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Music 101

Music 101

By: Daniel Lucas / G.Mick Smith/Karen DeLoach
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About this listen

Music 101: Where every beat tells a story. Dive into the heart of music, exploring genres, artists, and the inspiration behind every note.

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Daniel Lucas / G.Mick Smith/Karen DeLoach
Music
Episodes
  • Music 101 in its third season, featuring Mr.Mick Smith as my Co-host.
    Jun 22 2025

    1968 was the detonation point of the modern world.** Across continents, the year erupted in a convergence of raw defiance and cultural metamorphosis: students barricaded Parisian streets chanting revolution; Vietnam’s Tet Offensive shattered illusions of American invincibility; the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy gutted a nation’s conscience; Soviet tanks crushed Prague’s democratic spring; and Mexico City witnessed a massacre of protesting youth. Amidst the chaos, music became the heartbeat of resistance—Jimi Hendrix torched guitar strings into anthems of dissent, James Brown proclaimed Black pride in "Say It Loud," and The Doors channeled societal fever into psychedelic prophecy. Television beamed global unrest into living rooms, amplifying voices demanding civil rights, gender equality, and an end to war. In this crucible of protest and sound, counterculture flared into the mainstream, igniting a fuse that forever altered politics, identity, and art—proving that from the ashes of upheaval, a new world could scream itself into being.


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    39 mins
  • Music 101 in its third season, featuring Mr.G.Mick Smith as my Co-host.
    Jun 14 2025

    This Father's Day playlist isn't just music; it's a time machine.Each song – the ones he sang off-key in the car, the ballgame anthems, the worn-out vinyl he cherished – carries the weight of sticky fingers, shared laughter, and his unwavering presence. Hearing them now, decades later, the joy is bittersweet. The lyrics he taught me hold new meaning, the melodies echo in an empty space, and the man who shaped my world with these very sounds is the one I still reach for in the silence after the last note. It’s a symphony of grief and gratitude, proof he’s still teaching me, still near, in every chord he loved.


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    28 mins
  • Music 101 in its third season, featuring Mr.G.Mick Smith as my Co-host.
    Jun 7 2025

    The history of rock 'n' roll and its evolution into rock is marked by seismic cultural moments intrinsically tied to its visual identity.** It ignited in the mid-1950s with Elvis Presley's electrifying hip-shaking television performances and Chuck Berry's iconic duck walk, visually defining youthful rebellion against a conservative backdrop. The British Invasion of the 1960s, spearheaded by The Beatles' mop-top haircuts and tailored suits, and The Rolling Stones' deliberately ragged anti-establishment look, reshaped global fashion and attitude. Psychedelia exploded next, exemplified by The Jimi Hendrix Experience's flamboyant stage presence and Peter Max's swirling posters for events like Woodstock (1969), which itself became a defining visual symbol of the counterculture. The 1970s saw the rise of stadium rock spectacle, with bands like Led Zeppelin and Kiss employing elaborate stage shows, costumes, and makeup, while punk rock's late-70s eruption delivered a raw, DIY visual assault via ripped clothes, safety pins, provocative album art (like the Sex Pistols' "God Save the Queen"), and gritty club flyers. Finally, the 1981 launch of MTV irrevocably fused rock music with high-concept video narratives, making iconic imagery – from Michael Jackson's "Thriller" to Nirvana's slacker aesthetic in "Smells Like Teen Spirit" – central to an artist's identity and the genre's mainstream penetration, solidifying rock's power as both a sonic and visual cultural force.


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    38 mins
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