History in Five Songs with Martin Popoff

En podcast av Pantheon Media - Tisdagar

Tisdagar

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294 Avsnitt

  1. History in Five Songs 234: They Shrunk the Boogie!

    Publicerades: 2023-12-19
  2. History in Five Songs 233: OTT Hair Metal Songs

    Publicerades: 2023-12-12
  3. History in Five Songs 232: Celebrating Snare Drum

    Publicerades: 2023-12-05
  4. History in Five Songs 231: Birmingham’s Black Sabbath Family

    Publicerades: 2023-11-28
  5. History in Five Songs 230: My Shadow Top Five: A Breaks Study

    Publicerades: 2023-11-21
  6. History in Five Songs 229: My Top Five Albums: A Pre-Chorus Study

    Publicerades: 2023-11-14
  7. History in Five Songs 228: Corporate Solo Albums

    Publicerades: 2023-11-07
  8. History in Five Songs 227: Inspired by New York City

    Publicerades: 2023-10-31
  9. History in Five Songs 226: The Bruce Springsteen Family

    Publicerades: 2023-10-24
  10. History in Five Songs 225: Heaviest '70s Live Albums

    Publicerades: 2023-10-17
  11. History in Five Songs 224: Sequencing

    Publicerades: 2023-10-10
  12. History in Five Songs 223: Bands Rarely Copied. But Not Never.

    Publicerades: 2023-10-03
  13. History in Five Songs 222: Recalled Reactions: Big Debut Albums

    Publicerades: 2023-09-26
  14. History in Five Songs 221: Recalled Reactions from 1976

    Publicerades: 2023-09-19
  15. History in Five Songs 220: Hair Metal Skips by ‘70s Bands

    Publicerades: 2023-09-12
  16. History in Five Songs 219: Hair Metal Fails by ‘70s Bands

    Publicerades: 2023-09-05
  17. History in Five Songs 218: Hair Metal Wins by ‘70s Bands

    Publicerades: 2023-08-29
  18. History in Five Songs 217: This Band's (Police Album)

    Publicerades: 2023-08-22
  19. History in Five Songs 216: Finding Value in Instrumentals

    Publicerades: 2023-08-17
  20. History in Five Songs 215: Song Title Non-Starters

    Publicerades: 2023-08-08

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History in Five Songs with Martin Popoff is the show that aims to make grand and often oddball hard rock and heavy metal points through a narrative built upon the tiny idea of a quintet of songs. Buttressed with illustrative clips, Martin argues quickly and succinctly why these songs - and the specific sections of these tracks - support his mad professor premise, from the wobbly invention of an “American” heavy metal, to the influence of Led Zeppelin in hair metal or to more succinct topics like tapping and twin leads. The songs serve as bricks, but Martin slathers plenty of mortar. At the end, hopefully he has a sturdy house in which this week’s theory can reside unbothered by the elements. At approximately 7000, Martin has had published in books more record reviews than anybody in the history of music writing across all genres. Additionally, Martin has penned approximately 85 books on hard rock, heavy metal, classic rock and record collecting. Proud part of Pantheon - the podcast network for music lovers.

Visit the podcast's native language site