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13 votes
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FreeDOS open-source text-based OS turns 30, still in active development and primarily used for retro gaming
13 votes -
Slovenia's beautiful beehives turn apiaries into art
15 votes -
The strange origin story behind Akira's megacity, Neo Tokyo
12 votes -
Why didn't Chris and Dan get into Berghain?
7 votes -
What a century (plus a pandemic) does to moviegoing and why it matters
16 votes -
Scholars discover rare 16th-century tome with handwritten notes by John Milton
17 votes -
Chef cooks from 720 year old cook book
15 votes -
Adrift off the Finnish coast, the autonomous island of Maakalla comes alive each summer and offers a fascinating glimpse at how Finns once lived
10 votes -
Decades later, John Romero looks back at the birth of the first-person shooter
18 votes -
Red Lobster | Bankrupt
21 votes -
Fast crimes at Lambda School
21 votes -
Ahmes, the first known maths author
4 votes -
Before smartphones, an army of real people helped you find stuff on Google
21 votes -
Milwaukee’s oldest gay bar donates thousands of photos to Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project
20 votes -
Is Tetris really forty this year?
12 votes -
TETRIS: Heavenly Scrolls (1989)
5 votes -
Fit to be dyed: The enduring appeal of tie-dye
15 votes -
Government without states (how to raise a tribal army in pre-Roman Europe, part II)
8 votes -
Goldfish memories - most of China’s early websites have disappeared
30 votes -
Divers find remains of Finnish World War II plane that was shot down by Moscow with a US diplomat aboard
18 votes -
Band Saw Sculptor [1964]
7 votes -
Why we like people who ask us for favors
12 votes -
The life and death of E3
14 votes -
Science fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin made Schrödinger’s cat famous
12 votes -
The origin of every European country's name
13 votes -
"Sword breakers" were rare and we don't know much about them. How were they used and what were they really for? Two experienced rapier fencers experiment with one to discover more about them.
11 votes -
The moral economy of the Shire
26 votes -
The Goya paintings you aren't supposed to look at
11 votes -
Josh Gibson becomes MLB career and season batting leader as Negro Leagues statistics incorporated
13 votes -
I visited the mud wrestlers of Punjab, Pakistan Part 1 | Strength Unknown
6 votes -
Book borrowed from Finnish library returned eighty-four years late – copy of Arthur Conan Doyle's Refugees was due to be returned month after USSR invaded Finland
13 votes -
How to build 300,000 airplanes in five years
9 votes -
Kerbal Space Program 2 development history
20 votes -
Eastern Air Lines | Bankrupt
4 votes -
The history of Tetris world records
27 votes -
The Canterbury Tales, or, how technology changes the way we speak
14 votes -
Emigre typography and graphic design magazine (1984–2005)
5 votes -
This American Civil War submarine vanished for 136 years
3 votes -
Meet the Finnish biotech startup bringing a long lost mycoprotein to your plate – proprietary single-cell fungus-based protein was originally developed by local paper industry
5 votes -
Why the knuckleball is basically extinct... The unpredictable pitch with no spin.
9 votes -
How the internet revived the world's first work of interactive fiction
13 votes -
The engineering of duct tape
19 votes -
Why we don't see this physics defying pitch anymore - The mythical screwball
8 votes -
Archie, the (pre) Internet’s first search engine, is rescued and running
14 votes -
Why every city wants a Wrigley Field
10 votes -
When ABBA was declared the enemy in Sweden – documentary ‘Against the Odds’ sketches the ups and downs that accompanied the band's success
5 votes -
From Run DMC to Jay-Z: Hip-hop's history, told through bling
11 votes -
The forged Apple employee badge
25 votes -
A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs (my favourite podcast)
I noticed that Tildes has had no previous discussion of Andrew Hickey's wonderful music podcast A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs. So I thought I'd write a little about it, in case it might...
I noticed that Tildes has had no previous discussion of Andrew Hickey's wonderful music podcast A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs. So I thought I'd write a little about it, in case it might bring as much joy to someone here as it has brought me. It's easily my favourite podcast, and it might actually be my favourite work on music history in any medium. It's really that good.
The podcast started something like six years ago, and like its name suggests, it presents a history of rock music. But not just the "four white guys and some guitars" rock music of the 1970s and beyond, but a far more in-depth exploration of where the genre came from and how it has evolved. This is not one of those podcasts where a host or hosts have chosen a topic, done some light resarch and then talk about what comes to their mind. Instead, each episode is thoroughly researched, pre-written and edited. It is a high quality audio lecture delivered by an excellent and witty storyteller who knows what he is talking about.
The first episode was on "Flying Home" by the Benny Goodman Sextet, a jazz and jump blues track released in 1939, and therefore naturally not really a rock song, but something that works as a good starting point in the wider discussion of the genre's evolution. From there, episode by episode, Hickey has told us about the (or rather "a") history of rock music chronologically, taking us through the 40s and 50s, and currently heading towards the end of the 60s. He has indicated that just as 1939 was a somewhat arbitrary starting point, his 500-song history will end with a song that was released in 1999. Looking at his current pace, it may be a while until we get there.
The latest episode is song #174, "I Heard it Through the Grapevine", first released in 1967. It's part one of a two-part narration, with the current episode concentrating on the song's early history and its writers Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong, while the upcoming episode two will look at Marvin Gaye's version and career at that point.
Hickey has in fact recently started to split some songs into multiple episodes, and he did it also with the previous song, song #173, Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower", first released in 1967. That one had Part 1 that concentrated on Dylan's version, and then Part 2 that covered Jimi Hendrix's version. Although, when I say that those episodes concentrate on Dylan's and Hendrix's versions of the song, that's not exactly true. It would be more accurate to say that Part 1 concentrates on Dylan's career in the late 60s, as well some related subjects and artists from the era, while Part 2 looked at Hendrix's career at the time, as well as subjects and artists related to him around that time.
And this is actually an important point to make. While the episodes certainly tell you a lot about the song that they are discussing, they are not solely about the song in question, and they never really aim to give you a subjective interpretation of the song or anything like that. Instead, you are given plenty of historical facts, you hear a lot of interesting stories, and you find out how the song and the people who were involved with it fit into a larger narrative of rock music. And you also get to hear excerpts of some really good music along the way. Hickey is very much an expert in the topic, a great storyteller, and seems like someone who knows how to do his research.
The podcast's early episodes were shorter, about half an hour or so, while some of the more recent episodes have become much longer, some reaching over four hours, which is the reason why Hickey has started to split some episodes into multiple parts. In addition to the main podcast, there are also Patreon bonus episodes which are not part of the main narrative, but which I can highly recommend. They function as companion pieces to the main story, and typically last between 10 to 30 minutes; for instance, the bonus episode for the first "I Heard it Through the Grapevine" episode was on the song "Bend Me, Shape Me" by Amen Corner. And so, although he is officially just at song #174, Hickey has probably covered well over three hundred songs so far.
The podcasts are free of ads and fully community supported. You should be able to find the podcast on all the main podcast providers, and it has a dedicated website at 500songs.com. If you don't know where to start, the double episode on "All Along the Watchtower" that I mentioned earlier could be a good way to check if the podcast is for you. Or, if you have some favourite artists or songs from the 40s, 50s or 60s, check out the tags on the website to see if he has made episodes on them. Or you can of course just start from the beginning, like I did.
Last year, Hickey was also a guest on Rick Rubin's podcast, and that interview could also be a good introduction to Hickey and his work.
4 votes