s, we’ve never been sure whether art imitates life, or life imitates art. The most dramatic examples were still in the future, but it started in the 1950’s, and I’ve wondered why then, and not some other time. Let’s look at the 1950’s together for a few minutes and see if we can’t figure out why that might be.
IN THIS SPECIAL FEATUREBobby Darin
Malvina Reynolds
The Crew Cuts
Charlie Ryan and the Timberline Riders
Chuck Berry
The Silhouettes
Bobby "Boris" Pickett
Sheb Wooley
Danny and the Juniors
Todd Rhodes and His Orchestra, Featuring Connie Allen
The Del VikingsSun, 24 Oct 2021 - 12 - R&B Was Born on the American Song River
This episode is dedicated to the memory of Rolling Stones drummer, Charlie Watts,. Charlie passed away while I was preparing this episode. In a career that spanned more than sixty years, he left us all a massive library of songs and memories that we all will treasure forever. Thanks for everything, Charlie. It was only Rock and Roll, but I liked it!
Episode Description
It was a new day in America. The middle class was big and growing. Businesses were flush with cash it had come by, which meant people were working and saving and getting ahead. Those returning war-heroes had gotten to work making money, and making babies and America was a young country, too. So this young, expressive, exuberant, happy music was ideal for a nation that was feeling the same way. The fact that this new, young music became THE music of the day represented a sea change in what America was all about.Even more, Rhythm’n Blues set the stage for the next big arrival – rock and roll….. like the great R&B singer, Ruth Brown said, “when the white kids started dancing to it, R&B turned into Rock and Roll.” Hold that thought for a future episode!
Welcome to American Song, Episode 12: R&B Was Born on the Great American Music River.
Ike and Tina Turner - River Deep, Mountain HighBarrett Strong - Money, That’s What I WantNina Simone - Mississippi GoddamErskine Hawkins - After HoursAhmet Ertegün and Charlie Rose Interview ExcerptBib Mama Thornton - Hound DogJames Jamerson (isolated bass) - What’s Goin’ OnLouis Jordan - Is You Is, Or Is You Ain’t My Baby?Louis Jordan - Saturday Night Fish FryErskine Hawkins - Tuxedo JunctionHarlem Hamfats - Weed Smokers DreamCab Calloway - Minnie the MoocherCount Basie - One O’CLock JumpBullmoose Jackson - Big Ten InchKing Curtis - Instant GrooveLionel Hampton - Flying HomeLionel Hampton - Hey! Bop a Re BopT Bone Walker - Stormy MondayBB King - Live at Sing Sing PrisonElvis Presley - That’s Alright MamaHoss Allen InterviewIke & Tina Turner - Proud MaryBooker T and the MGs - Green OnionsMartha and the Vandella’s - Dancing in the StreetStevie Wonder - Heaven Help Us AllFunk Bros. - Aint No Mountain High EnoughFunk Bros. - You Keep My Hangin’ OnFunk Bros. - I Was Made to Love HerMarvin Gaye - What’s Goin’ OnThe New Moonglows - Twelve Months of the YearMarvin Gaye - How Sweet it IsBerry Gordy Talks about Marvin GayeRay Charles - Hit the Road JackRay Charles Interview on Dick CavettMaxin Trio - Blues Before SunriseRay Charles - I Got a WomanRay Charles - What’d I SayRay Charles - Georgia on My MindRuth Brown - 5-10-15 HoursRuth Brown - I’ll Wait For YouRuth Brown Interview with Terri Gross (NPR)Aretha Franklin - Do Right Woman, Do Right ManAretha Franklin Interview with Terri Gross (NPR)Aretha Franklin - (You Make Me Feel Like A) Natural WomanAretha Franklin - RespectAretha Franklin - I Say a Little Prayer For YouAretha Franklin - Chain of FoolsSam & Dave - Soul Man
TracksSun, 05 Sep 2021 - 11 - Folk Music Stood For America
Today’s episode is all about the first of the two 20th century waves in the folk music movement and how that movement rallied people behind some big themes to help them fight for social justice.
As a people, Americans are inclined towards optimism and a belief that if things aren’t working, they can be fixed. How improvement is defined, which issues get the focus, and how those improvements are managed comes down to party philosophy. Practically speaking, America has been a two-party system with a number of other minor parties that represent the people that don’t line up with everyone else. On the ‘left’, we’ve had three parties, progressives, socialists and communists.
