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Ep. 30: Mixing Prince and Heartland Rock and Roll in Minnesota

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Manage episode 335452324 series 2933914
Content provided by rockforward. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by rockforward or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This particular podcast episode found its inspiration in one of the Spotify-exclusive Rock Pop and Roll Radio Shows that we've made. They live on Spotify and were created to give me a chance to make an old-school radio show. Listen for 90 minutes to one and hear stories plus the whole song, something we don't do on the podcast. A callback to the great radio of the 70's and 80's.

I was working on a podcast about Minneapolis roots rock/heartland rock bands and how they were oddly influential in the 1980's musical landscape. Then I remembered this Prince Spotify radio show I produced and thought - hey - this is part of the story. How Prince - who music listeners know is from Minnesota - and a bunch of white kids with guitars could exist and, in a sense, inspire each other.

Prince was a mashup of what he heard growing up. That was his secret to crossover success. Filmmaker Philip Priestley, who made a 2008 documentary comparing the careers of Prince and Michael Jackson, said that growing up in Minneapolis helped Prince to create a new sound. "He grew up listening to a lot of radio which was other stuff than black soul music and rhythm and blues," Priestley said. “He was listening to rock -- white rock -- which explains why he was so unique musically. "He fused a black American tradition -- rhythm and blues, soul, funk, jazz -- with white rock."

That's what we peel back here, trying to figure out the connection between it all.

SUBSCRIBE:

Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Stitcher
Google Podcasts

Read Rob's current and archived writing at rockforward.wordpress.com

EMAIL: rockpoprollpodcast@gmail.com

FACEBOOK: @rockpopandroll

INSTAGRAM: @rockpopandroll

TWITTER: @rockpoprollpod

  continue reading

47 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 335452324 series 2933914
Content provided by rockforward. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by rockforward or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This particular podcast episode found its inspiration in one of the Spotify-exclusive Rock Pop and Roll Radio Shows that we've made. They live on Spotify and were created to give me a chance to make an old-school radio show. Listen for 90 minutes to one and hear stories plus the whole song, something we don't do on the podcast. A callback to the great radio of the 70's and 80's.

I was working on a podcast about Minneapolis roots rock/heartland rock bands and how they were oddly influential in the 1980's musical landscape. Then I remembered this Prince Spotify radio show I produced and thought - hey - this is part of the story. How Prince - who music listeners know is from Minnesota - and a bunch of white kids with guitars could exist and, in a sense, inspire each other.

Prince was a mashup of what he heard growing up. That was his secret to crossover success. Filmmaker Philip Priestley, who made a 2008 documentary comparing the careers of Prince and Michael Jackson, said that growing up in Minneapolis helped Prince to create a new sound. "He grew up listening to a lot of radio which was other stuff than black soul music and rhythm and blues," Priestley said. “He was listening to rock -- white rock -- which explains why he was so unique musically. "He fused a black American tradition -- rhythm and blues, soul, funk, jazz -- with white rock."

That's what we peel back here, trying to figure out the connection between it all.

SUBSCRIBE:

Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Stitcher
Google Podcasts

Read Rob's current and archived writing at rockforward.wordpress.com

EMAIL: rockpoprollpodcast@gmail.com

FACEBOOK: @rockpopandroll

INSTAGRAM: @rockpopandroll

TWITTER: @rockpoprollpod

  continue reading

47 episodes

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