Songs from the Dead: 10-Minute Histories of Legendary Songs

La Bamba: The Story Behind the Most Famous "Arriba"

9 min · 1. Juni 2026
Episode La Bamba: The Story Behind the Most Famous "Arriba" Cover

Beschreibung

La Bamba sounds like pure joy: three chords, a shout, a dance, and a chorus almost everyone knows. But before it became a rock and roll classic, La Bamba lived in the son jarocho tradition of Veracruz: a world of wooden platforms, dancing feet, weddings, gatherings, Spanish strings, Indigenous themes, Caribbean circulation, and African-rooted rhythm. In that world, dance was not decoration. The dancers’ feet struck the tarima, and the floor became an instrument. This episode follows the song from Veracruz to the recording age, through El Jarocho and Andrés Huesca, and then to Ritchie Valens, who transformed it into early rock and roll in 1958. From there, the story widens. La Bamba did not just become famous. It entered the bloodstream of pop and rock, echoing through Twist and Shout, Louie Louie, Sweets for My Sweet, and Sugar and Spice. The episode asks how one Veracruz dance song helped teach rock and roll how to move.

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Alle Folgen

28 Folgen

Episode Nobody: The Saddest Joke in the Room Cover

Nobody: The Saddest Joke in the Room

Nobody is a comic song built around one brutal answer. Written by Alex Rogers and Bert Williams, published in 1905, and made famous by Williams in 1906, the song seems at first like antique vaudeville: a man asks the world for help, sympathy, friendship, romance, or basic recognition, and the answer is always the same. Nobody. But the joke is darker than it sounds. Williams performed inside a theatrical world shaped by blackface and racist convention, and that history cannot be polished away. At the same time, he turned the market’s degrading language into something sharper, quieter, and stranger: deadpan as survival, comedy as accusation. This episode follows Nobody from early Tin Pan Alley recordings to Bing Crosby, Perry Como, Pearl Bailey, Nina Simone, The Muppets, Johnny Cash, and Cécile McLorin Salvant. Along the way, the punchline changes shape. In one voice it is nostalgia. In another, pride. In another, social diagnosis. The saddest part is that the answer still makes sense. The beautiful part is that every time someone sings it, “nobody” becomes untrue for a moment.

13. Juli 20269 min
Episode Over the Hills and Far Away: A Song for Leaving, Longing, and Finding Your Place Cover

Over the Hills and Far Away: A Song for Leaving, Longing, and Finding Your Place

Three songs. One title. Almost nothing else in common. Over the Hills and Far Away can mean escape, adventure, exile, longing, or the place your mind goes when your body is stuck somewhere ordinary. This episode follows that phrase across three very different lives. The oldest version goes back at least to the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century. In one form, it is a love complaint. In another, it becomes a recruiting song, promising money, clothes, and the possibility of returning as a gentleman. John Gay then uses the tune in The Beggar’s Opera, where “far away” becomes both romance and exile. The second Over the Hills and Far Away belongs to Led Zeppelin: a 1973 song born from the band’s acoustic period in the Welsh hills. The third is Gary Moore’s 1986 rock song about love, secrecy, and prison, later transformed by metal, folk, and Ukrainian mountain air. The episode asks why this simple phrase keeps attracting new stories, and why “far away” can mean both escape and loss.

5. Juli 20269 min
Episode Per Tyrsson’s Daughters: The Murder Ballad That Built a Church Cover

Per Tyrsson’s Daughters: The Murder Ballad That Built a Church

Per Tyrsson’s Daughters is a murder ballad that explains a place. The song, known in Swedish as Töres döttrar i Wänge, gives an origin story to Kärna Church in Östergötland and to the springs associated with Vänge. It takes a real landscape, a church, a quiet yard, strange springs, and answers the question folk songs love most: what happened here? The answer is murder, miracle, and memory. This episode follows the ballad as both an origin song and a murder ballad: a story in which ordinary movement, walking to church, walking home, suddenly becomes irreversible. One important Swedish manuscript witness dates from the 1670s, with a note saying the song was sung in Kärna parish on June 1, 1673. Centuries later, the song finds new lives through Jan Hammarlund, Falconer’s folk-metal version, and related English and Scottish ballads such as Babylon and The Bonnie Banks o Fordie. Along the way, the episode asks why places need stories, and why some places seem to remember violence long after people would rather forget.

29. Juni 20269 min
Episode House of the Rising Sun: The Building That Ruins Everyone Cover

House of the Rising Sun: The Building That Ruins Everyone

The House of the Rising Sun is a song about a building. In New Orleans. They call it the Rising Sun. It ruins people. Most people know the song from The Animals’ 1964 recording, with Hilton Valentine’s unforgettable guitar, Alan Price’s organ, and Eric Burdon singing as if there is no tomorrow. That version became definitive. But the song is much older, stranger, and harder to pin down. No one fully agrees what the “house” is. A brothel, a prison, a gambling house, a tavern, a hotel, or simply a symbolic place where bad decisions become fate. In some versions, the narrator is a woman ruined by seduction or prostitution. In others, a man ruined by gambling, drink, or prison. This episode traces the song from Appalachian field recordings and early blues versions to Lead Belly, Joan Baez, Odetta, Dave Van Ronk, Bob Dylan, and finally The Animals, whose one-take recording turned an old warning into one of the great doors in rock history.

22. Juni 20269 min
Episode Kâtibim: The Melody You Learned by Accident Cover

Kâtibim: The Melody You Learned by Accident

You know this melody. You may think you know it from Boney M’s Rasputin: the disco chorus, the theatrical history lesson, the “ra ra” that refuses to leave your head. But long before that, the melody belonged to another story entirely. Kâtibim, also known as Üsküdar’a gider iken, is an Ottoman-era song about a woman walking to Üsküdar in the rain with her kâtib, her clerk, secretary, companion, or perhaps something slightly harder to define. The lyrics are small, playful, and wonderfully social: a muddy coat, an admired shirt, a handkerchief filled with Turkish delight, and a refrain telling everyone else to mind their own business. This episode follows the melody as it travels through Turkish, Greek, Balkan, Arabic, Jewish, klezmer, and American pop traditions before reappearing in Rasputin and later folk-metal and cosmopolitan pop versions. Along the way, the song becomes a perfect example of how melodies cross borders while keeping their sly little smile.

15. Juni 20269 min