Woody Guthrie: This Land Is Your LandPete Seeger - Talking Union BluesBurl Ives: Wayfaring StrangerJosh White - TroubleThis Train is Bound for GloryWoody Guthrie - Do Re MiWoody Guthrie - 1913 MassacreThe Almanac Singers - Which Side Are You On?Woody Guthrie - All You Fascists Bound to LoseThe Almanac Singers - The Sinking of the Good Reuben JamesPete Seeger - Deliver the Goods60 Minutes with Charles Kuralt - Interview with Alan LomaxCBS Radio Network - HootenanyAlan Lomax Interviews Muddy WatersMuddy Waters - My Home is in the DeltaMáire Ní Shúilleabháin, Ballylicky, Co. Cor - An Cailín Aerach (The Airy [Light-Hearted] Girl)Burl Ives - John HenryHUAC Hearings - The Hollywood 10 In CourtCasablanca (Warner Bros.) - Play It SamVictims of Hollywood BlacklistEarl Robinson - Keeping Score in ’44Rudy Giuliani - Trial By CombatBurl Ives/ Paul Newman - Mendacity Scene (From Cat On a Hot Tin Roof) Burl Ives - Funny Way of LaughingJosh White - House of the Rising SunJosh White - In My Time of DyingJosh White - There’s a Man Going ‘Round Taking NamesJosh White - The House I Live InJosh White - Free and Equal BluesHUAC Hearings - Paul Robeson’s Testimony (Excerpt)Pete Seeger - Goodnight IrenePete Seeger Interview - The Power of MusicPete Seeger - Way Over TherePete Seeger with the Almanac Singers - The Strange Death of John DoeHenry Wallace 1948 Campaign SongThe Weavers - If I Had a HammerThe Weavers - So Long It’s Been Good to Know Yuh’Pete Seeger Interviewed about HUAC HearingsJames Taylor - You’ve Got to Be Carefully TaughtHenry Fonda - Grapes of Wrath MonologueBruce Springsteen - The Ghost of Tom Joad
Woody Guthrie, and a number of ‘folkie’ musicians like Pete Seeger, Josh White, Burl Ives and others, did something that hadn’t been done before in American music; they used it as a weapon against the things they thought were wrong in the world. For instance, Woody Guthrie’s guitar had the words “This machine kills fascists” on it.
They taught a nation to sing powerful songs about hope – Woody Guthrie did that – and when you do, you may sow the seeds of change in future generations, like the way Guthrie stood as Bob Dylan’s musical mentor. But music is just the drum beat that the rest of us have to march to. If we don’t like how things are going, we’re still Americans. We can still change it. We need to act on it. Ghandi said “Be the change you want to see in the world.”
When we do, we’ll see that just like things improved in working conditions, and minimum wage laws, and many other ways, the world can become a better place. Our country belongs to the people, not the tiny fraction on top. And this is a country that promises equality, but that equality is something we have to continuously protect
TracksMon, 26 Jul 2021 - 10 - Jazz in Defense of Equality and Justice For All
America’s music, at least through 1955, was jazz. In this episode, we’ll take a deep dive into the predominant forms jazz took on from 1930 through the 1950’s and into the 1960’s, including swing, bebop, hard bop and cool jazz. In many ways during these years, Jazz gave voice to the difficult tensions and struggles confronting Americans in those years, and which tested our belief in our own convictions. Welcome to American Song, episode ten; Jazz In Defense of Equality and Justice For All
In the Mood - Glenn MillerKing Porter Stomp - Fletcher HendersonFly Me to The Moon - Sinatra/ BasieStraighten Up and Fly Right - Nat King ColeNorthwest Passage - Woody Herman and His Thundering HerdLet’s Call the Whole Thing Off - Astaire/ RogersBoogie Woogie Bugle Boy - The Andrews SistersStomp Your Feet - Fred Elizalde and His Cambridge UndergraduatesMinor Swing - Django ReinhartAdolf Hitler at EssenPraise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition - Kay KiserGI Jive - Kay KiserMaking Whoopie - Charlie and His OrchestraThe Man With the Big Cigar - Charlie and His OrchestraI Sustain the Wings/ Jam Don’t Shake Like That - Glenn Miller and the Army Airforce BandThe Secret Broadcast - Music Fur Die Wermacht - Glenn Miller and “Ilse”Perfidia - Benny Goodman and Helen Forrest (V-Records)Koko - John ColtraneMussolini’s Letter to Hitler - Carson RobisonDer Fuehrer’s Face - Spike Jones and His City SlickersBody and Soul - Coleman HawkinsStraight