Announcement Regarding Schedule

Announcement Regarding Schedule

Author: Andrew Hickey January 17, 2024 Duration: 0:00
This is just a brief announcement. The fact that I’ve released stuff so inconsistently over the last year, along with the last episode being so long that it actually caused problems for Tilt’s editing softwaere has caused me to reconsider how I’m breaking these episodes up. I have had very good reasons for making the episodes longer rather than doing multiple parts — we would have had episodes titled “White Light/White Heat”, “Eight Miles High”, and “Good Vibrations” which literally didn’t mention at all the bands they were ostensibly about, and people would have got very annoyed at listening to an episode supposedly about the Beach Boys and finding it was entirely about a Soviet inventor in the 1920s. But the balance has tipped the other way now. Things have got a bit ridiculous. So what I’m doing npw is I’m still writing the scripts the same way I always do, as one long narrative, but then once a script is finished I will break it into sections of about 5-10,000 words (somewhere in the 45-minute to ninety minute range) depending on where natural cliffhangers come, and I will release those parts fortnightly. There still might be gaps between the last part of the previous song and the first part of the next, but probably nothing like as long as they have been. The actual content will still be the same — just for example the Velvet Underground episode would have been split into three or four parts, with the first part ending with John Cale joining the story, and me saying “join us in two weeks time”.  But it’ll be broken up into more manageable parts which hopefully won’t cause Tilt’s editing software to explode, and if you like listening to it all in one go you can just wait until the final part of that story and then listen to it all. So today you’re going to get, not ‘Episode 172, “Hickory Wind” by the Byrds’, but ‘SONG 172: “Hickory Wind” by the Byrds: Part 1, Ushering in a New Dimension”, and then Song 172 part two two weeks later. I want to emphasise that this will still be *exactly the same content* as it would otherwise be. The stories will go on as long as they need to. Some will be a single episode, some will be three or four. But breaking it up like this should mean you get more consistent releases and I can get ahead. Indeed, it *might* mean I could go back to weekly episodes — I’ve averaged somewhere in the region of thirty thousand words per month last year on the main podcast, which would be four seven-thousand-word episodes — but I won’t even think about that unless I start to actually build up a backlog. The stories should be getting shorter anyway as we finally move out of the late sixties, so the rate of storytelling *should* get faster, but this way at least you’re going to get regular episodes. So listen to today’s episode, and then join me again in precisely two weeks as Gram Parsons joins the story.

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
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