84 episodes

Prisoners of Rock and Roll is a bi-weekly podcast about music, the people who make it, and the almighty, ever-lasting power it has over all of us. We've covered everything from Anthrax to Frank Sinatra, the history of the blues to the history of punk, and from Johnny Cash to the Joshua Tree. We also play clips, discuss music news, and sentence a song every week to The Electric Chair for being terrible. Check us out -- you might learn something! Check us out at www.prisonersofrockandroll.com.

Prisoners of Rock and Roll Prisoners of Rock and Roll

    • Music

Prisoners of Rock and Roll is a bi-weekly podcast about music, the people who make it, and the almighty, ever-lasting power it has over all of us. We've covered everything from Anthrax to Frank Sinatra, the history of the blues to the history of punk, and from Johnny Cash to the Joshua Tree. We also play clips, discuss music news, and sentence a song every week to The Electric Chair for being terrible. Check us out -- you might learn something! Check us out at www.prisonersofrockandroll.com.

    The Moscow Music Peace Festival

    The Moscow Music Peace Festival

    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

    • 1 hr 12 min
    The Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection

    The Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection

    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

    • 1 hr 32 min
    How Chess Records Shaped the Blues and Rock & Roll

    How Chess Records Shaped the Blues and Rock & Roll

    Chess Records was an independent record label created on the South Side of Chicago in 1950 by two Polish immigrants named Leonard and Phil Chess. As one of the most important blues labels of all time, Chess Records captured the electric sound of the American South and had a huge influence on the early days of rock and roll. 
    Chess Records helped introduce America to Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Howlin’ Wolf, and Etta James. And when these albums made their way across the Atlantic, they inspired the British blues movement that gave us Clapton, Zeppelin, and of course, the Rolling Stones. 
    In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the history of Chess Records: how it got started, their impressive roster of important musicians, and the influence that these songs had on rock and roll. We’re also look at the shadier side of the label, where artists didn’t get paid the royalties they deserved and DJs were given writing credits in exchange for playing records. 
    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

    • 1 hr 28 min
    Lights, Camera, Music!: Awesome Soundtracks

    Lights, Camera, Music!: Awesome Soundtracks

    Lights, camera…rock and roll! Music plays a huge role in film, and in this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking another look at movie soundtracks. Soundtracks have given us some incredibly iconic songs over the last 80 years. 
    Purple Rain, The Bodyguard, Titanic, Saturday Night Fever, Purple Rain, 8 Mile, Ghostbusters, Footloose, Robin Hood, Judgment Night, Guardians of the Galaxy, Pulp Fiction, Singles, Grosse Point Blank, the Lion King. I could keep going but we have a show to do. 
    Grab some popcorn and a soda, recline your seat, and silence your damn cell phone because we’re about to press play on our favorite movie soundtracks. It’s showtime!
    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

    • 1 hr 26 min
    The Music of 1994

    The Music of 1994

    Get ready to climb into the musical memory machine and take a trip back to 1994 as we revisit the music that came out 30 years ago. 
    It was a year that defined our generation when Kurt Cobain took his own life. We got important albums like Purple from Stone Temple Pilots, Superunknown by Soundgarden, Sixteen Stone from Bush, Jar of Flies from Alice in Chains, Throwing Copper from Live, and Vitology from Pearl Jam. REM tried to plug in with Monster while Nirvana went unplugged on MTV. Mariah Carey transformed into a Christmas character, while Green Day and Offspring pushed punk onto the radio. Hootie & Blowfish, the Dave Matthews Band, the Cranberries, and Blues Traveler all entered the scene and helped define the mid 90s alternative sound. Hip hop had a fresh year with albums from Nas, the Beastie Boys, Bone Thugs & Harmony, and a newcomer called Notorious B.I.G. 
    Join the Prisoners of Rock and Roll as we break out our flannel shirts and take a look back at the music of 1994.
    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

    • 1 hr 43 min
    Jim Morrison: Brilliant or Buffoon?

    Jim Morrison: Brilliant or Buffoon?

    The Doors were one of the most influential and iconic bands of the 1960s – they built a dark counterculture sound on a foundation of Ray Manzarek’s organ playing that combined elements of poetry, blues, rock and roll, jazz, and psychedelic music. 
    At the front of it all was their charismatic, volatile, and enigmatic lead singer Jim Morrison. There’s no doubt that he was the embodiment of the whole sex, drugs, and rock and roll thing. The good looking frontman who helped forge his legacy by dying young. 
    But was Jim Morrison a brilliant visionary or a rock and roll buffoon? 
    On one hand, he saw himself as the Lizard King. A poet and mystic who was influenced by his background in literature and film. 
    On the other hand, Jim was also an erratic, self-indulgent showman. A hardcore alcoholic who clashed with his parents, his bandmates, and most famously, the police. 
    In this episode of Prisoners of Rock and Roll, we’re taking a look at the life and legacy of Jim Morrison and debating if he was brilliant or a buffoon?
    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

    • 1 hr 25 min

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