The Disco Hicks Show

Sean Disco Hicks

A podcast devoted to classic music, movies, television, and culture. The slogan for this podcast is "be you, share your gift, and keep those classics current” and that's the spirit of the podcast. Hosted by Sean Disco Hicks, a former DJ, music lover, and historian. 

  1. Why 1988 Still Feels Like Hip Hop’s Big Bang

    1d ago

    Why 1988 Still Feels Like Hip Hop’s Big Bang

    Send us Fan Mail One year can change a whole genre, and we think 1988 did exactly that. Shaun P joins me to debate one of hip hop’s biggest arguments: what is the best year in hip hop, and does 1996 really beat 1988 when you measure impact, innovation, and replay value? We use 1996 in hip hop as context, running through a stack of classics and the complicated cultural backdrop of that era. Then we go all in on 1988: the debuts, the breakthroughs, and the albums that still teach lessons on flow, storytelling, politics, and pure fun. We talk Public Enemy’s “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back,” N.W.A.’s “Straight Outta Compton,” Eric B. & Rakim, EPMD, Big Daddy Kane, Slick Rick, MC Lyte, Boogie Down Productions, and more, plus how the business side and production choices shaped what the world heard. But this is bigger than a list of records. We connect the music to the full 1988 cultural moment, including the fashion and the feeling, then pivot to how hip hop pushes into the mainstream through Yo! MTV Raps, Fab Five Freddy’s influence, and the hard truth about what it took for MTV to embrace Black artists. If you love rap history, golden age hip hop, and the stories behind why these classics still hit, you’ll leave with a sharper playlist and a stronger argument. Subscribe for more deep dives, share this with a friend who still argues about 88 vs 96, and leave a rating or review with your pick: which year really wins, and what album makes your case?

    1h 23m
  2. 12/19/2025

    From Baltimore Arts School To Global Icon: How Tupac Shakur Changed Hip-Hop And The Culture

    Send us Fan Mail Urgency has a sound, and Tupac Shakur made it impossible to ignore. Disco Hicks and brother of the show Shaun Whittaker open with the restless kid who studied acting and ballet at Baltimore School for the Arts, raised on Afeni’s Panther principles, then follow him through Digital Underground’s tutelage into a voice that could move streets and stadiums. The story bends through trauma and triumph: on-tour losses that hardened him, the Juice audition that stunned casting directors, and the moment his acting revealed a talent too big for one lane. They dig into the records that defined eras. 2Pacalypse Now planted empathy and protest in the mainstream. Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z. bottled 1992’s tension and hope. Me Against the World turned legal peril into poetry and precision, a no-skip classic of pain and perspective. Then the air shifts: All Eyez On Me, tracked at breakneck speed yet mixed with pristine clarity, sounds like freedom—California Love, How Do You Want It, Picture Me Rollin’—and the sobering counterpoints of Life Goes On and Only God Can Judge Me. Alongside the music, they look at how Pac built songs quickly, layered ad-libs like instruments, and clashed with perfectionists who moved slower than his fears allowed. The conversation widens to power and consequence: Death Row’s control, Suge Knight’s shadow, and a sobering trip to Milan that showed Pac how little he truly owned. Disco and Shaun unpack the Vegas brawl with Orlando Anderson, the street calculus that followed, and the chain of violence that reshaped hip-hop. The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory brings him back to laser focus—leaner, harder, fearless. On screen, Poetic Justice, Above the Rim, and Gridlock’d show range and timing that hinted at a career that might have rivaled Hollywood’s greats. Three decades on, the influence is everywhere: cadence, candor, and the courage to be complicated. We talk craft, context, and the choices that still spark debate, then honor the honors—Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Library of Congress—and the people who kept the flame. Press play to revisit the music and moments that made the man, and share this with a friend who needs the reminder. If this conversation moves you, follow the show, rate us, and tell us your one Pac song that never leaves your rotation.

    1h 54m
  3. 10/31/2025

    LL Cool J: From Kangol To GOAT

    Send us Fan Mail A Kangol, a boombox, and a pen that refused to dull—LL Cool J’s story is a roadmap for how to last in hip-hop without losing yourself. Sean and special guest Shaun Whittaker dive into the early spark from Krush Groove and Radio, the game-changing pivot of Bigger and Deffer, and why I Need Love quietly rewired how rap could talk to the heart. Then we pull the thread through a crucial comeback with Mama Said Knock You Out, examining how swagger, pacing, and production choices kept his sound street and radio at the same time. The fellas trace the on-screen evolution that made him more than a rapper who acts. From The Hard Way to Deep Blue Sea and In Too Deep, LL built a range: scene-stealing charm, suspense under pressure, and a villain you truly fear. Along the way, we unpack legendary clashes—Kool Moe Dee's old-school mechanics versus LL’s new cadence, and the high-drama chess match with Canibus that still fuels barbershop debates. Through it all, he kept a clean but cutting pen, a skillful balance that made room for pop and R&B without shedding credibility. Fast-forward to the modern reset: The FORCE, guided by Q-Tip, folds in warm analog drums, jazz textures, and African tones while letting LL push harder into reflection, protest, and purpose. The show breaks down standouts, why the sequencing works, and how the FORCE Tour reminded crowds what real stage command looks like. If you care about hip-hop history, artist durability, and the craft of performance, this conversation gives you a front-row seat to the blueprint LL wrote and rewrote across four decades. Enjoy the ride, share it with a hip-hop friend, and hit follow so you never miss the next deep dive. If you vibed with this one, leave a quick review—what’s your most slept-on LL track?

    1h 19m
5
out of 5
11 Ratings

About

A podcast devoted to classic music, movies, television, and culture. The slogan for this podcast is "be you, share your gift, and keep those classics current” and that's the spirit of the podcast. Hosted by Sean Disco Hicks, a former DJ, music lover, and historian. 

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