Highway Hi-Fi Podcast

Ryan & Joe
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Mar 20, 2020 • 48min

Desert Island Recordings: Tusk by Camper Van Beethoven

Isolation causes people to do funny things. Sometimes brilliant, sometimes mad, often both. We're both under the recommended self-quarantine and as we're waiting for this pandemic to hopefully quickly subside. We started thinking about albums that were made while in confinement. Many came to mind quickly. The Rolling Stones recorded Exile on Main Street while holed in France avoiding tax penalties. Of course, that is less like quarantine and more like a weekend at Caligula’s. Bon Iver’s post-break-up self induced retreat in a hunting cabin turned into For Emma, Forever Ago. Songs of Pain by Daniel Johnston was recorded in his parents basement as his bipolar swings made social engagements tremendously difficult. The majority of Cat Power’s Moon Pix was written during a terrifying hallucinatory nightmare while left alone in a farmhouse in the middle of nowhere. And of course, David Allen Coe, Charles Manson, that psycho guy from Burzum, and countless hip hop artists made records while incarcerated. That's when we remembered Camper Van Beethoven’s Tusk. As we recalled, the band got snowed in at a cabin somewhere in the depths of the California mountains in the late 80s. To stave off boredom, the band did a track by track remake of the Fleetwood Mac maligned bizarro AOR classic, Tusk. CVB got through most of the tracks before the thaw, stashed the tapes, and went about their merry way. Many years later, about to embark on a reunion tour, the band found the tapes, cleaned them up, added and rerecorded bits, and released the record. We both love Camper Van Beethoven and Tusk, so we decided it would be a good exercise in exploring what happens to bands when cabin fever sets in. So, today, break into your emergency vodka, settle into your confinement, and check your supply of toilet paper as we cover the bizarre tale of Camper Van Beethoven’s Tusk.Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Mar 13, 2020 • 2h 6min

Single Song Albums (Episode 67)

Today, we examine the messages that were delivered by seven of the most famous, and some equally infamous, single track records. The emotional tension that went into making them. The strife that went into releasing them. And the waves that were made by listening to them.Each with a message beyond their declaration of musical independence. A jazz composer completely undoing the constraining rules of his genre. An Afrobeat icon illuminating the political and social unrest around him. A New York legend aggressively rewriting the boundaries of popular music. A Krautrocker’s exercise in boredom relief. A metal band proving monotony and momentum are as critical to sound as dynamics. An artist’s reflecting on decay, death, and the world burning all around him. An eclectic soundscapist’s unraveling the seeming destruction of the medium of music. The collective sound of these records are full undefinable parallels...challenging and inviting. Simple and complex. From furious to melancholic. Anxious to gleeful. Structured loops and fractured chaos. The only common bond was a total disregard for what had been done before. Today, the single song albums that changed the landscape of music. We're fortunate enough to be added to FeedSpot's list of "Top 20 Music Podcasts You Must Follow in 2020"Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Feb 18, 2020 • 1h 43min

Who is Kevin Coyne? (Episode 66)

Kevin Coyne released over 40 albums in the course of his 35-year career. He would be hailed and championed by the likes of John Peel, Richard Branson, Johnny Rotten, the Mekons, Sting, and Will Oldham. He unceremoniously rejected an offer from Elektra Records to be the dead Jim Morrison’s replacement in the Doors, quipping that he didn’t like leather pants. He wrote scores of songs about the fringes of humanity dealing with mental illness and addiction with empathy and poise that few could match in even a single song. He penned bizarre operas and theme albums about nefarious characters including the notorious mobsters, the Kray Brothers, subversive comedian Frank Randle, the evil-incarnate Moor Murderers, and the acid-damaged Syd Barrett.  And he would remain known as someone who is famously unknown.Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Jan 20, 2020 • 1h 50min

Tolk-Rock: Music's Obsession with Middle-Earth (Episode 65)

