Colin Healy public
[search 0]
More
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Artwork

1
Music Is My Life

Berklee Online

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Monthly
 
During each episode of this Berklee Online podcast, we talk to a different music industry mover and/or shaker who is making us take note. Our guests walk us through their musical journeys, beginning with their first exposure to music, continuing through their epiphanies and into their current positions, where the subjects can proclaim from the highest mountain, “MUSIC IS MY LIFE!”
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Today we talk about: Redrawing regional and state lines A brand new marketing campaign for the region 3-1-4-2-5 of Tourist Attractions Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by Colin Healy, David Lemon, and Bradley Rohlf Produced by Ia…
  continue reading
 
Cicadas aren’t taking over the city, and a draft competition for who can build the best St. Louis Mount Rushmore. Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by Colin Healy, David Lemon, and Bradley Rohlf Produced by Ian Gilbert Edited by B…
  continue reading
 
- The current state of the Cardinals impact on St. Louis and their new city connect jerseys. - The Muny hosts a concert for the first time in over 30 years. - A city police officer tackles and straddles a person while smoking a cigar...on duty. - Who would you bring aliens to in STL if they said "Take me to your leader?" Overarching is filmed and r…
  continue reading
 
St. Louisan's all know these intersections. St. Louisan's all hate these intersections. Why do we insist on making these intersections about cars, and not about people? 1. Comment Section Readers Theater - Streets Are Dangerous!! 2. Good old fashioned top 5 of the LARGEST intersections in St. Louis corner to corner. 3. We introduce the baseball tes…
  continue reading
 
- We respond to the Wall Street Journal article about downtown St. Louis written by a guy who's never been here. - Riverfront Times comment section goes nuts for the Cybertrucks rolling into town. - We dream about the potential and future growth that will coincide with the incoming Gateway South development. Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fl…
  continue reading
 
-We Side with Kansas City -We Side with Oakland -We Side with Billionaires? We talk about the history of sports franchises in St. Louis, including the ones who've left us...multiple times. Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by Coli…
  continue reading
 
-We learn about St. Louis YouTube chef sensation Brain Lagerstrom's career and new found love of city planning, public transit, and orange-pilled YouTube. -Brian takes the first ever St. Louis Questionnaire. -We draft our favorite city restaurants you can bring you St. Charles parents to, the best sticky restaurants, the best "not american" restaur…
  continue reading
 
We do Bus stuff with Doug Weaver We talk bulldozing a St. Louis mall with Doug Weaver We talk public art with Doug Weaver We talk the best and worst skyscrapers in St. Louis. Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by Colin Healy, David…
  continue reading
 
St. Charles and St. Louis need to get along, but how? St. Louis' parks are top tier. Best in the country, perhaps. A 90s public transit commercial convinces us we're mentally unwell. We draw the city of St. Louis from memory. We draft all the parks across the city. Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the K…
  continue reading
 
- 31425: Ranking the St. Louis Billionaires by how much we like them. Spoiler, they're all bad - St. Louis County rebrands itself to much...arousal - Stan Kroenke murdered Princess Di. Don't look into it, we did the research for you Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Gran…
  continue reading
 
A so called 'faith based film company' called SMS Novel, run by out-of-towner Jomo Johnson, is currently running a private drone surveillance company in Gravois Park as if out of SkyNet. The website is WILD: https://www.smsnovel.com -Crime is down city-wide, but it's up in St. Charles County? -Weed. We talk about weed in Missouri. Do you smoke it, …
  continue reading
 
Buckle up, everyone. Or don't, because you don't need to. Today we're talking about our dream Metro expansions—How could we make St. Louis as accessible as possible with just a few more stops? Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by …
  continue reading
 
I this episode you'll hear: -Some of the finest "opinions" the comment section of the Post-Dispatch have to offer. -A celebration of notable St. Louisans in the form of a Baseball Draft Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly North Theatricals (in residence with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation) in Grand Center, St. Loogie McGoogie Hosted by Colin H…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, you'll hear: - Just how many streets change their names the moment they cross into Saint Louis County - An old poem about a smelly park - Why the Roundabout of Death is terrifying (Seriously, avoid it) - Legitimate gripes with the City/County divide - An autotuned jingle - And so much more! Overarching is filmed and recorded at Fly…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, we talk about: -How Bradley is being gaslit, and knows it, by Starbucks/Howard Schultz/Finance Bros. -Colin's love of public facing infrastructure and the walkability of St. Louis -David's obsession with business/construction development and 'pontification' on the future of Ballpark village/downtown housing. To top it all off, we'l…
  continue reading
 
Bruce Hornsby, legendary pianist, singer, and songwriter, discusses his humble beginnings in a Grateful Dead cover band and his graduation to a Doobie Brothers acolyte to his mega breakthrough with “The Way It Is” to his time as an actual member of the Grateful Dead and his resurgence, resonating first with hip-hop artists like 2Pac, and more recen…
  continue reading
 