No Chaser - Miles Davis(What Did I Do To Be So) Black and Blue - Louis ArmstrongWE INSIST! Freedom Now Suite! - Max Roach with Abbey Lincoln, Coleman Hawkins and OlatunjiFables of Faubus - Charles MingusAlabama Governor George Wallace (1964 Campaign)Acknowledgement (From a Love Supreme) - John ColtraneAlabama - John ColtraneKlactovesedstene - Charlie ParkerJust Friends - Charlie ParkerNight in Tunisia - Dizzy GillespieRound Midnight - Thelonious MonkFifty-Second Street Theme - Thelonious MonkNikita Kruschev at UN 1960Manteca - Dizzy GillespieDuke Ellington on American MusicReprise: (What Did I Do To Be So) Black and Blue - Louis ArmstrongPresident Dwight D Eisenhower Addresses Little Rock CrisisThe Real Ambassador - Dave Brubeck/ Louis ArmstrongSing Sing Sing! - Benny Goodman in USSRMoaning’ - Charles MingusU.S. Attorney General Derrick Garland on Voter Suppression Crisis
Through its history, Jazz has played a very important social role in America and abroad. It is the voice of democracy and freedom. It represents our continuing desire for social justice and equality in America and has supported that role abroad. In this episode, we see how jazz evolved through Swing to Bebop and how members of the same group who have been most historically oppressed have risen – both in the music world and out of it – to be the ones to defend the country, and inspire the effort needed to face our own demons. Because they did, America has begun to live up to its promises of equality and justice for all. I am certain that America’s music will continue to inspire us, encourage us, and unite us. Just as it always has.
In This Episode:As always, thanks for listening and downloading!
If you'd like to support American Song, consider a donation at Patreon!
Visit ourFacebook page!Sun, 13 Jun 2021 - 9 - The Rising of Gospel Music and How It Inspired the World.
Imagine a people, passing through the crucible of slavery, for hundreds of years, until the first people in your new lineage are often lost in time – because slaves have no more families or histories any more than cattle or sheep do – and coming out the other side, proud, shining, and triumphant. Imagine using that experience to lay the foundations of music that became the soundtrack within the lives of billions of people around the world. In the wake of so much devastation, the sounds of faith, love, dignity and freedom were heard and shared until they echoed the world over. Many times, they were there to drown out more modern pains, and were used to inspire other people to face new adversities. It started with African Spirituals, and those Spirituals gradually became Gospel Music.
This is a music that has given people a sense of holy urgency and righteousness all over the world. The Christians that created this music believed with everything they had in them that it was ‘the holy spirit’ that gave them the authority. This was not performance. This was leadership.
PS. My sincerest thanks to all of you repeat listeners out there in the following cities. Your interests in what I'm doing makes this so rewarding!
· As Sulaymānīyah, As Sulaymānīyah· Atlanta, GA
· Austin, TX
· Birmingham, Al
· Centennial, CO
· Charlotte, NC
· Chatillon, Ile-d-France
· Clermont, FL
· Clinchy, Ile-de-France
· Columbus, OH
· Compton, CA
· Cordoba, Andalusia
· Dallas, TX
· Dusseldorf, N Rhine-Westpghalia
· Fruitland, ID
· Hough, OH
· Hyderabad, Telangana
· Islington, England
· Lake Stevens, WA
· Lanham-Seabrook, MD
· Lillenthal, Lower Saxony
· Los Angeles
· Maidenhead, England
· Manhattan, NY
· Munster, North Rhine-Westphalia
· Olympia, WA
· Osaka, Japan
· Placentia, CA
· Reno, NV
· San Antonio, TX
· San Diego, CA
· San Francisco, CA
· Sao Paulo, Brazil
· Sharjah, UAE
· South Salt Lake, UT
· Tokyo, Japan
· Walsall, England
· Washington, VA
· Yorba Linda, CA
Included in this episode:
· Excerpt from Amistad
· Excerpt from Fountain Hughes interview; WPA and John Lomax
· Work Holler
· West Indies Slave Chant - Roger Gibbs (Earliest Recorded Slave Chant from 1775)
· Roll Jordan Roll - From 12 Years a Slave
· Title Unknown - The Singing and Praying Band
· Title Unknown - The McIntosh County Shouters
· Rock My Soul - The Spirit Chorale of Los Ang
Mon, 17 May 2021 - 8 - Country Music Blazes a Trail.
