Episodes

  • Dio: "The Last in Line" - 40 Years On
    Jul 1 2024

    "Back in Year 11 in high school, about six months after my friend group went from having a couple of people who had listened to heavy metal music before, to our entire cavalry being on board, we had an exchange student from the US turn up for a few months. Fortunately for us, Steve arrived bearing cassettes of his favourite bands and albums. Amongst them we were first introduced to bands such as Night Ranger and Ratt. And also the band Dio through the two cassettes he brought with him, “Holy Diver” and “The Last in Line”. And after we had ALL gotten copies of these albums on cassettes of our own, the joy and obsession with the band Dio began. For me, at least. And it is a love that has continued to grow over the almost 40 years since, and an obsession that has never died.

    I can’t tell you how much I listened to this cassette, over and over again. It was a time in my life that I had so much going on in regard to school and sport, and the amount of music that was flooding my existence as a result of discovering heavy metal was immense. It was overload. Maiden, Metallica, Ozzy, Sabbath, Megadeth, Purple. And yet Dio still kept up with all of them, constantly on rotation in the car once I had my drivers licence, or at home in my bedroom on my portable tape deck. This and “Holy Diver” just kept being played. And I never got sick of them. I knew every note, every word, every nuance of this album, singing along on the invisible microphone, playing guitar alongside Vivian on my cricket bat. Man I loved this album. Wait... what I mean is... man, I LOVE this album".


    On this episode we are going to talk about “The Last in Line” by Dio, the band’s 2nd studio album released 40 years ago this week, on today’s ‘two eyes from the east, it’s the angel or the beast’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.

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    36 mins
  • Three Years In: A Podcast Retrospective
    Jun 30 2024

    Today marks three years since I started recording this podcast, and so I thought that for this episode I would take the opportunity to share some thoughts with everyone about what goes on in my head when I think about it.


    It's my fireside chat, from me to you, to answer some of the questions I have had over the years that hopefully will be of some interest. I talk about how I came to start recording this podcast, the history behind it and the motivation. I talk about how it is structured and the fun I have in doing it. You can also hear about plans for the future... if the podcast lasts that long.


    It's not an essential episode, just me talking for 45 minutes. If that doesn't suit, ignore and move on. If it does, I hope it provides some interest.

    Thanks for tuning in, and here we go again, on Music from a Lifetime.

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    49 mins
  • Michael Schenker Group: “Rock Will Never Die” - 40 Years On
    Jun 29 2024
    "Back in my all-too-short university days, where I absolutely did not do enough work to come close to passing certain subjects, and during which I was not in the happiest mood of my life, the Michael Schenke Group was one of those artists that I grabbed onto hard, and who got me through a lot of dark days during that 18 month period. I first had three songs from this album taped onto the end of a cassette that my heavy metal music dealer had made for me of another album, the title of which has faded into the mists of time. But I remember those songs well, and how much I enjoyed them. I then happened upon this album at my favourite second hand store, Illawarra Books and Records, in that first year of uni, and it kept me company at home and in the car for a year afterwards. It is basically a best of album of the band, but performed live, and I loved every song on it. This, alongside “Built to Destroy” and “Assault Attack” were my constant companions during that era". On this episode we are going to talk about “Rock Will Never Die” by the Michael Schenker Group, the band’s 2nd live album released 40 years ago this week, on today’s ‘time after time, you can see him’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.
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    34 mins
  • Primal Fear: “Jaws of Death” - 25 Years On
    Jun 26 2024
    "The band sounds great. Tom Naumann and Stefan Leibing on guitars do a great job and have some excellent moments when soloing. The rhythm of drummer Klaus Sperling and band leader Matt Sinner on bass is solid throughout and provide the platform, but for me it is perhaps just a bit too regimented for my liking. The double kick drums keep an even tempo throughout, which is probably just missing a bit of excitement to help lift some songs out of the average. Trying to blend those high range vocals into the music being written is a tough task at any level. And this is where this just falls down a bit as well. Ralf Scheepers tends to sit back in a more comfortable vocal range than he has for some time throughout most of the album. As a result, it does give the songs a flatter feel musically, because we know what he is capable of. Perhaps in trying to keep his vocals in a safe zone with the songs he has cut out one of his best attributes". On this episode we are going to talk about “Jaws of Death” by the Primal Fear, the band’s 2nd studio album released 25 years ago this week, on today’s ‘what is this my final moment, is it real or fantasy?’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.
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    32 mins
  • Alice Cooper Band: “Pretties for You” - 55 Years On
    Jun 23 2024
    "By 1968, they discovered that the name Nazz was being used by Todd Rundgren, and along with believing that they needed a gimmick to increase the power and marketability of their music, they decided they needed another change. An urban legend suggested that the name the band came up with to change to, Alice Cooper, had come via a seance with a Ouija board. Furnier many years later in an interview suggested this was false. Instead, he said, "What if we sounded like we were somebody's aunt?" It was kind of like the all-American, sweet little old lady name. And I wasn't Alice Cooper. I was just the singer in the band Alice Cooper, like Manfred Mann. Pretty soon everybody called me Alice, they just assumed that the singer's name was Alice. So, at that point, I legally changed my name to Alice Cooper. It was a total outrage at the time. Now it's a household name"." On this episode we are going to talk about “Pretties for You” by the Alice Cooper Band, the band’s debut studio album released 55 years ago this week, on today’s ‘look upstanding with your head held high’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.
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    26 mins
  • Dokken: "Erase the Slate" - 25 Years On
    Jun 21 2024