Kira Roessler played bass in Black Flag for two years, during which time the legendary hardcore band put out seven(!) records. Now, at the age of 60, she's an Emmy- and Oscar-winning dialogue editor and promoting her self-titled solo debut. In this interview she discusses her new album, being in a band with Henry Rollins and Greg Ginn, as well as b…
  continue reading
 
Arooj Aftab began getting notice with a viral cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” more than 15 years ago, but with two Grammy nominations, she has finally arrived (and quit her day job at Genius.com). Her 2021 “Vulture Prince” album is a stunning work that frequently reaches transcendence. In this wide ranging interview, she discusses playing Whi…
  continue reading
 
Bruce Sudano has written songs that have been sung by Michael Jackson, Dolly Parton, and his late wife, Donna Summer. He discusses coming up in Brooklyn and being taken under the wing of Tommy James, and meeting Donna Summer, writing "Bad Girls" and appearing on the album cover as a police officer. He also plays a stripped down version of that song…
  continue reading
 
​​Colin Blunstone began his career in music as a teenager with the Zombies. After a run of successful singles in the 1960s the group broke up, but not before releasing their masterpiece, “Odessey and Oracle,” featuring the mega-hit “Time of the Season.” A Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Colin and Rod Argent reformed the Zombies at the turn of the cent…
  continue reading
 
Don Letts provides an important lesson in the fact that even if you don’t play an instrument, you can still be a part of the music industry, and not just on the business side either. He got his start as a DJ, and is widely credited for introducing reggae into the burgeoning punk rock scene in London in the 1970s, but he doesn’t want all of that cre…
  continue reading
 
If you’ve heard any reggae music in your entire life then you’ve heard Sly Dunbar’s drumming, or at the very least, his influence. As one half of Sly and Robbie, he says he’s probably played on a million songs. Sly and Robbie got their start as the rhythm section for Peter Tosh in 1976, and after touring with him for a number of years started Taxi,…
  continue reading
 
Steven Wilson has been a part of more than a dozen musical projects and/or bands, most notably Porcupine Tree. After 10 studio albums, they broke up in 2009. Wilson released his sixth solo album, The Future Bites, earlier this year, and he still involves himself in collaborative endeavors, including a podcast called The Album Years, which he co-hos…
  continue reading
 
AJR are three brothers—Adam, Jack, and Ryan Metzger—who began their music career on New York City streets, where they busked daily for hours at a time. The two brothers who take part in this interview—Ryan and Jack—say that years of trying to get people’s attention off the streets was formative to their work ethic and the constant need to one-up th…
  continue reading
 
Molly Tuttle’s brand new … but i’d rather be with you is a collection of seemingly disparate cover songs—running the gamut from Rancid to the Grateful Dead—that got the singer through tough times in her life. She recorded the album as a coronavirus lockdown project because everybody else is currently going through tough times of their own. She talk…
  continue reading
 
Summer’s here and the time is right for taking time to appreciate the legendary Martha Reeves, of “Dancing in the Street” fame! Along with her backing singers, the Vandellas, Martha Reeves recorded other mega Motown hits, including “Jimmy Mack,” “Nowhere to Run,” and “Love is Like a Heatwave.” She speaks to Pat Healy about the climate of social cha…
  continue reading
 
Janet Billig Rich became interested in music when she first saw the Replacements. After taking in about 100 shows she went on to sell merch at indie rock shows, intern at Caroline Records, and then move on up to manage acts like Nirvana, Hole, and Dinosaur Jr. She's now a music supervisor, clearing rights for Broadway shows like Rock of Ages, as we…
  continue reading
 
Vanessa Carlton speaks candidly about the seedy underbelly of the music industry, and why followups to “A Thousand Miles” were more successful than the men on her team wanted her to believe. She discusses how her latest album, Love Is An Art, is a new beginning for her and how eager she is to tour, once touring is something people are allowed to do…
  continue reading
 
Sam Hales is the songwriter, singer, guitarist, multi-instrumentalist, and now the producer of most of Jungle Giants’ music. They have released three albums and two EPs, and for the first EP, Sam worked two jobs, one at a convenience store, the other at McDonald’s, just to make the money to fund the recording. He and the other members, Ceshira Aitk…
  continue reading
 
Lisa Loeb shares how her parents encouraged her and her siblings' musical development, but cautioned them against going into the music industry. But now they are all musicians. She also shares how she wrote her mega-smash, “Stay (I Missed You)” while studying at Berklee. Her latest album, A Simple Trick to Happiness, is out now. Visit musicismylife…
  continue reading
 
Ron Pope wrote "A Drop in the Ocean," a mammoth hit that he had no idea would resonate with an audience so much. Then he wrote "One Grain of Sand" and enjoyed similar astronomical success. He talks to Pat Healy about triumphs and tribulations with major labels and streaming services, as well as Brooklyn Basement Records, the label he founded with h…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Quick Reference Guide