During the first half of the 1900’s, Country music grew from a small group of naïve country musicians who shared their love of the old songs and the old ways with a country that was coming of age. As even now, the players that created the music Americans loved came from colorful backgrounds, and gave all they had to the music. Along the way, some of them gave too much – guys like Hank Williams who died so young and lived such a hard life – come to mind. The stories they told and created and shared left deep impressions in the hearts of the country – almost like the wagon wheel ruts you can still see in some places out along the prairie. At the same time, they forged a trail for newer sounds, first Honky Tonk, then Nashville that cleared a path for what was soon coming behind them – like Rockabilly and Rock and Roll. By the early 1950’s, you began to hear the first chords ringing out.
Can the Circle Be Unbroken - The Carter FamilyWildwood Flower - The Carter FamilySitting On Top of the World - The Mississippi SheiksWabash Cannonball - Roy Acuff and His Smoky Mountain BoysWalking the Floor Over You - Ernest TubbWhen Ernest Tubb Wrote Walking the Floor Over You - from A Celebration of Ernest Tubb(See the American Song Facebook page for the link to the full symposium)Hello Walls - Faron YoungJole Blon - Harry ChoatesHank and Audrey Williams Radio Interview with Bob McKinnon; 1950I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry - Hank WilliamsJambalaya (On the Bayou) - Hank WilliamsIf You've Got the Money, I've Got the Time - Lefty FrizzellSingle Girl, Married Girl - The Carter FamilyMy Big Iron Skillet - Wanda JacksonStand By Your Man - Tammy WynetteKiss An Angel Good Morning - Charlie PrideHow Charlie Broke Country's Color Barrier; Interview with Dan RatherGod Bless the U.S.A. - Al GreenwoodA Soldier's Last Letter - Ernest TubbThere's a Star Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere - Elton BrittAtom Bomb Baby - Five StarMarty Robbins - El PasoThe Jordanaire's Remember Recording with Patsy Cline - InterviewShe'll Be Coming Round the Mountain - The Skillet LickersCrazy - Patsy ClineRoot Hog or Die - June Carter CashCowboy, Harry Stephens, Talks About Writing "The Night Herding Song" - Library of Congress recordingTumbling Tumbleweeds - Sons of the PioneersWhen the Work's All Done This Fall - Roy RogersBlue Shadows on the Trail - Roy RogersI Want to Be a Cowboy's Sweetheart - Patsy MontanaMan of Constant Sorrows - Soggy Bottom Boys
Tracks and Interviews In This Episode
Visit Our Facebook Page
If you're enjoying our podcast episodes, you'd probably love our Facebook page!
There, you'll find links to all our research, and many of the interviews we access for our content.Sun, 25 Apr 2021 - 7 - The Duality of the Blues; Episode 7 of American Song
The Blues deals with very personal types of pain. But it doesn’t wallow in self-pity. The blues is about overcoming – like Martin Luther King Jr. used in his marches – “We Shall Overcome”. Great blues is all about a catharsis – a purging – of the things that hurt us so that we can go on living better lives! Nothing captures the Christian sense of death and redemption like the blues; When you think of the blues, you think about misfortune, betrayal and regret. You lose your job, you get the blues. Your mate falls out of love with you, you get the blues. Your dog dies, you get the blues.
Appallingly, America seems to be back at 'the crossroads' again in 2021. At the time that I'm publishing this, Georgia has just instituted voter suppression laws again, and there are bills in 43 of our states to follow suit. I hope this episode of American Song serves as a reminder about the horrors we've already been through as a nation, and a strong statement that we MUST NEVER go there again. I pray that the 'better angels' (to use a phrase from Abraham Lincoln) of our natures and our nation gain control. I hope that this entire podcast series is a reminder of how great our nation is and has been, and that we realize that it is BECAUSE and not despite of our diversity that we have been so.