    "A follow up with 1997’s “Shadowlife” saw the band move towards an alternate rock sound that appeared to not be as enjoyable to the band's fanbase, and had seen the tensions between Dokken and Lynch continue to escalate once again. Lynch’s behaviour had already seen the band dropped by their label due to him leaving a live radio broadcast moments before the band was supposed to play, and having pushed the band into the new musical direction he was quoted in an interview as saying "This is the perfect record. This is gonna be the end of Dokken, and that is what I wanted to accomplish”.

    Suffice to say, Lynch was fired by the rest of the band after a long dispute, though he then tried to sue the band when they went on tour with a guitar replacement in Europe’s John Norum, an action that failed in court. After the tour, Norum was forced to leave due to other commitments, and so the band brought in former Winger and future Whitesnake guitarist Reb Beach as his replacement. Beach suited the band as he had been a prominent guitarist in the same 80’s era where Dokken had thrived, and so the foursome went into the studio to create their new album, aptly titled “Erase the Slate”."


    On this episode we are going to talk about “Erase the Slate” by Dokken, the band’s 7th studio album released 25 years ago this week, on today’s ‘two eyes from the east, it’s the angel or the beast’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.

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    29 mins
  • Queen: “Live Killers” - 45 Years On
    Jun 19 2024

    "To be fair, Queen chose a pretty awesome time to record a live album, as the set list that they played on this tour was second to none. Certainly, the absence of any material from their first two albums is perhaps an oversight, but by this stage of their career, with so many successful singles and songs that were fan favourites, and seven albums worth of material to choose from, making set lists was never going to be an easy thing. Would I like to have had songs from that era represented? Absolutely. But choosing songs to leave out would have been the hard part. And the fact that a song like “Somebody to Love”, which was the third song played on most nights of this tour, was left off the album, is incredible to believe. So yes. Choices to be made. So, let’s just be thankful for the songs and album that we have here to enjoy".


    On this episode we are going to talk about “Live Killers” by Queen, the band’s debut live album released 45 years ago this week, on today’s ‘I was told a million times of all the troubles in my way’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.

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    31 mins
  • Faith No More: “The Real Thing” - 35 Years On
    Jun 16 2024

    "For so many fans, this album was the first that they had experienced the band, and what better way to be introduced to Faith No More than the barnstorming opening track “From Out of Nowhere”, which blazes out of the speakers without warning and trips the album into overdrive from the outset. Energetic and browbeaten from the start, it is a killer opening, and surely impressed the fans who knew the first two albums with the onus on the new lead vocalist.

    Everybody on the single’s release knew “Epic”, a song particularly well named for the way it sounded and the way it was treated on release. The video is mayhemic, and indeed created some controversy because of the vision of a fish out of water, flapping madly to breathe. But it was the manic energy of the track both on screen and on vinyl and CD that made it so popular, that drove the sales of the album because it funnelled the popularity of the single into people wanting to dive into the album itself and find out what else they could find. Surely no one left disappointed".


    On this episode we are going to talk about “The Real Thing” by Faith No More, the band’s 3rd studio album released 35 years ago this week, on today’s ‘it’s not over yet, you don’t remember I won’t let you forget’ episode of Music from a Lifetime.

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    34 mins