Professor of Rock

Gamut Podcast Network
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Feb 3, 2026 • 20min

FROM THE VAULT: How Redbone’s “Come and Get Your Love” Became the Most Likable Song Ever

The amazing story of the first all indigenous band Redbone and their ultra catchy 70s smash Come and Get Your Love. The band was compelled by a burning desire to put the spirituality and history of their ancestry in the forefront of their music... the band featured in this episode risked commercial acceptance...disregarded music industry conventionalism, and scored the first major pop hit by a group entirely made up of Indigenous Americans. The inspiring story is coming up NEXT on Professor of Rock.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Feb 2, 2026 • 33min

How 1955 and “Rock Around the Clock” Changed Music Forever

It was the year that lit the flame of Rock and Roll. The charts were full of remakes of hit songs by black artists that were re-recorded by white singers that became a trick of the trade in the record business. It's FASCINATING music history. At one point 4 different versions of one famous song competed for #1. One of those led to the first crossover hit by blues legend Fats Domino, and helped him afford to buy a gold ring he bragged about on stage. Another was orchestrated by Alan Freed, the man who coined the phrase ‘rock n’ roll,’ but was later indicted for payola. The landmark track Only You by the iconic vocal group The Platters came out during this year and the hook to that song was created because of a hiccup that made the singer’s voice jolt, and that jolt made the song a classic. But, the most impactful quake that shook the landscape was caused by Rock Around the Clock, a song that was rescued from obscurity by the 9-year-old son of a famous actor who accidentally played the wrong side of a record, and that mistake became THEE anthem that established the Rock Era. Honestly, there’s a fascinating story around every track that came out during this pivotal year. Every song is a history lesson! Next on professor of rock. with Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Little Ricard to lead the way!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Feb 1, 2026 • 19min

Why “Sabotage” Is the Beastie Boys’ Most Badass Song

Todays song is a music revelation. it's a song story that will kick you in the teeth. This killer 90s song is epic. Coming up a song breakdown of The Beastie Boys at their best with their big fat classic.. Sabotage. It’s so ferocious you have to blast it whenever it comes on and then crank it up some more. It’s the most badass song of the decade it came from.. this high-octane assault on the ears almost didn’t make it. It sat on the shelf for a year. The band couldn’t think of any lyrics. Turns out, The Beastie-Boys were a little distracted. Their studio had a skate ramp and a basketball court and they were always messing around. Finally, two weeks before their deadline, their producer got so frustrated he YELLED AT them to finish one song. So in a moment of smart-ass inspiration, Ad Rock spit out a verse about how this producer was stifling their creativity by making them work. Turns out, that was all the Beastie Boys needed to turn what was supposed to be an instrumental track into the iconic hit Sabotage from their classic album Ill Communication. Plus there’s the hilarious music video to talk about as well. That’s a whole other story. We’re gonna break it all down for you with Ad Rock, MCA and Mike D… NEXT on Professor of Rock.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 31, 2026 • 33min

The Comeback Tracks: Songs That Bombed Then BLEW UP.

Alright, today, we’ve got a line-up of songs that were complete failures when they first came out… but fortune was with them. Because even though some of these tracks couldn't crack the charts to save their lives, they all became massive multi-million dollar money makers. We've got a fascinating lineup of 'love failure songs' that initially stumbled but ultimately made massive comebacks, becoming multi-million dollar hits. This video also explores a heated band rivalry, showcasing the dramatic stories behind these musical 'comeback' triumphs. Including the story of Nick Drake who decades after his death scored a huge payday when his song was used in a Car Ad and he sold more records in a moth than he sold in 30 years combined. You'll hear about a psychedelic rivalry so intense it involved shotgun shells and restraining orders. Plus the cult classic Where is My Mind by Pixies that wasn’t released as a single, but thanks to an explosive movie spot in Fight Club it’s now getting licensing offers once a week… making the songwriter enough to retire. Then you’ve got the band Alabama 3, whose song became the theme song for one of HBO’s all-time biggest shows the Sopranos. And their manager completely screwed them… selling it for just $500. It raked in millions. But would they ever see any of it? Plus, there’s the B-side Tainted Love that nobody wanted that came out of nowhere to make 25 million. From family-friendly drug anthems like Lust For Life by Iggy Pop to obscure punk covers from the Cramps that went viral 40 years later, these are the songs that prove timing is everything. Let’s go.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 30, 2026 • 21min

How Cyndi Lauper Turned Struggle Into a #1 Hit with “Time After Time”

Everyone loves a great underdog story, and up next, we have one of the best from the 80s. Today’s Rookie artist Cyndi Lauper went through hell and back to get to the top. First of all, she lost her voice because of a collapsed vocal cord, and doctors said she’d never sing again. Then she got sued for $80K, which today would be like a quarter million. This forced her to declare bankruptcy and left her destitute. But Lauper kept going, she finally got a break with a label, but they didn’t believe in her songs, they pushed her to do cover songs from other artists, even though she was a great songwriter herself. After recording a bunch of covers, she rebelled and wrote a song with another up-and-coming artist from the band the Hooters that came from her TV GUIDE and an annoying alarm clock that kept malfunctioning and going off in her apartment. She even smashed it against a wall and threw it in the shower, but it kept ticking away. That ticking sound inspired one of the greatest #1 hits in history. Time After Time from her 80s classic album She's So Unusual. It became the most covered song of the decade and hundreds of artist have claimed it's the one song they wish they'd written. It was so good her producer would let anyone near the studio when she was working on it for fear someone would steal it. Up next, I have the co-writer to tell the story.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 27min