Track List
Viola Davis - from Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (Netflix)
Interview: Leadbelly on the Origin of the Blues
The Burden of the Angel Beast - Bruce Cockburn, from Dart to the Heart
Homeless - Ladysmith Black Mambazo, from Paul Simon's Graceland
Woke Up This Morning, With my Mind on Jesus - Mississippi Fred McDowell
Motherless Child - O.V. Wright
We Shall Overcome - Mahalia Jackson
Strange Fruit - Bessie Smith
Signifying Monkey - Oscar Brown
Cross Roads - Robert Johnson
Dust My Broom - B.B. King
W.C. Handy - St. Louis Blues
John Lee Hooker - Boom Boom
Midnight Special - Leadbelly
See That My Grave is Kept Clean - Blind Lemon Jefferson
Interview: Steven Johnson (grandson of Robert Johnson)
Preaching Blues (Up Jumped the Devil) - Robert Johnson
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom - Ma Rainey
This Train - Sister Rosetta Tharpe
You Shook Me - Muddy Waters
Interview: Buddy Guy (with Nick Harcourt and Guitar Center)
Jumpin' at the Woodside - Count Basie and his Orchestra
One O'Clock Jump - Lester Young
Mean Old World - T Bone Walker
Indian Tom Tom - Big Chief Henry's Indian String Band
Sibo Bangoura - Ted Talk from TedX Sydney
Hey Hey - Eric Clapton, Unplugged
For a listing of all sources, please visit our American Song Podcast page on Facebook or download this episode's script, posted on this website.Mon, 05 Apr 2021 - 6 - The Classical-Jazz Affair; Episode 6 of American Song
By the 1920's, jazz had grown too large for its humble origins in New Orleans and was impacting the musical world, including the greatest classical European musicians and composers, as well as American listeners and fellow jazz musicians.
The Rite of Spring - Igor StravinskyCharleston - Sidney BechetFireworks - Louis ArmstrongGolliwogg's Cakewalk - Claude Debussy; performed by Branford MarsalisRagtime for 11 Instruments - Igor StravinskyCentral Park in the Dark - Charles IvesTea For Two - Art TatumAndre Previn and Oscar Peterson talk about Art TatumLivery Stable Blues - Original Dixie Land Jass BandFerde Grofe talks about working with George Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue - Paul Williams Orchestra, pianist George GershwinIra Gershwin Talks About George GershwinLa Creation du Monde - Darius Milhaud; performed by Branford MarsalisAaron Copland Talks About HimselfRodeo; I: Buckaroo Holiday - Aaron CoplandMusic for the Theater; Aaron Copland, performed by Leonard Bernstein & New York PhilharmonicFour Piano Blues: 3 - Muted and Sensous - Aaron Copland; performed by Leo SmitJazz Suite No. 2; 3: Dance - Dmitri ShostakovichEbony Concerto - Igor Stravinsky; performed by Woody Herman and His Thundering HerdOverture From Westside Story - Leonard Bernstein; Film Soundtrack, 1961Leonard Bernstein Talks About HimselfPreludes, Fugues, and Riffs - Leonard Bernstein; performed by Leonard Bernstein, Benny Goodman and the Colombia OrchestraCreole Rhapsody - Duke EllingtonConcerto for Cootie - Duke EllingtonDont' Get Around Much Anymore - Duke EllingtonBlack, Brown & Beige - Duke Ellington
What came next was an explosion of creativity among the musical who's who of the day.
The world's stage was filled to capacity with Europe's heavy-weights, like Toscanini, Rachmaninoff and Stravinsky and American classicists, like Leonard Bernstein, George Gershwin, Aaron Copland, not to mention the greats of the jazz world, like Louis Armstrong, Woody Herman, Benny Goodman, and Duke Ellington, just to name a few. All these mind-blowingly awesome artists were active and collaborating among each other. Could this have been the history's greatest musical period?
Find out what happened and how it happened, right here on American Song.
Tracks:Sat, 20 Mar 2021 - 5 - The Early Days of Jazz
Welcome to episode five in the American Song podcast.
The early days of jazz were full of exploration, invention, and creativity. It was a time of fluid exchanges in the music world between blacks and whites, even if it was only seldom happening anywhere else.
Jazz rose up from Congo Square in New Orleans, which was a culturally rich gumbo of sounds, rhythms and movement produced by people whose origins were from far away places. Spanish, French, English, African and Native Americans all contributed to this musical feast to create an art that could only have happened here.
