672 episodios

Mark Ellen and David Hepworth have been talking about and writing about music together and individually for a collective eighty years in magazines like Smash Hits, Mojo and The Word and on radio and TV programmes like "Rock On", "Whistle Test" and VH-1.
Over thirteen years ago, when working on the late magazine The Word, they began producing podcasts. Some listeners have been kind enough to say these have been very special to them. When the magazine folded in 2012 they kept the spirit of those podcasts alive in regular Word In Your Ear evenings in which they spoke to musicians and authors in front of an audience. 
Over these years they've produced hundreds of hours of material. As of the Current Unpleasantness of 2020, they've produced yet hundreds of hours more with a little help from guests kind enough to digitally show them around their attics such as Danny Baker, Andy Partridge, Sir Tim Rice and Mark Lewisohn. For the full span of the Word In Your Ear world, visit wiyelondon.com.
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Word In Your Ear Mark Ellen, David Hepworth and Alex Gold

    • Música

Mark Ellen and David Hepworth have been talking about and writing about music together and individually for a collective eighty years in magazines like Smash Hits, Mojo and The Word and on radio and TV programmes like "Rock On", "Whistle Test" and VH-1.
Over thirteen years ago, when working on the late magazine The Word, they began producing podcasts. Some listeners have been kind enough to say these have been very special to them. When the magazine folded in 2012 they kept the spirit of those podcasts alive in regular Word In Your Ear evenings in which they spoke to musicians and authors in front of an audience. 
Over these years they've produced hundreds of hours of material. As of the Current Unpleasantness of 2020, they've produced yet hundreds of hours more with a little help from guests kind enough to digitally show them around their attics such as Danny Baker, Andy Partridge, Sir Tim Rice and Mark Lewisohn. For the full span of the Word In Your Ear world, visit wiyelondon.com.
Get bonus content on Patreon
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Steve Diggle of the Buzzcocks remembers the day “a terrible beauty was born”

    Steve Diggle of the Buzzcocks remembers the day “a terrible beauty was born”

    Steve Diggle met Pete Shelley when the Pistols played Manchester in 1976 and the Diggle-fronted Buzzcocks are now on a world tour that began in Mexico and takes in North and South America, Europe and Australasia before winding up at the 100 Club where they played the Punk Festival 48 years ago – “we’ve come full circle”. He looks back here at the first shows he saw and played himself and talks about Silverhead, Status Quo, Leo Sayer dressed as a clown, George Best, the Groundhogs, The History of Mr Polly by HG Wells, the Buzzcocks as “Lennon and McCartney in a blender”, “Led Zeppelin for Comprehensive schoolkids, Deep Purple for Grammar schoolkids” and a great story about Patrick Moraz of Yes with a bank of keyboards like a telephone exchange and an alpine horn.
     
    Buzzcocks world tour dates here: https://www.buzzcocks.com/events
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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    • 30 min
    Rock snobbery, the seven wives of Gregg Allman & the greatest solo on a pop record

    Rock snobbery, the seven wives of Gregg Allman & the greatest solo on a pop record

    This week’s theories, rants, ruminations, recollections, weak gags and free and frank exchanges of view alight upon the following …  
     
     … is pop music now all about identity?
     
    …. the recording of the Animals’ House of the Rising Sun and other apocryphal tales.
     
    … has any act been as ubiquitous since Frankie Goes to Hollywood in 1984?
     
    … or has anyone inspired a greater level of personal devotion than Taylor Swift?
     
    … Peter Green, a shotgun and his accountant.
     
    … books bought but never read.
     
    .. re-reading Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity and the changing benchmarks for good and bad musical taste.
     
    … intriguing parallels between the book and record industries.
     
    … and Neil Tennant braves the digital lynch-mob.
     
    Plus Adam Clayton’s garden, Konstantin Chernenko, Richard Burton, Rebel Wilson, Dark Academia, creepy weepies and birthday guest John Montagna looks at singles by the same act that are ‘descendants’ – ie pretty much identical – eg the Monkees’ Teardrop City and Last Train To Clarksville, the Kinks’ You Really Got Me and All Day And All of the Night and Mark Knopfler’s Cannibals and Walk Of Life. Or just try the first few seconds of these four by the Inkspots – Maybe, I Don’t Want To Set The World On Fire, If I Didn’t Care and Whispering Grass.
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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    • 1h 3 min
    Harold Bronson of Rhino Records kept a 40-year rock and roll diary…

    Harold Bronson of Rhino Records kept a 40-year rock and roll diary…

    File this under ‘right place, right time’. Harold Bronson was a teenager in mid-60’s Los Angeles and saw every act imaginable. Then wrote for the Daily Bruin and Rolling Stone and interviewed everyone that interested him. Then managed a music store and co-founded Rhino Records, pretty much inventing the idea of the top-end reissue – “Sooner or later everyone ends up in a box.” All of this is in his memoir, ‘Time Has Come Today: Rock and Roll Diaries 1967 – 2007’, and many of its cast of thousands appear in this podcast, among them Johnny Horton and ‘the Battle of New Orleans’, the Purple People Eaters, the Temple City Kazoo Orchestra, the Doors at the Hollywood Bowl, the Stones supported by Ike & Tina (for $12), Ozzy Osbourne (“I’d never meet anybody with a tattoo before”), Hilton Valentine working at a Henry The Eighth-themed restaurant, Groucho Marx at a Led Zeppelin launch, a ‘Best of Louie Louie’ that sold 100,000 copies and a Ritchie Valens record made on a dictaphone. 
     
