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    The Meatmen "Were the Meatmen and You Suck" - Part 2

    enAugust 29, 2016
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    About this Episode

    Recent Episodes from Podcast – That Dandy Classic Music Hour

    Nashville Rock n Pod Expo 2018

    Nashville Rock n Pod Expo 2018

    Ahh..Yes!!
    Well, it would be an understatement of sorts to say that we haven't been around in a while,
    but that's pretty-much the case so, we want to say Thank you for your patience while we're doing things outside
    of this podcast.

    So, the last time we Dandy Classic Music met-up, it was at this year's Rock & Pod Expo 2,
    lovingly made possible by Chris Czynszak and friends.
    We weren't even sure if we'd be going because of this and that,  but we made it,
    and it was fantastic to see everyone, and even to talk to some on our show..!

    While we didn't get a chance to talk with everyone, we were fortunate enough to talk with:
    Brad Page of the "I'm in Love With That Song" podcast.
    B.J. Kahuna of the "Rock And/Or Roll" podcast.
    Jon Lamoreaux of: "The Hustle" podcast
    Lee McCormack of the "Tramps Like Us" podcast & his band: MoonViolet, respectively
    and Eric Miller from the "Pods & Sods" podcast.

    We cover a lot with each guest so instead of telling you about who & what,
    go ahead and click-on for a listen..!

     

    A BIG THANK YOU, once again to everyone, but mainly: YOU.

    Chris Cornell Part 1

    Chris Cornell Part 1
    Let's face it, if you're interested in this program, odds are you were either a Music fan and/or a Chris Cornell fan and know most or all of the details of losing him a scant few weeks ago so we'll save you reading the saddening details yet again.
     
    The idea of this show is to express how much of a fan Dan Minard and Randy W. Hall were, and are, of Chris Cornell. First in Soundgarden, then as a solo artist, and also in one-off Temple of the Dog and his well-known supergroup Audioslave.
     
    In Part 1 we discuss our own fandoms and how he was one of Dan's all-time favorite singers and how he has a degree from Cornell (as a student of the man, not the college) and his esteemed membership in the exclusive online community known as Knights of the Soundtable (it's as awesome as it sounds 😄). Randy recalls how he got into Soundgarden his junior year of high school and how he considers 'Badmotorfinger' his all-time favorite Cornell featuring album. We also broach the touchy topic of his ill-fated 2009 solo project "Scream" because we're anything if not thorough.
     
    In Part 2 we discuss each of our favorite Cornell-sung songs in detail and Randy ( who's never met a list he doesn't like) reveals his eleven fave songs in descending order). Dan rolls his eyes and plays along as we pay tribute to one of the best voices of a generation and grieve yet again another legends untimely passing. This time it's most definitely personal.

     

    DandyTheWhoP1

    DandyTheWhoP1

    The Who are legends. Aside from the Beatles and The Rolling Stones, the Who and Led Zeppelin are as big as rock n’ roll gets. And, believe it or not, the band are one of Dan Minard’s all-time favorites and inspirations. So it’s about time we did a show on them.

    The challenge is it’s hard (pun intended) to settle on just one album. ‘Who’s Next’, ‘Tommy’ and even ‘Quadrophenia’ all deserve the Dandy Classic treatment on their own merits but we decided to go ahead and just do a two-part retrospective on the all-time greats.

    Part one we talk about how Dan and I each got into the band and discuss the personalities of all four original members and how they formed together like Voltron to be the best live rock band on the planet. In part 2 we give our Top 10 favorite songs to kind of discuss the music itself in more depth. Also Dan shares what it was like to actually be in London the day bassist John Entwhistle died in July, 2002. 

    Ordinarily I’d write and pontificate in this space but I’m running out-of-time and I’ll let the podcast do the talking for a change. We know you’ll enjoy this episode if you dig one of rock n’ rolls greatest treasures. So without further ado I give you The Who!