In this episode, you'll learn about some of the earliest jazz musicians who made a lasting impact, influencing and shaping the music for many decades to come. You'll also hear and experience some of those great early songs, as well as hear directly from a few of the musicians that made the music possible.
As they say in New Orleans, ""Laissez les bon temps rouler!" Let the good times roll!
Track List
Duke Ellington Remembers
Jelly Roll Morton Rembers
St. James Infirmary - Buddy Bolden
Jelly Roll Morton & His Red Hot Peppers - Dr. Jazz
James P. Bolden - You've Got to Be Modernistic
Archie Shepp Remembers Sidney Bechet
Sidney Bechet - Strange Fruit
Rockin' Chair - Bix Biederbecke
Louis Armstrong Remembers Bix Biederbecke
St. Louis Blues - the Paul Whiteman Orchestra
Basin Street Blues - Louis Armstrong
When You're Young the Whole World Smiles With You - Louis ArmstrongThu, 04 Mar 2021 - 4 - The Early Days of Country Music
A fusion of blues and mountain music, a reminder of better times for many people, and a host of memorable and gifted musicians. In this episode, we'll discover the following musicians and their music:
The Carter Family - When the World's On FireThe Carter Family - Little Darling Pal of MineWoody Guthrie - This Land is Your LandJake Tullock & Earl Scruggs - Little Darling Pal of Mine
Jimmie Rogers & Louis Armstrong - Blue Yodel Number Nine
DeFord Bailey - Pan American Blues
Cotton Eyed Joe - Fiddlin' John Carson
Show Intro for the Grand Ol' Opry - November 11, 1939
Jimmie Rogers -
The Carter Family - Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow
(Medley):Lesley Riddle - Red River Blues
Maybelle Carter Interview from 1975
DeFord Bailey - The Fox Chase
Harry McClintock - The Big Rock Candy Mountain
Eck Robertson - Sally Gooden
Doc Watson - Going Down the Road Feeling Bad
Updates!
If you'd like to have a hand in helping to produce the American Song podcast, we'd sure appreciate it if you'd become an American Song Patreon member. You can make a donation of any amount by visiting our Patreon page!
Also, we'd love to hear from you and answer any questions, or hear any suggestions you might have about the podcast. Visit the American Song Facebook page!Sun, 21 Feb 2021 - 3 - The Roots of Jazz - Ragtime, Stride, Boogie Woogie and the Blues
America's original art contribution to the world - jazz.
So deep. So rich. But where did it come from?
There were at least four different sources; and yet one of these - the blues - is also much more than a contributing art form. The blues is almost mythology itself.
Sprung from the earth, like the plantation soil where so many slaves lived and died, the blues at once describes and also gives life to everything in its path.
I hope you enjoy this episode. If you do, please tell me about it! Leave a comment to let me know what you think of our podcast so far - what you like, and what you'd like to know more about! I'll get back to you, and possibly even address any questions or suggestions in an upcoming episode!
Many recordings have been sourced to prepare this week's episode. Here's a list of what I've included:
Grace and Beauty
composed by James Scott
source: Jazz Piano History
Elite Syncopations
composed and performed by Scott Joplin
source: Scott Joplin Piano Rolls
The Entertainer
composed and performed by Scott Joplin
source: Jazz Piano History
Wynton Marsalis interview
taken from Ken Burns "Jazz" documentary
Bleeding Hearted Blues
composed and performed by James P. Johnson
source: Library of Congress
Boogie Woogie Stomp
composed and performed by Pine Top Smith
source: Jazz Piano History
Son House interview
source: YouTube video
Trouble of the World
performed by Mahalia Jackson
source: Gospels, Spirituals & Hymns
Go Down Old Hannah
performed by Texas Prison Gang
source: YouTube
Terraplane Blues
composed and performed by: Robert Johnson
source: The Ultimate Jazz Archive
Contact Joe Hines at joe.hines4@gmail.comSat, 06 Feb 2021 - 2 - The Many Musical Threads in Our National Fabric; Early American Music by Region
Hi All,
Episode two of “American Song” is an exploration of some of the early regional music from before the 20th century. Like some of the things we listened to in episode one, many of these forms survive and continue to be popular today!