On today’s episode, we are going to seek to understand the bands who spent hours stenciling runes on their guitars and drum heads, writing lyrics in the Black Tongue of Mordor, and filling their pipes with Longbottom Leaf. The bands that wandered into fame beyond belief and those who were lost to the darkest depths of Khazad Dum. Today’s episode: Tolk-Rock: the musical obsession with Middle Earth. Sources used for this episode:The Tolkien Music ListAn Essay posted on We Are The Mutants by K.E. Roberts, titled “And in the Darkness Bind Them”: The First ‘Lord of the Rings’ Paperbacks and the Making of Fantasy"Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Dec 20, 2019 • 1h 30min

Conspira-Season's Greetings! (Episode 64)

The holidays are a time of peace, joy, and love. They are also the best time to look around, take a breath, and stop a minute to enjoy all the madness that constantly swirls amongst us. Here at Highway Hi-Fi, our Christmas episode is the show we allow ourselves to talk about some of our favorite stories that are too small for a Turntable Talk, but too good to not share. All of which have nothing to do with Yuletide Festivities. And the theme this year is our favorite music conspiracies and myths. Sure, there are your garden variety conspiracies, like “Paul is Dead”, “Elvis is Alive”, and “Jay-Z is an Illuminati, Lizard Person, and/or Time-Traveling Vampire”. Or we could even go into the typical sort of master of puppet situations like “The Laurel Canyon hippy movement was a government-sponsored action to make war protesters seem like druggy ding dongs” or that “Private prison profiteers conspired with Record Execs to make Gangsta Rap the Nation’s most popular genre”. Heck, we could even bore you with mash-ups like “Darkside of the Rainbow” or that “ABBA became the Residents” or “Stephen King killed Lennon”. And those are well and good. But here, we like to go a little deeper. A little wackier for our highly discerning audience. So, we rolled up our sleeves and hit the dark webs and sub-sub-sub-Reddits to bring you some juicy bonkers-ness. Websites where every picture is grainy and plastered with Microsoft paint embellishments. Websites where no obsolete detail is too minute. Websites where research is a dirty word and where no news is fake.Settle in. Take off your Santa Cap, and put on your tinfoil cap. Dump out the eggnog, and start drinking the Koolaid. And quit gazing at the twinkling tree lights, in favor of those unexplained glowing orbs circling the room. Bookmark all 39 of your copies of Catcher in the Rye. Crank up the podcast, you sheeple. Today, we present our Conspiracy Christmas spectacular.Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Dec 11, 2019 • 1h 43min

Turntable Tutelage: How-To Records (Episode 63)

In the middle of the century, a collective thirst for knowledge grew around the world. In these new space age times, people had neither the time nor patience for books, tutors, or apprenticeships. Instead they turned to the newest form of mass media for their learning needs...the vinyl record. The turntable allowed unlimited listens in the private and cozy confines of home making it the ideal vehicle for audio instruction. As a result, there was a gigantic wave of how-to records, or educational records, produced. These discs were designed to help people learn how to become better. Better ventriloquists, better dancers, better pick-up artists, better mathematicians, and better duck callers. An age of self improvements, decades before YouTube. It gave people a sense of control and purpose in a world where so much was changing over which they had no influence, no power, and often no understanding. This combined with a wave of mass capitalist consumption made for the fertile conditions for the explosion of instructional discs.Today, we discuss the wacky world of tutelage that are How-To Records.  Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Nov 18, 2019 • 1h 34min

The History of Disaster Songs (Episode 62)