     

    What Does Music Mean To You? - Part 1

    What Does Music Mean To You? - Part 1

     

    Music makes the good times better and the bad times bearable. Thanks to my Dad I got into music at an early age. He was always playing his records and some of my earliest memories involve his massive collection of 45’s in those classic cases and the musty smell. When I’d start choosing my own music it was cassette’s I’d buy because a Walkman was cheap and portable (although the first album I bought was Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ on LP with some of my First Communion money).
     
    When we finally got cable in 1987 it was MTV and VH1 I watched on a daily basis hypnotized by the hits of the day, be it “Hysteria” by Def Leppard or “So Emotional” by Whitney, or a flash-in-the-pan like Johnny Hates Jazz or The Escape Club it captured and led my young imagination and lit the fire for me to love collecting and listening to music for pretty much every day of my life since those hair-metal rich days of the late-80’s until this very day.
     
    I began to keep my own Top 25 and eventually Top 40 music chart as a means for cataloging and interacting with all the music I was listening to. Dutifully I’d keep this chart in a spiral notebook as if anybody besides me cared whether “I Remember You” by Skid Row or “Cherish” by Madonna was #1 on my chart. 
     
    As time went by I became more aware and curious about the music that came before my era of Top 40 awareness. Since my parents were divorced I had hours alone in my Dad’s basement to comb the shelves and see what grooves my Pops was jamming to before he had 3 kids. The Beatles, the Stones, Led Zeppelin and so much Motown were the highlights. It also turned out there was a lot of dreck too before my time, as those K-Tel compilations featured some truly awful dreck that even my unrefined ears could tell didn’t age well. In fact I clearly remember the aural affront of “Seasons In the Sun” by one Terry Jacks and “Afternoon Delight” by Starland Vocal Band as serious offenders to my developing musical taste.
     
    Also, as Dan and I pivoted to angsty teens, we would discuss and introduce different musical artists and ideals to each other. Sometimes we’d agree. Occasionally we’d differ. But we were brothers in our mutual misery and coming-of-age stories and music was the soundtrack.
     
    We were the perfect age to be swept up by grunge and the third wave of hip-hop which paved the way for rap to rule the pop charts. 
     
    As the times changed I began to make my own money and the CD age took hold. Emboldened by the ease of signing up for record clubs like Columbia House and BMG I jumped whole-hog into getting as many albums as I could get my hands and ears on. So many mix tapes were made it became its own form of therapy or entertainment. I was never a drinker or into drugs. I believe music had a huge hand in that (along with Dan). I simply couldn’t afford that bad habit and all the music I was buying 😄! At this point Music was a huge part of my identity and what I was genuinely enthusiastic about. I loved discovering a new up-and-coming act but also reveled in going back-in-the-day and finding the forefathers of what informed the music of today. I also genre-hopped and took pride in the notion I could listen to the latest Tori Amos release one minute and follow-it-up the next by listening to a Classic Funkadelic LP. Over time I went wide and deep. 
     
    As the years have gone by music has been along every step of the way. From the finding and losing and finding again of love. From adolescence into adulthood and currently into middle-age. From inner city Detroit, MI to the beautiful suburbs of Nashville, Tn. From running a college radio station to being a parent of two my constant companion. As for what else music means here’s some quick hitters:
    Passion
    Community 
    Connection
    Going to shows
    Heartbreak
    Intellectual curiosity 
    Emotional 
    Stereotyping
    Happiness
    Critical evaluation 
    Meaning
    Hype
    Anticipation
    Discovery
    Disappointment 
    Supreme creativity
    Growth
    Stagnation 
    Cultural 
    Salve for the wounded
    Rhythm
    Dancing
    Eclecticism 
    Standing for what you believe
    Essential 
    Friendship 
     
    Music is all these things and more. Like all great art it means what you mean and it depends on your mood at the time. Be it pop, rock, rap, soul, country, Emo or some bastardization or amalgamation of any of the above it’s both personal and communal. And it’s the reason you and I are here for this podcast. So that’s probably the most important takeaway of all. Thanks for including us on your musical journey.