    You can order Harold’s book here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Time-Has-Come-Today-Diaries/dp/B0CGTX2YN8
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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    • 39 min
    The “amniotic throb” of modern pop, the eternal life of the Top Gear theme and the Blue Nile’s lucky break

    The “amniotic throb” of modern pop, the eternal life of the Top Gear theme and the Blue Nile’s lucky break

    With Mark Ellen in foreign parts David Hepworth and Alex Gold light cigars, pass the port in the correct direction and discuss…..

    …..the fact that there is only one way to play a Beatles song and that is the way the Beatles did it.
    …..the chances that Taylor Swift is reaching her imperial phase and nobody is prepared to tell her what she really needs to hear.
    ….the very good reason that all contemporary pop records do literally sound the same.
    …the 50th anniversary of Richard and Linda Thompson’s “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight”.
    ….the story of the Allman Brothers’ “Jessica”, a jam that turned into Dickey Betts’ pension.
    ….how the Blue Nile got a plug which is worth all the bought media in the world.
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 47 min
    Hollywood Babylon, the inspired gimmickry of Catch A Fire and the luck of Ron Wood

    Hollywood Babylon, the inspired gimmickry of Catch A Fire and the luck of Ron Wood

    We lobbed the feathered arrows of enquiry at the rock and roll dartboard this week and these got the highest scores …
     
    … rock stars v the new league of the Super-Rich.
     
    … package tours of the mid-‘60s – eight acts, an interval, a compere plus God Save the Queen.
     
    … ‘Hits, Flops and Other Illusions’ by Edward Zwick and the fantastic tale about arrogance, money-squandering and Julia Roberts at the Halcyon Hotel.
    ... pop music used to be about persuading people to cut loose; now it’s about getting them to tighten up.
     
    … why you can read Ron Wood’s memoir as either comedy or tragedy.
     
    .. Chris Blackwell’s post-production trickery that sold Bob Marley to a rock audience.
     
    … Master Tape Rescue: the arduous task of panning for gold.
     
    ... and why there should be a movie about the making of Shakespeare in Love.
     
    Plus birthday guest Chuck Loncon in Savannah, Georgia – Neil Young v Spotify, Lady Antebellum, the Dixie Chicks and the tangled world of political correctness.
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear via Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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    • 58 min
    Neil Tennant remembers life “with dyed red Bowie hair and clattering platforms”

    Neil Tennant remembers life “with dyed red Bowie hair and clattering platforms”

    Neil’s an old friend from our days back at Smash Hits in the early ‘80s. The first Pet Shop Boys demos were played on the office tape machine, though he was a bit self-conscious about “the one with the rap on it”. He’s always had a journalistic capacity for story-telling, remembering everything in famously entertaining detail, and we had so much material from this reunion we turned it into a two-part podcast. Here’s a taste of what you’ll find in this second half ...
     
    … “every group has to have an angle”.
     
    … pop’s current obsession with identity.
     
    … why Bronski Beat were so significant.
     
    … David Bowie’s scathing one-word reviews of Michael Jackson and Oasis at the Brits.
     
    … “the whole world of pop songs is a giant ever-expanding artwork”.
     
    … meeting Frida from Abba, “a song waiting to happen”.
     
    … the ‘Pits & Perverts’ gay benefit for the miners in 1984.
     
    … London clubs in the early ‘80s - “we had a competition to see who could wear the highest heels”.
     
    … how everyone at Smash Hits thought Michael Jackson’s Thriller was “a damp squib”.
     
    … recording West End Girls. 
     
    … first hearing a 12-inch single.
     
    … appearing on Soul Train with Don Cornelius – “like being on a different planet”.
     
    … why Dusty Springfield gave Jerry Wexler a nervous breakdown.
     
    … seeing the last Ziggy Stardust show.
     
    … meeting Steven Spielberg, Micky Dolenz and Joni Mitchell.
     
    … and Boy George's gag about George Michael.
    -----------------------------------
     
    PSB tour dates: https://www.ticketmaster.co.uk/pet-shop-boys-tickets/artist/735852
     
    Order the new Pet Shop Boys album ‘Nonetheless’ here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/nonetheless-Deluxe-2CD-Shop-Boys/dp/B0CTKKBBVF
    -----------------------------------
    Subscribe to Word In Your Ear on Patreon for early - and ad-free - access to all of our content, plus a whole load more!: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
     
    Get bonus content on Patreon
    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 43 min

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