While music is often dominated by songs of love...romantic love, fleeting love, spiritual love, love of place, love of country, love of Waffle House delicacies, there is a dark side to that jukebox coin. An obsession we all have with the darkness. A bleak reality that is as unknown as it is universal. It is riveting, enthralling, and oddly comforting to delve into other people’s tragedies. And honestly, we can’t get enough of it. Everyone loves a train wreck. Quite literally and especially if it’s being sung about by the likes of Johnny Cash.Today, we are examining an old tradition that keeps being reborn in tragedy, public and private, national and local. Songs that are constant reminders that our hubris has blinders, our safety merely an illusion, and our demise inevitable. Often acting as moral reminders of what happens when we flaunt our disregard for our environment, become too enmeshed with technology, or forget the true nature of mankind. Songs that ensured that the victims, and sometimes the perpetrators, would never be forgotten and the tales would be sung for generations. Music of the calamities that are part of national consciousness and of the grim cataclysms that we collectively yearn to forget. Equal parts eulogy, sermon, and tabloid. Today, we bring you the history of disaster songs. Ode, what a feeling.Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Oct 26, 2019 • 1h 45min

Constructing Terror: John Carpenter and the History of Horror Soundtracks (Episode 61)

Today, we are exploring the depths of a genre that can be both ghoulishly fun, menacing, and shocking all within the same side of a record. The twists and turns that composers use to enthrall the audience and make their collective flesh crawl.  The orchestral equivalents of Vincent Price whispering sweet nothings into your ear. A left out style of music that has made itself into a viable and influential genre despite being secondary to its own medium. Today, we examine the history of the horror movie soundtrack and its recent unholy alliance with the vinyl record. Highway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Oct 11, 2019 • 2h 5min

In Recognition of Peter Laughner (Episode 60)

No one man can make a scene. But perhaps one can be an embodiment of it. A representation of what makes a place and its music intertwined. Like his beloved Cleveland itself, the emblematic and occasionally problematic Peter Laughner was on the fringes of the American music canon. A shadowy presence in a shadowy place at the time when rock n roll was dark, smart, and powerful. But that is the thing about underground music...it can happen in the most unlikely places. And underground music needs people with vision and determination to make it live. Though most of Laughner's renown comes from being a member of both the proto-punk master-blasters Rocket from the Tombs and then his short-lived stint in their seminal art-punk offshoot Pere Ubu, he was involved in scores of other bands as well as being a writer and critic of music at one of its most important periods.The real tragedy of Peter Laughner, beyond his self-destructive tendencies and untimely death, is that he is often remembered most for his self-destructive tendencies and untimely death. Though his importance has been well documented in his circles of influence, his reflective writing, his other-worldly guitar playing, and the scarce snippets of music that were available through bootlegs and a single disjointed compilation, his status as a rock n roll victim and burnt out luminary overshadow the music itself.Today, we will play an interview with Nick Blakey, a Northwestern Ohio music archivist and a producer on the boxset who spent a decade working on the project. He speaks about what he has learned about Peter Laughner, the sometimes grueling process of culling hours of tapes to a 5 LP set, his perspective on hero worship, and a myriad of fascinating stories about his years as a fan, record collector, bootleg trader, musician, researcher, writer, and archivist.You can order your copy of the Peter Laughner 5LP box set at Smog Veil RecordsHighway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Sep 30, 2019 • 1h 46min

First Wave Ska (Episode 59)

In the late 50s, the streets of Jamaica were alit with music. Bands would bang out jazz and rhythm & blues songs every night, catering to large crowds of people desiring only to dance all night.It was a disco, but outside in the streets, every night of the week, from dusk till dawn, like Mardis Gras and a discotheque crammed into one big outdoor dance-off.However, there was a singular prevalent problem. The bands...they wanted breaks, and the breaks lasted too long and people wanted to keep going. A compromise of sorts was agreed upon, a sound system would be brought in and allowed to be play records during an intermission.No one knew it then, but this compromise would eventually be the end of those bands and the start of ska's rise to prominence.Research Sources used for the episode:Heather Augustyn's Ska: An Oral HistoryThe short documentary "The Origin of the Word Ska"Heather Augustyn's website: Foundation SkaHighway Hi-Fi is a proud member of the Pantheon Music Podcast Network - Home of the Finest Music Podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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