In this half-hour episode, we’ll listen to Appalachian and Mountain music, then travel down to Louisiana for a sampling of Cajun music! No trip to Louisiana is complete without at least a short stop in New Orleans – we’ll be back to New Orleans again in episode three. This week, however, we’re digging into the march music; early jazz music was, at least in part, played of ex- marching band members. And I hope you’re leaving a little room on your plate for some Mexican food – or at least music! Our neighbors to the south have contributed to our culture like everyone else.
Here’s a list of the music used in this episode:
West Virginia Gals
Recorded 11/26/66 in the family home of Glen Lyn; Giles County, Virginia.
Source: Library of CongressBarbara Allen
Sung by “Granny Porter”; Wade Ward, fiddle player.
Source: Ballads and Songs of the Blue Ridge Mountains; Persistence & ChangeCamden Clog Dancing
Mike Adamson YouTube videoDarlin’ Cori
Cedric Watson on Gourd Banjo
Cedric Watson YouTube videoWash Tub Bass
Demonstration by Mick Ralphs
YouTube videoWhiskey Before Breakfast
Performed by: Stephen Seifert
YouTube videoHigh On a Mountain
Performed by: Ola Belle Reed
Classic Mountain Songs; Smithsonian FolkwaysCajun Comedian
Comedy by: Kent Gonsoulin
YouTube videoLa Danse du Mardi Gras
Performed by: The Balfa BrothersPomona Waltz
Emil Waldtleufel; composer
Recorded by E. Berliner Gramophone; 1897
Source; Library of CongressSoldier’s March
Performed by Prince’s Military Band
Recording Date; 3-25-1909
Source: Library of CongressPanama Rag
Performed by: Regimental Band of the Republic (instrumentalist)
Recorded By: American Record Co.
Date: 1905La Cucaracha
Performed by: Cuco SanchezVolver, Volver
Performed by: Vicente FernandezSat, 30 Jan 2021 - 1 - (If World Cultures Were Musical Notes), Early America Was a Ready-Made Symphony.
Welcome to American Song.
There are few things I love more than music, and America.
Both of these worlds have been my home since my earliest days.
I've been thinking about producing this podcast for many years now. And now, this is episode one; With this podcast, I want to tell a story about how many cultures have contributed to the music we listen to today, and how the people of the United States have a common and proud heritage. We are a great people because of our diversity. This diversity made it possible to create totally new ways of addressing challenges and opportunities. It made it possible for our country to lead in science, the arts, business - nearly every endeavor.
I'm choosing to tell the story with something that I, and many people like me, love. Music.
I'm going to tell the story about how every modern form of music we listen to today has it's roots in the cultures that brought their unique musical arts with them when they arrived on our shores.
The music I've included in this first episode mostly comes from the digital archives available through the Library of Congress.
This podcast will be updated at least once a month. I hope you enjoy it, and I hope you'll come back to listen every month. I've got no sponsors; this is a labor of love. So, if you like what I'm doing here, please encourage me by spreading the word!
I look forward to hearing your ideas or experiences that you might like to share. If you love America and music the way I do, I hope together we can build a community that celebrates both of those blessings together.
God bless America!Sun, 17 Jan 2021
Podcasts similar to American Song
- Conversations ABC listen
- Global News Podcast BBC World Service
- El Partidazo de COPE COPE
- Herrera en COPE COPE
- The Dan Bongino Show Cumulus Podcast Network | Dan Bongino
- Es la Mañana de Federico esRadio
- La Noche de Dieter esRadio
- Hondelatte Raconte - Christophe Hondelatte Europe 1
- Dateline NBC NBC News
- 財經一路發 News98
- La rosa de los vientos OndaCero
- Más de uno OndaCero
- La Zanzara Radio 24
- L'Heure Du Crime RTL
- El Larguero SER Podcast
- Nadie Sabe Nada SER Podcast
- SER Historia SER Podcast
- Todo Concostrina SER Podcast
- 安住紳一郎の日曜天国 TBS RADIO
- アンガールズのジャンピン[オールナイトニッポンPODCAST] ニッポン放送
- 辛坊治郎 ズーム そこまで言うか! ニッポン放送
- 飯田浩司のOK! Cozy up! Podcast ニッポン放送
- 吳淡如人生實用商學院 吳淡如
- 武田鉄矢・今朝の三枚おろし 文化放送PodcastQR