Three Dog Night’s Forgotten Reign: 21 Straight Hits with Chuck Negron

Coming up next a lead singer from an underrated band that in their peak years from the late 60s to the mid 70s had More Gold records Than The Stones! Bigger Crowds Than Credence! And Fatter Purses Than Elvis! Chuck Negron's band, Three Dog Night had had a then record, 21 consecutive hit songs and up next he shares the story of several classics including a song...Pieces of April he recorded because the band needed one more song, only the rest of his band mates were out of town so he had to go in and record it himself but because he didn’t have his regular group and none his of session guys were available so he found out that the janitor played Cello and the studio’s secretary played guitar and so he Jerry rigged the song and it became a smash. Then there was the album cover that was so controversial he had to put a bandage over the cover and then there was the hit song called the show must go on that he covered and decided to change the lyrics but he was in such a hurry to get it recorded, he forgot to call the original singer for permission to change them and when the song came out he was livid… plus the song that was created for a failed children's tv show and because one of the biggest rock songs ever, Joy to the World. So many classics coming up next. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 28, 2026 • 34min

How Rock Legends Turned Stuttering Into Iconic Songs

Coming up, we shine a focus on the neurological condition known as stuttering…. Some spend a lifetime trying to get rid of it, others have learned to control it and become legendary performers. And then some have turned the condition into some of the biggest hits in rock history. In this episode, we explore how a stutter was turned into a clever art form, uniting a universal chorus of stammers that was beautiful. Including the song Lola that Kinks singer Ray Davies was writing when his toddler started singing along with him… the simple lyrics were like a nursery rhyme and they stuttered it together and that stutter by his toddler made it a classic. Then there’s the stutter that came from frustration when The Who's legendary singer Roger Daltrey, couldn’t get the timing of the vocal and lyrics right, so he had to stutter to make it fit. It became an all-time anthem. And then Randy Bachman, who wrote Ain't Seen Nothing Yet to mock his little brother’s speech impediment and it hit #1 in 12 countries and he even got a special award from the non-profit stuttering foundation. Let’s do it. Go to this exclusive web address right now to try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE: https://www.ziprecruiter.com/rockSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 27, 2026 • 39min

MTV’s Most Explosive Moments: The Videos, the Stars, and the End of an Era

Ladies and gentleman, rock and roll. From its inaugural blast off and moon landing on August 1, 1981 until the clock struck midnight on New Years Eve 1989, MTV and the 80s were a match made it heaven. The decade was no doubt the most important in the network’s history and was stacked with landmark moments. Famously opening with the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star,” MTV quickly became part of the fabric of our lives. It’s humble origins began with a very limited library of music videos, but it wasn’t long before the channel caught fire… and became the juggernaut that powered the lives of music lovers everywhere. As the “I Want My MTV” ad campaign hammered the brand into public consciousness, rock and pop stars came out of the woodwork to throw in their support. And as the decade unfolded, we were hit with music videos that revolutionized the medium and kept our eyes glued to the screen. Duran Duran’s Hungry Like the Wolf, Peter Gabriel’s Sledgehammer, Dire Strait’s Money For Nothing, Genesis with Land of Confusion, and Michael Jackson’s Thriller. The list goes on and on. And surrounding the never-ending line-up of videos were moments that put MTV down in pop cultural history: Madonna’s“Like a Virgin” performance at the 1984 MTV Video Music Awards, Live Aid coverage, the Run-DMC Aerosmith collab on Walk This Way, Motley Crue’s Home Sweet Home breaking Dial MTV, the debut of MTV Unplugged in 1989… But now over 44 years later. MTV has been unplugged once and for all. On December 31, 2025, the last of MTV’s dedicated 24-hour music television channels ceased global broadcasting, ending over four decades of continuous music programming. The shutdown affected 5 major channels (MTV Live, MTV Music, MTV 80s, MTV 90s, and MTV Hits).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 26, 2026 • 21min

When Grunge Hit: Def Leppard’s Comeback Story with Joe Elliott

Sometimes you ask a question, and there’s some mustard behind the answer. Today I talk with a legend who was riding as high as a band can in one moment, but then music got turned on its head, and this band, along with dozen’s of other,s were suddenly at a crossroads. Coming off one of the biggest albums ever, this band was in crisis going into a new decade… They lost two of their members. Their legendary guitarist and their so called 6th member, one of the greatest producers ever, as they gathered to put together their new record, all bets were that it was gonna be dark and brooding. That was certainly the mood, but instead this band put out a relentlessly upbeat album full of hard rock that was a pure adrenaline rush with a huge first single; the only problem was their timing was a bit off. Had this record come out even a year before, it would’ve been twice as big, but it dropped when GRUNGE had taken over the landscape and was threatening to take this band out. I pose the question decades later to their legendary frontman. What were you thinking when this musical movement that took out so many bands and threatened yours happened, and he spits a little fire my way… But his answer is priceless. Let’s do it.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Jan 25, 2026 • 36min

From Hits to Hate: The Most Mocked Songs in Rock History

Some songs start as hits but end up as punchlines. Over-saturation, endless mocking, and viral internet culture can transform a former chart-topper into a pop culture punching bag. Today, we're counting down 6 tracks and artists that went from beloved… to the butt of the joke. We’ve got stories like the time Conan O'Brien teased Michael Bolton. So Bolton threatened to end Conan's life by sending a softball through his head at their next charity softball game. Or how about when the star of Titanic, the highest-grossing film of the 20th century, said that movie’s theme song My Heart Will Go On makes her throw up in her mouth every time she hears it… because fans won’t stop playing it for her! And then there’s the music journalist who was locked inside a listening booth at a Best Buy, and was forced to listen to We Built This City his magazine called “the worst ever”… for 24 hours straight. Plus, there’s What's Up, the song that is so annoying I'd rather be water boarded then list to it. We’re covering the rock era’s best musical punchlines. Let’s go!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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