ANNOUNCEMENT: Pledge Week 2024

ANNOUNCEMENT: Pledge Week 2024

Author: Andrew Hickey July 9, 2024 Duration: 0:00
An announcement of this year’s pledge week. To sign up to the Patreon, visit http://patreon.com/andrewhickey Transcript Welcome to Pledge Week 2024. For those who don’t know — perhaps you’ve only recently started listening to the podcast — this podcast is entirely funded by people backing me on Patreon, the crowdfunding site, and so occasionally I’ll do a pledge week, where I remind people about this and encourage people to sign up. The main benefit you get for signing up to the Patreon, other than the knowledge that you’re supporting an independent creator, is bonus episodes. There’s one of these with every main episode, and sometimes random other ones as well. They’re shorter episodes than the main episodes — I say at the end of each main episode that they’re ten minutes, and that’s how they started out, but often in more recent years they’ve been twenty-five minutes or more, sometimes as long as an hour, as they’ve grown in the same way the main episodes have grown. These bonus episodes are about artists who for whatever reason don’t fit into the main narrative I’m telling. Sometimes they’re a massively important artist, but one who never interacted much with the rest of the music world and made their own path, and so they don’t feed into the larger story. Sometimes they’re an obscure artist who never had much success at the time but gained a cult following after their death. Sometimes they’re just a personal favourite of mine who I can’t really justify devoting a main episode to. Sometimes they’re someone who made great music but had a boring story that wouldn’t be worth spending a long time over, but I can tell the highlights, and sometimes they’re someone who made terrible music but had a fascinating story. And sometimes they’re people who I would cover in a main episode but who there’s simply not enough information about to tell the story in any detail. There are lots of reasons for artists being covered in the Patreon but some of the episodes I’ve done for that have been among my favourites. Anyway, anyone who signs up to the Patreon as a backer for $1 or more gets access to every single bonus episode I’ve done, and continues to get access to new ones as long as they’re a backer. Now I have to emphasise this time round that that is “for $1 or more”. For some reason known only to themselves, the people at Patreon recently decided it would be a good idea for their crowdfunding site which exists as a way for people to pay artists they want to support, if they put in a compulsory free tier on every account where you pay nothing, and to make that the default that people see. So if you sign up, you see “Sign up for free!” If you sign up for free you won’t get anything. But if you sign up for $1 a month, you’ll get somewhere in the region of two hundred bonus episodes — and if you want you can cancel right after you download them all, and you’ll have only paid one dollar. I won’t be annoyed at that — that’s the deal here. I know times are tough and sometimes a dollar is a lot. If you sign up for higher tiers, you get copies of most of my old books as ebooks, and new print books when they come out (though it’s been quite a while since a new book came out — the person who was proofing and indexing the next book based on the podcast got sick with long covid and I’ve been having to do that myself while doing my other work, but that should be out sooner rather than later, and you’ll get access to all the past ebooks straight away). People on all tiers also get occasional blog posts from me — gig reviews, occasional updates about my work process, and so on. But the main extra you get is the bonus podcasts. So for the next five days, tomorrow through Saturday, I̵

Andrew Hickey’s A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs is a deep, chronological journey through the sounds and stories that built a century-defining genre. This isn't a simple list of hits; it's a richly detailed narrative that connects musical innovation to its cultural and historical context. Each episode focuses on a single pivotal track, using that song as a lens to examine the artists, producers, technologies, and social movements that made it possible. You'll hear about forgotten pioneers, unexpected influences, and the tangled web of events that led from early blues and country recordings to the dawn of the digital age. Hickey’s approach is both scholarly and accessible, weaving together musical analysis, biographical sketches, and broader historical arcs. Listening to this podcast feels like assembling a massive, interconnected puzzle where every piece-every song-reveals a part of a larger, fascinating story. The series commitment to a full timeline, from 1938 through 1999, provides a unique and comprehensive framework rarely attempted in audio documentary. For anyone curious about how popular music evolves, and why certain songs endure, this extensive project offers an endlessly engaging education. It’s a definitive, ambitious audit of rock's DNA, one carefully chosen song at a time.
Author: Language: en-us Episodes: 100

A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs
Podcast Episodes
An Alert: Someone Plagiarising Me [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 0:00
Transcript The next proper episode will be up in a couple of days – I’m recording it tonight – but I just wanted to make a brief announcement. It has recently been brought to my attention that the French language podcast…
Song 172, Hickory Wind by the Byrds: Part 4, Hour of Darkness [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

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For those who haven’t heard the announcement I just posted , songs from this point on will sometimes be split among multiple episodes, so this is the fourth and final part of a four-episode look at the Byrds in 1966-69 a…
Song 172, Hickory Wind by the Byrds: Part 3, The Parsons Tale [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 0:00
For those who haven’t heard the announcement I just posted , songs from this point on will sometimes be split among multiple episodes, so this is the third part of a four-episode look at the Byrds in 1966-69 and the birt…