Month: July 2025

  • Bob Dylan Finally Reveals His 6 Favourite Bands Of All Time!

    Bob Dylan Finally Reveals His 6 Favourite Bands Of All Time!

    At 84 years old, Bob Dylan remains one of the most enigmatic and influential figures in music history. Known for his poetic lyrics, genre-defying career, and cultural impact, Dylan has always been generous in acknowledging the artists who shaped his sound. In a recent deep-dive video titled “At 84, Bob Dylan Finally Reveals His 6…

    Read More

  • Between the Beatles and Woodstock: 10 Songs That Shaped a Generation

    Between the Beatles and Woodstock: 10 Songs That Shaped a Generation

    When the Beatles landed at JFK Airport in February 1964, they didn’t just arrive in America—they reshaped it. And when nearly half a million people gathered in a muddy New York field in August 1969 for Woodstock, it wasn’t just a concert—it was a culmination. Between these two cultural earthquakes, music did more than entertain.…

    Read More

  • Bing Crosby: Spokane’s Golden Voice

    Bing Crosby: Spokane’s Golden Voice

    When you think of Spokane and music, there’s one name that resonates through the years—and across the decades: Bing Crosby. Born Harry Lillis Crosby Jr. in Tacoma in 1903, his family moved to Spokane when he was just a toddler in 1906. He would grow up here, attend Gonzaga schools, and return home time and…

    Read More

  • The Music of Innocence: Before the Shift

    The Music of Innocence: Before the Shift

    Before transistor radios.Before Ed Sullivan and The Beatles.Before I knew the charts or cared who wrote the song. Music was technicolor smiles, sweeping choreography, and elegant voices that floated across the screen. It came wrapped in story, in satin gowns and tap shoes, in black-and-white close-ups and wide-eyed wonder. This was the music of innocence.And…

    Read More

  • The King Family and Up with People: Songs for a Sweeter World

    The King Family and Up with People: Songs for a Sweeter World

    Before the Beatles, before transistor radios took over my world, before I learned to tune the dial and find music for myself—there were songs that found me. They came through the television, in technicolor harmony, from families and choirs who sang with bright smiles and polished shoes. Two musical acts stand out from that time:…

    Read More

  • Dancing with America: The Era of Dick Clark and American Bandstand

    Dancing with America: The Era of Dick Clark and American Bandstand

    In the days before MTV and YouTube, if you wanted to see your favorite artists perform, you turned on the television—and no show loomed larger than American Bandstand. Hosted by the eternally youthful Dick Clark, American Bandstand aired nationally from 1957 to 1989, becoming one of the most influential platforms for popular music in American…

    Read More

  • Before the Beatles: The Sound That Set the Stage

    Before the Beatles: The Sound That Set the Stage

    By the time the Beatles stepped onto the Ed Sullivan stage in February 1964, the world of music had already been shifting for over a decade. The 1950s gave birth to rock and roll, a sound that blended rhythm and blues, country, gospel, and pop into something loud, thrilling, and, for the time, dangerously new.…

    Read More

  • Tuning In: KJRB and the Magic of AM Radio

    Tuning In: KJRB and the Magic of AM Radio

    If the transistor radio gave me ownership of music, then KJRB 790 AM gave that music a voice. In the early 1960s, tucked into a small town thirty-three miles south of Spokane, I discovered that a tiny radio in my pocket could reach across space and make the world feel bigger. The Beatles were coming,…

    Read More

  • The Pocket Radio: Holding Music in My Hands

    The Pocket Radio: Holding Music in My Hands

    Before Spotify, before boomboxes, before cassette tapes in glove compartments, there was the transistor radio. Small enough to slip into a pocket. Cheap enough that kids could buy their own. And powerful enough to change the way America listened to music—forever. The first time I held a transistor radio, it felt like holding a secret.…

    Read More

  • When the Beatles Came to America

    When the Beatles Came to America

    Ten weeks had passed since President Kennedy’s assassination. The national mood was still heavy, still stunned. It felt like we were all waiting for something to lift the fog, though we didn’t know what it might be. And then, word began to spread—The Beatles were coming. Their music had already begun to trickle across the…

    Read More

About

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consec tetur adipiscing elit. Maecenas odio lacus, dignissim sollicitudin finibus commodo, rhoncus et ante.

categories

Archives