Why Is This So Hard For You?
Episode 130 keeps Derek Hale in the room for another round of deep cuts, debut-album discoveries, jazz fusion precision, and one very important reminder that some guys used to sing like their lives depended on it. Curtis continues his run through favorite debut albums with Kenny Loggins, bringing warm singer-songwriter craft, soft rock polish, and the kind of 1970s studio-musician atmosphere that sits right in the show’s sweet spot. Derek follows with Steve Smith and Vital Information, adding a sharp turn into jazz fusion, rhythmic muscle, and drummer-led instrumental firepower. Jonathan brings in an overlooked Alice Cooper cut that leans into the more melodic and reflective side of the catalog, giving the episode a little theatrical classic rock contrast before Derek takes over the category song. For the category Remember When Guys Could Sing..., Derek goes straight to Journey for a reminder that arena rock and AOR vocals once required absurd range, control, and probably a pre-show oxygen tank. Debut-album warmth, fusion chops, Alice Cooper curveballs, and Journey-level vocal gymnastics—Episode 130 has plenty to talk about. Curtis Gross is a self-employed video editor. Jonathan Workman is an adult learning consultant based in Wichita, KS. --- Make sure you are subscribed to Why Is This So Hard For You. Type Why Is This So Hard For You in your podcast provider, hit that subscription button, and leave us a five-star review. This will make it easier for other podcast listeners to find the podcast. --- The intro music is the first 30 seconds of the Ornette Coleman tune "Song X" fed into AI software that attempts to output the song to a solo piano transcription. The outro music is the first 30 seconds of Sonny Rollins' version of the tune "St. Thomas" fed into the same software.
131 episoder
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